Youth Empowerment Solutions for Peaceful Communities

This study has been completed.
Sponsor:
Information provided by (Responsible Party):
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier:
NCT00164593
First received: September 12, 2005
Last updated: April 4, 2012
Last verified: April 2012

September 12, 2005
April 4, 2012
April 2005
August 2008   (final data collection date for primary outcome measure)
Youth Violence [ Time Frame: 6 months ] [ Designated as safety issue: Yes ]
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Complete list of historical versions of study NCT00164593 on ClinicalTrials.gov Archive Site
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Youth Empowerment Solutions for Peaceful Communities
Youth Empowerment Solutions for Peaceful Communities

This project is an evaluation of an intervention to involve youth in creating community change for peace promotion and violence prevention. The intervention, Youth Empowerment Solutions for Peaceful Communities (YES), includes three components: youth empowerment activities, neighborhood organization development, and community development projects that involve youth and organizations working together.

Hypothesis 1: Efforts to engage youth in the community change process will enhance their attachment to their community, reduce their problem behaviors, and begin to change norms among their peers about community violence and interpersonal problem solving.

Hypothesis 2: Efforts to make community-based organizations more youth-friendly and engaging will assist them to be more effective in reaching their community enhancement goals and will expand youth involvement in their mission.

Hypothesis 3: Efforts to create more health-enhancing land use (e.g., beautification, community gardens, parks development) will improve social organization (e.g., social capital, social cohesion, and social support), and reduce the level of violent incidents and crime in the community.

The program will focus on youth and neighborhood organizations in one middle-school attendance area. A nearby middle-school attendance area will serve as a comparison community. We will assess change in community norms, fear, social cohesion and social capital using an existing community survey of adults in the two neighborhoods. A similar survey will assess changes in youths' social norms, fears, perceptions of social cohesion and social capital, as well as their violent behavior and ethnic identity and pride. We will also compare the intervention and comparison neighborhoods on several community-level measures including police incident data, hospital injury reports, school suspension data, and ratings of neighborhood qualities (e.g., vacant lots, community gardens, social interaction).

The long-term goals of YES are to:

  1. modify environmental conditions that contribute to youth violence;
  2. promote social norms supportive of community participation and nonviolence;
  3. increase perceptions of neighborhood safety among residents; and
  4. reduce the incidence of youth violence perpetration and victimization.
Interventional
Phase 1
Allocation: Non-Randomized
Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study
Intervention Model: Single Group Assignment
Masking: Open Label
Primary Purpose: Prevention
  • Violence
  • Juvenile Delinquency
  • Social Problems
  • Social Control, Informal
Behavioral: Youth Empowerment Solutions for Peaceful Communities
YES is a multi-faceted program that (1) engages 7th and 8th graders in a youth development program, (2) enhances neighborhood organizations' ability to include youth in their activities, and (3) connects the youth participants and adults in neighborhood organizations (e.g., crime watches, block groups, neighborhood associations) to carry out neighborhood improvement activities (e.g., community gardens, parks cleanup).
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*   Includes publications given by the data provider as well as publications identified by ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier (NCT Number) in Medline.
 
Completed
1142
August 2009
August 2008   (final data collection date for primary outcome measure)

Inclusion Criteria:

  • 7th and 8th graders in the intervention middle-school attendance area
  • Neighborhood organizations with at least 10 members serving the intervention middle-school attendance area

Exclusion Criteria:

  • Students who have been suspended or expelled during the intervention period
  • Neighborhood organizations that serve areas in both the intervention and comparison areas.
Both
12 Years to 15 Years
No
Contact information is only displayed when the study is recruiting subjects
United States
 
NCT00164593
CDC-NCIPC-4530, U49CE000348
No
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Not Provided
Principal Investigator: Marc Zimmerman, PhD University of Michigan School of Public Health
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
April 2012

ICMJE     Data element required by the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors and the World Health Organization ICTRP