NCJ Number
184743
Date Published
December 2000
Length
8 pages
Publication Series
Annotation
This Bulletin chronicles the 30-year evolution of Functional Family Therapy (FFT), sets forth the program's core principles, goals, and techniques, and reviews its research foundations.
Abstract
The FFT is a family-based prevention and intervention program that has been applied successfully in a variety of contexts to treat a range of high-risk youth and their families. The Bulletin describes community implementation of FFT and provides an example of effective replication. The success of FFT as both a prevention and an intervention program results from its integration of a clear, comprehensive, and multisystemic clinical model with ongoing research on clinical process and outcomes. FFT can reduce recidivism and prevent the onset of delinquency. Unique to FFT is its systematic yet individualized family-focused approach to juvenile crime, violence, drug abuse, and other related problems. The therapist can adjust and adapt program goals to each family's unique characteristics, thus ensuring treatment fidelity while remaining respectful of individual families and cultures and unique community needs. Figures, resources, references
Date Published: December 1, 2000
Downloads
Similar Publications
- Trends for Background Checks for Firearm Transfers, 1999–2018: The First 20 Years of the Permanent Brady Act Period
- Audit of the Office of Justice Programs Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention Mentoring Opportunities for Youth Initiative Grants Awarded to Sea Research Foundation, Inc., Mystic, Connecticut
- Factor Structure of the Difficulties in Emotion Regulation Scale among Early Adolescents: Results from the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development Study