Anxiety disorders are prevalent in the school-aged population and are present across cultural groups. Scant research exists on culturally relevant prevention and intervention programs for mental health problems in the Aboriginal populations. An established cognitive behavioral program, FRIENDS for Life, was enriched to include content that was culturally relevant to Aboriginal students. Students (N = 533), including 192 students of Aboriginal background, participated in the cluster randomized control study. Data were collected three times over 1 year. A series of multilevel models were conducted to examine the effect of the culturally enriched FRIENDS program on anxiety. These analyses revealed that the FRIENDS program did not effectively reduce anxiety for the total sample or for Aboriginal children specifically. However, all students, regardless of intervention condition, Aboriginal status, or gender, reported a consistent decrease in feelings of anxiety over the 6-month study period.
Prevention/intervention programs for anxiety disorders, the most common form of psychological distress reported by children and adolescents, are critical, as unaddressed anxiety has been associated with a host of negative life-outcomes. This study examines the transportability and dissemination of the Skills for Academic and Social Success (SASS), an early intervention program that can be delivered in high school settings and is aimed at reducing symptoms of anxiety among adolescents. A total of 27 adolescent high school students participated. Teachers and adolescent peer counselors were trained to deliver a modified version of SASS, involving ten 60-minute sessions. The results reveal that at-risk adolescents participating in the SASS program showed a reduction in anxiety, behavioural avoidance, and depression symptoms from pre-to posttesting, which provides further support for the transportability and dissemination of the SASS program in secondary schools. Limitations of the study and future directions are discussed.
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