At a glance
ClinicalIndex Comparison RecordStandardized by ClinicalIndex from the ClinicalTrials.gov record · verify against the source.
Girls In Recovery From Life Stress (GIRLS) Study
In Brief
A Phase 2 clinical trial evaluating Trauma Adaptive Recovery Group Education and Therapy and Enhanced Treatment As Usual for Posttraumatic Stress Disorder and PTSD. Completed, enrolled 70 participants across 7 sites.
Detailed Summary
This study will compare treatment outcomes of 90 adolescent girls who are (a) at high risk for delinquency and/or are juvenile justice involved, and (b) who are experiencing symptoms of PTSD: 45 of the girls will receive Trauma Affect Regulation: Guide for Education and Therapy (TARGET, Frisman, Ford, Lin, Mallon, \& Chang, in press), and their outcomes will be compared to 45 girls who receive Enhanced Treatment as Usual (ETAU). As part of their involvement, participants will make phone calls to provide data via an interactive voice response system (IVR), meet 3 times for a research interview, and be invited to participate in a cognitive assessment substudy at the Olin Neuropsychiatric Research Center at Hartford Hospital.
Study Details
Timeline
Interventions
Trauma Affect Regulation: Guidelines for Education and Therapy (TARGET; Ford \& Russo, 2006) is a manualized gender-specific treatment for PTSD. The 12-session individual therapy version in the present study is being adapted for adolescent girls based on a parallel version for young mothers and a group version that has been field tested with more than 20 adolescent girls. TARGET teaches a practical 7-step sequence of skills for processing and managing trauma-related reactions to current stressful experiences. The skills are designed in a sequence mirroring the three phases of complex traumatic stress disorder treatment (Ford, Courtois, Van der Hart, Nijenhuis \& Steele, 2005), summarized by an acronym "FREEDOM". TARGET also uses creative arts activities: personalized "lifelines" via collage, drawing, poetry, and writing.
Enhanced Treatment as Usual (ETAU) is a 12-session supportive therapy adapted from the Present Centered Therapy co-developed by the first author (McDonagh-Coyle, Friedman, McHugo, Ford, Mueser, \& Sengupta, 2005). In ETAU therapists invite the participant to talk about goals or problems that are important to her. The therapist's focus is on providing the core conditions of client centered psychotherapy (nonjudgmental acceptance, empathy, interpersonal warmth) and engaging the participant in a strengths-based solution-focused reflection on how she is successful (or has been in the past) in managing stressors, handling problems, achieving personal goals, and developing healthy relationships with peers, family, and other community members.