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Dive into the research topics where Rebecca Lebeau is active.

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Featured researches published by Rebecca Lebeau.


Drug and Alcohol Dependence | 2011

Motivational interviewing to reduce substance-related consequences: Effects for incarcerated adolescents with depressed mood

L. A. R. Stein; Mary Clair; Rebecca Lebeau; Suzanne M. Colby; Nancy P. Barnett; Charles Golembeske; Peter M. Monti

BACKGROUND The impact of depressed mood on Motivational Interviewing (MI) to reduce risky behaviors and consequences in incarcerated adolescents was examined in this brief report. METHODS Adolescents (N=189) were randomly assigned to receive MI or Relaxation Training (RT). RESULTS At 3-month follow-up assessment, MI significantly reduced risks associated with marijuana use, with a trend towards reducing risks associated with alcohol use. There was also a trend for depressive symptoms to be associated with reduced risks after release. Interaction effects were non-significant, indicating no moderating effects for depressed mood on treatment outcome. CONCLUSIONS MI may be a useful treatment for incarcerated adolescents in order to reduce risks and consequences associated with substance use after release.


Journal of Substance Abuse Treatment | 2013

Ethnicity as a moderator of motivational interviewing for incarcerated adolescents after release

Mary Clair; L. A. R. Stein; Shayna Soenksen; Rosemarie A. Martin; Rebecca Lebeau; Charles Golembeske

Motivational interviewing (MI) has been found to be an effective treatment for substance using populations, including incarcerated adolescents. Although some studies suggest MI is more successful with individuals from minority backgrounds, the research remains mixed. The current study investigated the impact of ethnicity on treatment in reducing alcohol and marijuana use among incarcerated adolescents. Adolescents (14-19 years of age) were recruited from a state juvenile correctional facility and randomly assigned to receive MI or relaxation therapy (RT) (N=147; 48 White, 51 Hispanic, and 48 African American; 126 male; 21 female). Interviews were conducted at admission to the facility and 3 months after release. Results suggest that the effects of MI on treatment outcomes are moderated by ethnicity. Hispanic adolescents who received MI significantly decreased total number of drinks on heavy drinking days (NDHD) and percentage of heavy drinking days (PHDD) as compared to Hispanic adolescents who received RT. These findings suggest that MI is an efficacious treatment for an ethnic minority juvenile justice-involved population in need of evidence-based treatments.


American Journal on Addictions | 2011

A Web-Based Study of Gamma Hydroxybutyrate (GHB): Patterns, Experiences, and Functions of Use

L. A. R. Stein; Rebecca Lebeau; Mary Clair; Rosemarie A. Martin; Monte Bryant; Susan A. Storti; Peter M. Monti

GHB (gamma hydroxybutyrate) was developed as a general anesthetic. Due to dosing difficulty and side effects, regular use was discontinued. Medical uses include treating sleep and alcohol disorders. In the 1990s, it was promoted as a supplement and taken to improve mood and sex. GHB and its analogs (gamma butyrolactone and butanediol) were widely available until federal regulations were put into effect with mounting evidence of adverse events. This survey (N = 61) study was conducted to assess patterns, experiences, and functions of use. Much of what is understood regarding GHB treatment is based on hospital case studies for overdose and withdrawal. Not enough is known about prevention, reducing use and associated problems, or relapse. We know little about specific drug effect expectancies, triggers, coping skills, and consequences of use (positive/negative). While the drug treatment literature has a wealth of information to draw upon, GHB-specific information may greatly assist relapse prevention. 


Journal of Child & Adolescent Substance Abuse | 2008

Validation of the Marijuana Effect Expectancy Questionnaire-Brief

O. Torrealday; L. A. R. Stein; Nancy P. Barnett; Charles Golembeske; Rebecca Lebeau; Suzanne M. Colby; Peter M. Monti

ABSTRACT The purpose of this study was to evaluate a brief version of the Marijuana Effect Expectancy Questionnaire (MEEQ; Schafer & Brown, 1991). The original MEEQ was reduced to 6 items (MEEQ-B). Principal component analysis (PCA) was performed and two factors were identified (positive effects and negative effects) accounting for 52.3% of the variance. Internal consistencies (0.42 to 0.60) were slightly lower than those of the original MEEQ. The negative effect expectancy scale correlated with criterion variables that assess marijuana use (p ≤ .05). This measure is a helpful tool for clinicians to use when assessing youth expectancies. Replication across different samples of adjudicated youth is recommended.


Drug and Alcohol Dependence | 2010

Validation of a measure to assess alcohol- and marijuana-related risks and consequences among incarcerated adolescents

L. A. R. Stein; Rebecca Lebeau; Mary Clair; Joseph S. Rossi; Rose Marie Martin; Charles Golembeske

Few measures exist to assess risky behaviors and consequences as they relate to substance use in juvenile delinquents. This study sought to validate such a measure on a racially and ethnically diverse sample (N=175). Results indicate that alcohol-related risky behaviors and consequences comprise a single scale as do marijuana-related risky behaviors and consequences. Furthermore, results suggest that the retention of common items for both scales produces reliable and valid scales and maintains parsimony. Internal consistencies were more than adequate (0.72-0.83) and test-retest stabilities, even across several months were acceptable (0.52-0.50). The scales evidenced a high degree of concurrent and predictive incremental validity in predicting conduct disorder, dependence symptoms, and consumption patterns. Researchers can use these scales to measure a generalized construct tapping risks and consequences as related to alcohol and marijuana use. Ease of use may make these scales appealing to clinicians who can provide feedback to clients regarding risky behaviors involving alcohol and marijuana.


Journal of Substance Abuse Treatment | 2016

The Impact of Motivational Interviewing on Delinquent Behaviors in Incarcerated Adolescents

Mary Clair-Michaud; Rosemarie A. Martin; Linda A.R. Stein; Shayna S. Bassett; Rebecca Lebeau; Charles Golembeske

The impact of Motivational Interviewing (MI) on risky behaviors of incarcerated adolescents and adults has been investigated with promising results. Findings suggest that MI reduces substance use, improves motivation and confidence to reduce use, and decreases risky behaviors. The current study investigated the impact of MI on general, alcohol-related, and marijuana-related delinquent behaviors in incarcerated adolescents. Participants in the study were incarcerated adolescents in a state correctional facility in the Northeast region and were assessed as part of a larger randomized clinical trial. Adolescents were randomly assigned to receive MI or relaxation therapy (RT) (N=189) treatment. Delinquent behaviors and depressive symptomatology were measured using the Delinquent Activities Scale (DAS; Reavy, Stein, Paiva, Quina, & Rossi, 2012) and the Center for Epidemiological Studies-Depression scale (CES-D; Radloff, 1991) respectively. Findings indicate that depression moderated treatment effects. Compared to RT, MI was better at reducing predatory aggression and alcohol-related predatory aggression 3 months post-release when depressive symptoms were low. Identifying an efficacious treatment for these adolescents may benefit society in that it may decrease crimes against persons (i.e., predatory aggression) post release.


American Journal of Drug and Alcohol Abuse | 2012

Preliminary Web-Based Measures Development for GHB: Expectancies, Functions, and Withdrawal

L. A. R. Stein; Rebecca Lebeau; Mary Clair; Rosemarie A. Martin; Monte Bryant; Susan A. Storti

Background: Much of what is understood regarding gamma hydroxybutyrate (GHB) treatment is based on hospital case studies for overdose and withdrawal, and there are currently no measures developed specifically for GHB or its analogs (e.g., gamma butyrolactone and 1,4-butanediol) to assess drug effect expectancies, reasons for starting use, withdrawal effects, and knowledge and opinions about use. Objectives: This pilot study (N = 61) was conducted to begin measures development to assess experiences, functions of use, and opinions regarding use as indicated by respondents taking a Web-based survey. Methods: Minimum average partial correlation and parallel analysis procedures are employed to create scales. Results: Scales were developed to assess expectancies, reasons for use, withdrawal, and knowledge/opinions of use with median α = .79 and that account for 8.69–24.17% of the variance. Conclusion: Scales have relatively good psychometric properties and replication is needed. Scientific Significance: GHB-specific measures may greatly assist in furthering our understanding of protective and risk factors for use, and withdrawal phenomena.


Health Promotion Practice | 2012

Facilitating Grant Proposal Writing in Health Behaviors for University Faculty A Descriptive Study

L. A. R. Stein; Mary Clair; Rebecca Lebeau; James O. Prochaska; Joseph S. Rossi; J. Swift

Grant proposal writing in the behavioral sciences is important for fiscal reasons and scientific reasons at many universities. This report describes a grant proposal–writing seminar series provided to University faculty (N = 20) and explores factors facilitating and impeding writing. Summary statistics are provided for quantitative data. Free responses were sorted by independent raters into meaningful categories. As a consequence of the training, 45% planned to submit within 18 months; 80% of grant proposals targeted NIH. At 1-year follow-up, 40% actually submitted grants. Factors impeding grant proposal writing included competing professional demands; factors facilitating writing included regularly scheduled feedback on written proposal sections and access to expert collaborators. Obtaining grants generates financial resources, facilitates training experiences, and vastly contributes to the growth and dissemination of the knowledge base in an area.


Journal of Child & Adolescent Substance Abuse | 2015

Cannabis Withdrawal Among Detained Adolescents: Exploring the Impact of Nicotine and Race.

Shayna Soenksen; L. A. R. Stein; Joanna Brown; JoAnn R. Stengel; Joseph S. Rossi; Rebecca Lebeau

Rates of marijuana use among detained youths are exceptionally high. Research suggests a cannabis withdrawal syndrome is valid and clinically significant; however, these studies have mostly been conducted in highly controlled laboratory settings with treatment-seeking, White adults. The present study analyzed archival data to explore the magnitude of cannabis withdrawal symptoms within a diverse sample of detained adolescents while controlling for tobacco use and investigating the impact of race on symptom reports. Adolescents recruited from a juvenile correctional facility (N= 93) completed a background questionnaire and the Marijuana Withdrawal Checklist. Analyses revealed a significant main effect for level of tobacco use on severity of irritability as well as for level of marijuana use on severity of craving to smoke marijuana and strange/wild dreams. Furthermore, a significant main effect for race was found with Black adolescents reporting lower withdrawal discomfort scores and experiencing less severe depressed mood, difficulty sleeping, nervousness/anxiety, and strange/wild dreams.


Substance Abuse | 2014

Measuring Behaviors of Individual Adolescents During Group-Based Substance Abuse Intervention

L. A. R. Stein; Mary Clair; Rosemarie A. Martin; Shayna Soenksen; Rebecca Lebeau; Damaris J. Rohsenow; Christopher W. Kahler; Warren Hurlbut; Peter M. Monti

BACKGROUND Group treatment is delivered in youth correctional facilities, yet groups may be iatrogenic. Few measures with demonstrated psychometric properties exist to track behaviors of individuals during groups. The authors assessed psychometrics for the Group Process-Individual Level measure (GP-IL) of group treatment. METHODS N = 152 teens were randomized to 1 of 2 groups (10 sessions each). Adolescents, counselors, and observers rated teen behaviors at sessions 3 and 10. GP-IL assesses reinforcement for deviancy and positive behaviors, member rejection, and counselor connection and praise. RESULTS Internal consistency and 1-month stability were demonstrated. Concurrent validity is supported by correlations with measures expected to be associated with group behavior (e.g., coping skills). Counselors and observers rated more deviancy during interactive skills-building groups versus didactic psychoeducational groups (P ≤ .005). Scales evidenced incremental validity. CONCLUSIONS GP-IL offers a sound method of tracking adolescent behaviors for professionals working with groups. Counselors ratings were most reliable and valid overall.

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L. A. R. Stein

University of Rhode Island

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Mary Clair

University of Rhode Island

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Joseph S. Rossi

University of Rhode Island

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Shayna Soenksen

University of Rhode Island

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