Prevention and early intervention programs that strengthen the skills of parents and teachers and encourage home-school partnerships can provide the needed support to prevent the escalation of children's aggressive behavior problems and promote social competence and school readiness in young children.
To prevent children from progressing on the trajectory from early onset conduct problems to later substance abuse, early intervention and preventive efforts should concentrate on reducing known risk factors and increasing known protective factors related to delinquency and substance abuse. The Incredible Years training series does this by addressing four predictor variables: (a) promoting parent involvement by helping parents learn how to be more positive and nurturing in their parenting styles and less harsh or abusive in their discipline approaches; (b) promoting stronger school bonding by increasing positive teacher relationships with children and with their parents; (c) increasing children's social competence; and (d) promoting children's self-regulation skills by teaching teachers and parents to help children learn anger management strategies, problem-solving skills, appropriate social behaviors, and friendly communication. This multifaceted approach to early intervention reduces child risk factors, such as conduct problems, and strengthens the protective factors previously listed that will lay the groundwork for preventing later development of substance abuse and other antisocial behaviors.