Department of Psychology, Stony Brook University.
Department of Psychology, North Carolina State University.
J Clin Child Adolesc Psychol. 2020 Sep-Oct;49(5):660-672. doi: 10.1080/15374416.2019.1622123. Epub 2019 Jun 20.
Adolescents living in rural regions of the United States face substantial barriers to accessing mental health services, creating needs for more accessible, nonstigmatizing, briefer interventions. Research suggests that single-session "growth mind-set" interventions (GM-SSIs)-which teach the belief that personal traits are malleable through effort-may reduce internalizing and externalizing problems in adolescents. However, GM-SSIs have not been evaluated among rural youth, and their effects on internalizing and externalizing problems have not been assessed within a single trial, rendering their relative benefits for different problem types unclear. We examined whether a computerized GM-SSI could reduce depressive symptoms, social anxiety symptoms, and conduct problems in female adolescents from rural areas of the United States. Tenth-grade female adolescents ( = 222, age = 15.2, 38% White, 25% Black, 29% Hispanic) from 4 rural, low-income high schools in the southeastern United States were randomized to receive a 45-min GM-SSI or a computer-based active control program, teaching healthy sexual behaviors. Young women self-reported depression symptoms, social anxiety symptoms, and conduct problem behaviors at baseline and 4-month follow-up. Relative to the female students in the control group, the students receiving the GM-SSI reported modest but significantly greater reductions in depressive symptoms (= .23) and likelihood of reporting elevated depressive symptoms (= .29) from baseline to follow-up. GM-SSI effects were nonsignificant for social anxiety symptoms, although a small effect size emerged in the hypothesized direction (= .21), and nonsignificant for change in conduct problems (= .01). A free-of-charge 45-min GM-SSI may help reduce internalizing distress, especially depression-but not conduct problems-in rural female adolescents.
美国农村地区的青少年在获得心理健康服务方面面临着巨大的障碍,因此需要更易获得、去污名化和更简短的干预措施。研究表明,单次“成长心态”干预(GM-SSI)——即教授个人特质可以通过努力而改变的信念——可能会减少青少年的内化和外化问题。然而,GM-SSI 尚未在农村青年中进行评估,其在单次试验中对内化和外化问题的影响也尚未得到评估,因此不同问题类型的相对益处尚不清楚。我们研究了计算机化 GM-SSI 是否可以减少美国农村地区青少年的抑郁症状、社交焦虑症状和行为问题。从美国东南部 4 所农村低收入高中招募了 222 名 10 年级的女青少年(年龄=15.2,38%为白人,25%为黑人,29%为西班牙裔),随机分配接受 45 分钟 GM-SSI 或基于计算机的主动控制程序,教授健康的性行为。年轻女性在基线和 4 个月随访时自我报告抑郁症状、社交焦虑症状和行为问题。与对照组的女学生相比,接受 GM-SSI 的学生报告的抑郁症状(=0.23)和报告出现较高抑郁症状的可能性(=0.29)从基线到随访都有适度但显著的降低。GM-SSI 对社交焦虑症状的影响不显著,但出现了一个较小的预期方向的效应量(=0.21),对行为问题的变化不显著(=0.01)。免费的 45 分钟 GM-SSI 可能有助于减少农村女青少年的内化困扰,尤其是抑郁症状,但对行为问题没有影响。