Title: Family-based Prevention of Offending: A Meta-Analysis
1Family-based Prevention of Offending A
Meta-Analysis
- David P. Farrington Brandon C. Welsh
- 2003
- Jenna Ayers
- Radford University
2Overview
- Review of the effectiveness of family-based
prevention programs in reducing offending and
antisocial behavior by children and adolescents. - Family-based programs typically target family
risk factors. - Goal aims to prepare and maintain systematic
reviews and to make them available electronically.
3Previous Research
- Narrative reviews of effect of family-based
interventions to prevent delinquency and later
criminal offending - Serketich Dumas (1996)
- Cochrane review completed by Woolfenden,
Williams, Peat (2002)
4Systematic Review
- Why?
- Use rigorous methods for locating, appraising,
and synthesizing evidence from evaluation studies - Explicit objectives
- Explicit criteria for inclusion and exclusion of
studies - Wide-ranging methods for searching for studies
that are designed to reduce bias
5Method
- Selection of Evaluations (Inclusion)
- 1. The family and family factors
- 2. Outcome measure of delinquency or antisocial
child behavior - 3. High quality methodologically
- 4. Original sample size
6Searching Strategies
- Original aim to update the review of
family-based crime prevention in the 1997
Maryland Report - Began searches in 1997
- 1. Recent reviews
- 2. Articles in major journals
- 3. Youth Update
- 4. Contacts
7Measuring Effect Size
- Aimed to measure 4 different effects in each
study - 1. Short-term effect on delinquency
- 2. Short-term effects on child antisocial
behavior - 3. Long-term effects on offending
- 4. Long-term effects on antisocial behavior
8Main Measure of Effect Size
- The standardized mean difference d, which
summarizes the difference between the
experimental and control groups in standard
deviation units - D (Mc-Me)/s
- Positive value of d indicates a desirable effect
of the intervention
9Family-based Prevention Programs
- Home Visiting (4)
- Day Care/Preschool programs (5)
- Parent Training programs (10)
- School-based programs (7)
- Home/Community programs with Older Children (8)
- Multi-systemic Therapy Programs (6)
10Meta-AnalysisMean Effect Sizes
Category Low CI High CI Mean Sig
A .111 .360 .235 2/4
B .147 .371 .259 4/5
C .274 .517 .395 5/10
D -.014 .149 .068 3/7
E .056 .306 .181 3/8
F .281 .548 .414 2/6
Total .278 .269 .223 19/40
11Mean Effect Sizes
Delinquency Low CI High CI Mean Sig
Short-term .132 .315 .224 5/12
Long-term .281 .464 .372 6/10
Total .250 .391 .321 10/19
Antisocial behavior
Short-term .157 .252 .204 11/26
Long-term .016 .201 .109 2/7
Total .146 .246 .196 11/27
12Results of Meta Analysis
- Suggest that prevalence of offending could be
reduced by about 10-15 by implementing such
programs. - More than half of all evaluations found a
significant decrease in delinquency - Effects on delinquency persisted in long-term
evaluation studies
13Results
- Most effective types of programs used behavioral
parent training - Least effective were those based in schools
- All other types of family-based programs were
effective
14Conclusions
- 40 of the highest quality family-based crime
prevention programs were reviewed - Programs grouped into 6 categories
- These family-based programs had desirable effects
in reducing delinquency and antisocial child
behavior
15Future Research
- More large-scale evaluations are needed using
randomized experiments - Ideally, programs focusing more clearly and more
narrowly on family risk factors should be
implemented and evaluated - More efforts should be made to determine links in
the causal chain between family processes and
offending - More long term follow ups should be carried out
to establish the persistence of effects
16Future Research
- Important to investigate why effect sizes are
greater in smaller scale studies than in larger
scale ones. - Future experiments needed that attempt to
disentangle the different elements of successful
programs - Know more about the economic efficiency of
family-based crime prevention programs
17Bottom Line
- Existing evidence suggests that family-based
prevention programs are effective in reducing
offending. - More of these types of programs should be
implemented and evaluated.
18(No Transcript)