Mental Disorders Clinical Trial
Official title:
My Life: Evaluation of Self-Determination Enhancement for Adolescents in Foster Care
The purpose of the study is to implement a full-scale efficacy trial of the My Life program. Conducted in partnership with the Oregon DHS Foster Care Program, the impact of the intervention will be being evaluated with a randomized experimental longitudinal design. Two hundred and ten youth, ages 16.5-17.5, will be enrolled in 3 waves, and randomly assigned to either a comparison group that receives typical foster care services or to a treatment group that participates in the key elements of the model, including instruction in self-determination skills, support in leading their own coordinated inter-agency transition planning meetings, and participation in workshops with mentors. Outcomes, including youth self-determination, quality of life, employment, mental health, educational achievement and independent living, are assessed pre-intervention, at the conclusion of intervention, and at 12 months post-intervention. The proposed study will provide important information on the efficacy of the model for all youth exiting the foster care system, yielding unequivocal data on whether enhanced self-determination mediates, at least partially, various outcome areas, including mental health, educational achievement, employment, independent living, and quality of life; evaluating the effect of special education status, gender, and race as moderating influences on the impact of the intervention. Foster care experiences, such as trauma and placement instability, will be considered as covariates; direct effects of the intervention on these key foster care experiences will also be explored.
Compared to their same age peers in the general population, youth who transition to adult
living from foster care are less likely to have stable housing, to be connected to a caring
adult, to graduate from high school, to go to college, or to be employed (e.g., Avery, 2001;
Pecora et al., 2003; Goerge et al., 2002). They are more likely to engage in risky sexual
behaviors, to become a single parent, and to be homeless or involved in the criminal justice
system (e.g., Courtney et al., 2006; Smithgall, Gladden, Yang & Goerge, 2005). While
consensus exists about the poor outcomes of these youth and policies have been adopted (e.g.,
Foster Care Independence Act) aimed at improving their transition, evidence-based practices
have yet to be validated for achieving this goal.
Skill development focused on self-determination enhancement, shown to be associated with
transition success of young people in special education, could have unrealized potential to
prepare youth in foster care for the sudden independence they experience when they abruptly
age out of foster care. The overlapping nature of these at risk groups (approximately 40% of
youth in foster care receive special education services) further suggests that skill
development for self-determination enhancement could have cross-cutting benefits. To gather
preliminary efficacy and feasibility data for youth approaching transition from foster homes,
a pilot study using a randomized, 2 groups X 3 repeated measures design was conducted in
Oregon (entitled My Life). Sixty youth, ages 16.5 through 17.5, in foster care and special
education, were randomly assigned to either a control group that received community as usual
services (CAU) or an experimental group that received one-to-one coaching designed to enhance
self-determination (My Life). The My Life intervention group experienced a statistically
significant increase in self-determination (as measured by the ARC; Wehmeyer & Kelchner,
1995) in comparison to the control group. Youth who participated in the intervention were
also more likely to exhibit improvement in employment outcomes and in overall well being and
to report greater involvement in the transition planning process over time as compared to the
control group. In addition to providing evidence of its efficacy, the My Life pilot provided
important feasibility information and estimates of effect size.
Given the promising findings of our randomized controlled pilot of the My Life intervention,
the goal of this R01 proposal is to undertake a full-scale efficacy trial of the My Life
program. We are proposing to expand the work conducted in our initial investigation to
include all youth preparing to exit foster care (i.e., youth receiving and not receiving
special education services), and to specifically assess the impact of the intervention on
mental health. The proposed study, which builds on the promising findings of our initial
work, will provide important information on the efficacy of the model for all youth exiting
the foster care system, providing data on the intervention's direct effects on critical
outcomes, including quality of life, mental health, education, employment, employment and
independent living, and whether enhanced self-determination mediates, at least partially, the
intervention's effects on these critical outcomes. Additionally, the study will investigate
whether disability, gender and race moderate the effect of the intervention on distal
outcomes. Trauma symptoms and placement instability experienced at baseline will be
considered as covariates; the potential direct effects of the intervention on these key
foster care experiences also will be explored at completion of treatment and follow along.
The proposed study has four specific aims: 1) We will recruit 210 foster youth, 16.5 to 17.5
years of age and randomly assign them to either the My Life intervention group or a community
as usual control group that receives typical services (CAU). The intervention is designed to
increase youth's self-determination in preparation for aging out of care and to provide for
follow along assessment of their outcomes during this challenging and high-risk period. To
recruit youth, we are collaborating with Oregon DHS and will target Oregon's most densely
populated area: Multnomah County; 2) We will use a multiple agent, multiple indicator
strategy for measuring key constructs to assess youth at baseline, intervention termination
(12-month post-baseline) and follow-up (12-month post-intervention completion). We also will
collect DHS Foster Care and school district archival records at these three time points.
Brief phone interviews will be conducted every 60 days with participating youth regarding
recent service and support utilization, global ratings in key outcome areas, stressful
events, and contact with supportive adults. Thus, a total of 13 60-day phone interviews will
be conducted over the entire 24-month period of study enrollment; 3) Using a series of
modeling analyses, we will test intervention efficacy and the key elements of our theoretical
model. Specifically, we will test for stability versus change of self-determination, mental
health adjustment, academic achievement, quality of life, employment and independent living,
with intervention group assignment (My Life vs. CAU) modeled as a dummy variable with
anticipated direct effects on outcomes for the key constructs. In a second series of
analyses, we will test the hypothesized mediator effects of self-determination on mental
health adjustment, academic success, quality of life, employment and independent living, and
explore whether disability, gender and race moderate the impact of the intervention on key
outcomes. The influence of trauma and placement instability on distal outcomes will be
examined, as will the intervention's impact on these key foster care experiences. 4) We will
track fidelity of implementation to document adherence to intervention protocols and perform
analyses to identify intervention components actively associated with major outcomes as well
as possible differences in intervention components for foster youth with a disability versus
those without. Oregon DHS has a strong interest in this project and we anticipate that they
will work to maintain delivery of active intervention components.
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