2011
DOI: 10.1016/j.jsat.2011.02.009
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Motivational interviewing integrated with social network counseling for female adolescents: A randomized pilot study in urban primary care

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Cited by 47 publications
(68 citation statements)
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“…As RTC does predict subsequent service use (Broome, Simpson, & Joe, 1999; Joe, Simpson, & Broome, 1999) and reduced substance use (Bailey, Baker, Webster, & Lewin, 2004; Cady et al, 1996; D’Amico et al, 2008; Grenard et al, 2007; Mason et al, 2011) in some studies, future studies should replicate our findings and determine whether NF lowers RTC. As these effect sizes may be unstable due to our small sample size (Kraemer, Mintz, Noda, Tinklenberg, & Yesavage, 2006), it is important to replicate findings with larger and racially diverse samples.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 51%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…As RTC does predict subsequent service use (Broome, Simpson, & Joe, 1999; Joe, Simpson, & Broome, 1999) and reduced substance use (Bailey, Baker, Webster, & Lewin, 2004; Cady et al, 1996; D’Amico et al, 2008; Grenard et al, 2007; Mason et al, 2011) in some studies, future studies should replicate our findings and determine whether NF lowers RTC. As these effect sizes may be unstable due to our small sample size (Kraemer, Mintz, Noda, Tinklenberg, & Yesavage, 2006), it is important to replicate findings with larger and racially diverse samples.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 51%
“…However, upon our reexamination of these studies, it appears that the nonfindings may possibly be due to lower treatment integrity in the studies with nonfindings. That is, of the three studies using rigorous treatment coding (D’amico, Miles, Stern, & Meredith, 2008; Mason, Pate, Drapkin, & Sozinho, 2011; Thush et al, 2009), two (67%) reported positive findings. However, of the two studies finding no significant outcomes for MI’s effectiveness on RTC, only one (50%; Thush et al, 2009) coded MI using the widely used Motivational Interviewing Treatment Integrity (MITI) Scales (Moyers, Martin, Manuel, Miller, & Ernst, 2010).…”
Section: Relevance Of Study Outcome Variablesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Three studies reported outcomes for diastolic and systolic blood pressure readings (Hardcastle, Taylor, Bailey, & Castle, 2008; Hyman, Pavlik, Taylor, Goodrick, & Moye, 2007; Ogedegbe, et al, 2008); the effect sizes from these outcomes were grouped together for one meta-analysis. Six studies reported on substance use outcomes (Beckham, 2007; Brown, Saunders, Bobula, Mundt, & Koch, 2007; D’Amico, Miles, Stern, & Meredith, 2008; Hyman, et al, 2007; Mason, Pate, Drapkin, & Sozinho, 2011; Soria, Legido, Escolano, Yeste, & Montoya, 2006). Two studies reported body weight reduction outcomes (Greaves, et al, 2008; Hardcastle, et al, 2008), while 3 studies reported physical activity results (Greaves, et al, 2008; Hardcastle, et al, 2008; Hyman, et al, 2007).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Higher scores indicate greater peer network protection, and lower scores indicate increased network risk. The ASNA has favorable internal reliability (Cronbach’s alpha = .84) and correlates significantly in the expected direction with self-reported measures of substance use (any alcohol, marijuana or other substance) (r = −.64), with self-reported alcohol use (r = −.66) and with self-reported marijuana use (r = −.54) (Mason et al, 2011). …”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%