Cynthia Ewell Foster
University of Michigan
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Children and Youth Services Review | 2017
Cynthia Ewell Foster; Adam G. Horwitz; Alvin Thomas; Kiel J. Opperman; Polly Y. Gipson; Amanda N. Burnside; Deborah M. Stone; Cheryl A. King
Youth who feel connected to people and institutions in their communities may be buffered from other risk factors in their lives. As a result, increasing connectedness has been recommended as a prevention strategy. In this study, we examined connectedness among 224 youth (ages 12-15), recruited from an urban medical emergency department, who were at elevated risk due to bullying perpetration or victimization, or low social connectedness. Regression analyses examined multiple domains of connectedness (family, school, peer, community) in relation to adjustment. Youth who felt more connected to parents reported lower levels of depressive symptoms, suicidal ideation, non-suicidal self-injury, and conduct problems, higher self-esteem and more adaptive use of free time. Youth who felt more connected to their school reported lower levels of depressive symptoms, suicidal ideation, social anxiety, and sexual activity, as well as higher levels of self-esteem and more adaptive use of free time. Community connectedness was associated with less social anxiety but more sexual activity, and peer connectedness was not related to youth adjustment in this unique sample. Findings suggest that family and school connectedness may buffer youth on a trajectory of risk, and may therefore be important potential targets for early intervention services.
Current opinion in psychology | 2018
Cheryl A. King; Alejandra Arango; Cynthia Ewell Foster
A comprehensive public health strategy for adolescent suicide prevention includes upstream prevention strategies, strategies for risk recognition, and services for those at risk. Interpersonal trauma and substance use are important prevention targets as each is associated with risk for suicide attempts. Multiple prevention programs target these factors; however, the Family Check-Up, designed to reduce substance use and behavioral problems, also has been associated with reduced suicide risk. Several youth screening instruments have shown utility, and a large-scale trial is underway to develop a computerized adaptive screen. Similarly, several types of psychotherapy have shown promise, and sufficiently powered studies are underway to provide more definitive results. The climbing youth suicide rate warrants an urgent, concerted effort to develop and implement effective prevention strategies.
Journal of Clinical Child and Adolescent Psychology | 2017
Ewa K. Czyz; Adam G. Horwitz; Carlos E. Yeguez; Cynthia Ewell Foster; Cheryl A. King
This study of adolescents seeking emergency department (ED) services and their parents examined parents’ self-efficacy beliefs to engage in suicide prevention activities, whether these beliefs varied based on teens’ characteristics, and the extent to which they were associated with adolescents’ suicide-related outcomes. Participants included 162 adolescents (57% female, 81.5% Caucasian), ages 13–17, and their parents. At index visit, parents rated their self-efficacy to engage in suicide prevention activities and their expectations regarding their teen’s future suicide risk. Adolescents’ ED visits for suicide-related concerns and suicide attempts were assessed 4 months later. Parents endorsed high self-efficacy to engage in most suicide prevention activities. At the same time, they endorsed considerable doubt in being able to keep their child safe if the teen has thoughts of suicide and in their child not attempting suicide in the future. Parents whose teens experienced follow-up suicide-related outcomes endorsed, at clinically meaningful effect sizes, lower self-efficacy for recognizing suicide warning signs, for obtaining the teen’s commitment to refrain from suicide, and for encouraging their teen to cope, as well as lower confidence that their teen will not attempt suicide; self-efficacy to recognize warning signs was at trend level. Despite endorsing high self-efficacy for the majority of suicide prevention activities, parents of high-risk teens expressed less confidence in their capacity to influence their teen’s suicidal behavior, which could undermine parents’ effort to implement these strategies. The relationship between parental self-efficacy and youth suicide-related outcomes points to its potential value in guiding clinical decision making and interventions.
Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology | 2008
Cynthia Ewell Foster; Judy Garber; Joseph A. Durlak
Journal of Youth and Adolescence | 2008
Cynthia Ewell Foster; Melissa C. Webster; Myrna M. Weissman; Daniel J. Pilowsky; Priya Wickramaratne; A. John Rush; Carroll W. Hughes; Judy Garber; Erin Malloy; Gabrielle Cerda; Susan G. Kornstein; Jonathan E. Alpert; Stephen R. Wisniewski; Madhukar H. Trivedi; Maurizio Fava; Cheryl A. King
Journal of Clinical Child and Adolescent Psychology | 2008
Cynthia Ewell Foster; Melissa C. Webster; Myrna M. Weissman; Daniel J. Pilowsky; Priya Wickramaratne; Ardesheer Talati; A. John Rush; Carroll W. Hughes; Judy Garber; Erin Malloy; Gabrielle Cerda; Susan G. Kornstein; Jonathan E. Alpert; Stephen R. Wisniewski; Madhukar H. Trivedi; Maurizio Fava; Cheryl A. King
Journal of Youth and Adolescence | 2010
Cheryl A. King; David C. R. Kerr; Michael N. Passarelli; Cynthia Ewell Foster; Christopher R. Merchant
Archive | 2013
Cheryl A. King; Cynthia Ewell Foster; Kelly M. Rogalski
Suicide and Life Threatening Behavior | 2017
Cynthia Ewell Foster; Amanda N. Burnside; Patricia K. Smith; Anne Kramer; Allie Wills; Cheryl A. King
Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry | 2018
Cheryl A. King; Alejandra Arango; Anne Kramer; Danielle Busby; Ewa K. Czyz; Cynthia Ewell Foster; Brenda Gillespie