Primary and Secondary Control Enhancement Training
An Effective Practice
Description
The Primary and Secondary Control Enhancement Training (PASCET) program is an eight-session child depression treatment program. The theoretical background for the program is based on managing depression through a two-process model of control. Primary control involves rewarding oneself by identifying enjoyable activities and making objective, modifiable goals (such as school achievement or relationships with peers) that conform to one's wishes. Secondary control involves rewarding oneself or avoiding negative thoughts or self-punishment by adjusting one's beliefs or interpretations in response to objective, nonmodifiable conditions (such as parental divorce). The approach of PASCET is that depression may be addressed, in part, by applying primary control when faced with distressing conditions that are modifiable and using secondary control when confronted with conditions that are not.
Goal / Mission
The goal of this program is to prevent and control depression among children.
Results / Accomplishments
PASCET has been evaluated in a single comparison group study conducted in the early 1990s (Weisz et al., 1997). The sample of 48 students was drawn from three elementary schools with a total population of about 500 students in grades 3 through 6. Despite the small sample size, the study used a randomized control design and retested participants nine months after completion of the program, finding significant and sizable program effects on reducing levels of child self-reported depression.
About this Promising Practice
Organization(s)
Harvard Medical School
Primary Contact
John R. Weisz
President and CEO, Judge Baker Children’s Center
Professor of Psychology, Harvard Medical School
53 Parker Hill Avenue
Boston, MA 02120-3225
(617) 278-4299
jweisz@jbcc.harvard.edu
President and CEO, Judge Baker Children’s Center
Professor of Psychology, Harvard Medical School
53 Parker Hill Avenue
Boston, MA 02120-3225
(617) 278-4299
jweisz@jbcc.harvard.edu
Topics
Health / Mental Health & Mental Disorders
Health / Children's Health
Community / Social Environment
Health / Children's Health
Community / Social Environment
Organization(s)
Harvard Medical School
Source
Promising Practices Network
Date of publication
Feb 2007
Location
Los Angeles, CA
For more details
Target Audience
Children