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High School Students in a Health Career Promotion Program Report Fewer Acts of Aggression and Violence

Overview
Publisher Elsevier
Specialty Pediatrics
Date 2012 Dec 25
PMID 23260841
Citations 2
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Abstract

Purpose: This study examined the effects of two school-based programs on the perpetration of nonphysical aggression, physical violence, and intimate partner violence among high-risk secondary school students in an economically disadvantaged and predominantly Latino school district. The intervention program was El Joven Noble, and the control program was the Teen Medical Academy.

Methods: The study used a repeated-measures quasi-experimental intervention/control design. The participants self-reported the previous 30 days' acts of nonphysical aggression, physical violence, and intimate partner violence at baseline and at 3 and 9 months after enrollment. Program- and grade-level effects at 3 and 9 months were examined using three-factor analyses of covariance models with one factor for repeated measures. The covariate in each of the models was the baseline measure of the dependent outcomes.

Results: No significant baseline differences were found between the participants in the intervention (n = 96) and control (n = 127) programs. At 9 months after enrollment in the study, high school students who participated in the Teen Medical Academy reported fewer acts of nonphysical aggression (p < .001) and physical violence (p = .002) than high school students who participated in El Joven Noble. Students who participated in the Teen Medical Academy also reported fewer acts of intimate partner violence (p = .02) than students who participated in El Joven Noble.

Conclusions: High school students who participated in a health career promotion program reported fewer acts of aggression and violence as compared with high school students who participated in a culturally tailored character development program.

Citing Articles

Studies evaluating of health interventions at schools: an integrative literature review.

Medeiros E, Reboucas D, Paiva A, Nascimento C, Bezerra E Silva S, Pinto E Rev Lat Am Enfermagem. 2018; 26:e3008.

PMID: 30020339 PMC: 6053286. DOI: 10.1590/1518-8345.2463.3008.


True Love: Effectiveness of a School-Based Program to Reduce Dating Violence Among Adolescents in Mexico City.

Sosa-Rubi S, Saavedra-Avendano B, Piras C, Van Buren S, Bautista-Arredondo S Prev Sci. 2016; 18(7):804-817.

PMID: 27738783 DOI: 10.1007/s11121-016-0718-4.

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