Association between Intention to Quit School and Youth Depression: A Cluster Randomized Controlled Trial of the Effects of a Group CBT Course
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Date
2023-02Metadata
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Original version
Sætre, O. C. L., Keles, S., & Idsoe, T. (2024). Association between Intention to Quit School and youth depression: a cluster randomized controlled trial of the effects of a group CBT course. Scandinavian Journal of Educational Research, 68(3), 574-587. 10.1080/00313831.2023.2175242Abstract
We investigated changes in youths’ intentions to quit school after following a group-based cognitive behaviour therapy (CBT) based intervention for depressed adolescents in upper secondary school: the Adolescent Coping with Depression Course (ACDC). Data were collected from 228 youths, 133 of whom received the 14-week ACDC intervention and 95 who received usual care (UC). Structural equation models showed that symptoms of depression at post-test positively predicted intention to quit school at six-month follow-up after the intervention ended (β = .291, p < .001). Furthermore, ACDC, which showed a decrease in depressive symptoms post-test, had an indirect effect on adolescents’ intention to quit school at six-month follow-up (indirect β = −0.117 p = .018). Hence, targeting depression and implementing effective preventive programmes may prevent dropout from upper secondary school. Such interventions should thus be investigated in future studies.