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Successes and Challenges in Preventing Conduct Problems in Australian Preschool-Aged Children Through the Early Impact (EI) Program

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 February 2012

Stephen Larmar*
Affiliation:
Griffith University, Australia. [email protected]
Mark R. Dadds
Affiliation:
University of New South Wales, Australia.
Ian Shochet
Affiliation:
Queensland University of Technology, Australia.
*
*Address for correspondence: Stephen Larmar, PhD, School of Human Services, Griffith University, Logan Campus, University Drive, Meadowbrook QLD 4131, Australia.
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Abstract

This article reports on the initial effects of the Early Impact (EI) Program, a preventative program that includes home and school components designed to arrest the development of conduct problems in preschool-aged children. Participants included 455 preschool-aged children enrolled across 10 schools. Schools were randomly assigned to either EI or control conditions. All participants were screened at the commencement of the academic year to determine those children considered more at risk for ongoing conduct problems. Following screening n = 66 children were identified in the intervention group and n = 69 in the control. The intervention commenced in the second term of the academic year and ran over a 10-week period. Teachers involved in the intervention were highly engaged and satisfied with the program design. Improvements were reported at the school level at post-intervention with mixed evidence of durability of change at 6-month follow-up. Parent participants were more difficult to engage and reported no changes in the behaviour of children in the home. The study provides initial evidence of the efficacy of the EI intervention as a means of preventing conduct problems in young children at the school level; however, issues associated with parental engagement and home-based change remain to be solved.

Type
Standard Papers
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2006

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