
Psychiatr News August 1, 2008
Volume 43, Number 15, page 4
© 2008 American Psychiatric Association
Can Antisocial Behaviors Be Prevented?
A number of factors seem to put children at risk of engaging in antisocial
behaviors (see Multiple Factors at Root of Antisocial Behavior). So can
antisocial behaviors be prevented by altering these factors? The answer seems
to be yes.
Take a program called the Nurse-Family Partnership, developed by David
Olds, Ph.D., director of the Prevention Research Center for Family and Child
Health at the University of Colorado at Denver. Olds and his colleagues
developed the program in the mid-1970s. Its aim was to give first-born
children from a disadvantaged background a better start in life. The
intervention consisted of nurses who visited the mothers of these children
before birth and during the two years after birth.
For example, while the mothers were pregnant, the nurses urged them to
reduce their exposure to tobacco and alcohol, which can have adverse effects
on brain development and subsequent behavior. Once the mothers gave birth, the
nurses guided them on how to provide sensitive, responsive, and competent care
for their babies and urged them to plan future pregnancies so that they could
devote sufficient time to their babies and become economically
self-sufficient. "Having economic stability in households is an
important component in creating the right kinds of conditions for children to
develop well," Olds said during an interview.
Besides developing the program, Olds and his team conducted a number of
studies to test its effectiveness. In one study, they looked to see whether
the program could reduce antisocial behaviors in the children whose mothers
had participated.
Four hundred women who were awaiting the birth of their first child served
as subjects. Eighty-five percent were young, unmarried, and/or from low
socioeconomic backgrounds. Half received the Nurse-Family Partnership
intervention; the other half served as controls, receiving standard prenatal
and well-child care in a clinic. Of the children born to the 400 women, 315
were available for follow-up during the next 15 years.
Olds and his coworkers found that the children of mothers who had received
the intervention experienced significantly fewer arrests, convictions, and
probation violations than did the children of controls. And as Olds and his
group concluded in the October 14, 1998, Journal of the American Medical
Association, "This program of prenatal and early childhood home
visitation by nurses can reduce reported serious antisocial
behavior."
Subsequently Olds and his team created a nonprofit organization, the
Nurse-Family Partnership National Service Office, to help communities set up
nurse-family partnerships. Now, a decade later, these nurse-family
partnerships are operating in 24 states and assisting some 14,000 families
annually. In fact, Olds traveled to Sweden in June to receive the 2008
Stockholm Prize in Criminology. The jury, which was composed of criminologists
from various countries, praised Olds both for his innovative program and for
the impact that it has had on crime reduction.
Currently Olds is working with researchers in Australia, Canada, Germany,
and the Netherlands to determine whether the partnership concept can work in
their countries as well.
Although there has not been much research besides his group's to explore
early-intervention paradigms in preventing antisocial behaviors, Olds said,
there has been a substantial amount to determine whether some later
interventions might work. In fact, he pointed out, the Institute for
Behavioral Sciences at the University of Colorado at Boulder lists on its Web
site several later-intervention programs that have been rigorously evaluated
and that show considerable promise in reducing antisocial behaviors. The Web
site is
<www.colorado.edu/cspv/blueprints>.
Related Article:
-
Multiple Factors at Root of Antisocial Behavior
- Joan Arehart-Treichel
Psychiatr News 2008 43: 4-18.
[Full Text]
Get information about faster international access.
a>
Privacy Policy
Copyright © 2008
American Psychiatric Association.
All rights reserved.
Home
| Search
| Current Issue
| Past Issues
| Subscribe
| All APPI Journals
| Help
| Contact Us
|