Background: A worldwide and ever-growing population of children are using psychoactive substances. To slow this problem, the Child Intervention for Living Drug-Free (CHILD) Curriculum was created to train treatment providers on how to screen, assess, and treat children between the ages of 4-12 years of age exposed to or actively using psychoactive substances. The purpose of the present project was to evaluate the extent to which completion of a six-session training of the six courses of the CHILD Curriculum met the objective of increasing the participants' knowledge of the Curriculum's approach to treating children for substance use problems.
Methods: 71 participants from Africa, Asia, and South America were invited for training and 100% accepted the invitation. Trainees completed an in-person small-group course, occurring over 32 days and comprising 256 total hours. During the CHILD Curriculum training, they completed six separate, 20-item, multiple choice knowledge assessment measures, one for each of the six courses comprising the Curriculum.
Results: Significant (ps<.001) improvement in knowledge in each course was associated with a multivariate measure of strength of the relationship that indicated the change was substantial for five courses (R2s>.5) and moderate for a sixth course. Percentage change from baseline varied from a low of 17% to a high of 63%.
Conclusion: The CHILD Curriculum provides a useful educational framework to ensure knowledge gains by trainees. This curriculum content and evaluation provides a framework for future training of providers to pre-adolescent children who use psychoactive substances or are at risk for such use.
Keywords: Child, pre-adolescent; Substance use; Substance use disorder treatment; Training.