Strong African American Families (SAAF)

University of Georgia

Program Type

Education or Training Program

Cost

$501 to $1,000

Evidence Type

Empirically-Defined Evidence

SPRC Comprehensive Approach

Life Skills and Resilience, Connectedness

Program or Intervention Summary

The Strong African American Families (SAAF) programis a culturally tailored, family-centered intervention for 10-14 year-old African American youth and their caregivers. The goal of SAAF is to prevent substance use and behavior problems among youth by strengthening positive family interactions, preparing youth for their teen years and enhancing caregivers’ efforts to help youth reach positive goals.

For parents, SAAF aims to strengthen parenting practices related to monitoring and supporting youth, articulating parental expectations for alcohol use, communicating with youth about sex, and promoting positive racial socialization. It also works to promote youths’ ability to focus on goals for the future, resist involvement in risk behaviors, maintain negative images of risk behaviors and peers who engage in them, and accept parental influences.

Type Education or Training Program
Setting PK-12 School
People People Who Live in Rural Areas, Low Income
Languages English
Study Method Quantitative Design
Implementer Requirement Adults, People with suicide-centered living or lived experience
Training Requirement Yes
Delivery Options In-Person
Risk and Protective Factors History of depression and other mental illnesses, Impulsive or aggressive tendencies, Substance use, Strong sense of cultural identity

Is there a broken link on this page? Let us know!