Darius Tandon
Northwestern University
8 Papers
12 Citations
Darius Tandon is an academic researcher from Northwestern University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Psychological intervention & Community-based participatory research. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 8 publications. Previous affiliations of Darius Tandon include Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine.
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Papers
A randomized controlled trial of a trauma-informed school prevention program for urban youth: Rationale, design, and methods
Tamar Mendelson,Laura K. Clary,Erica Ms Sibinga,Darius Tandon,Rashelle J. Musci,Kristin Mmari,David S. Salkever,Elizabeth A. Stuart,Nick Ialongo +8 more
TL;DR: This randomized controlled trial testing the impact of RAP Club, a trauma-informed intervention for eighth graders that includes mindfulness as a core component, identifies factors related to successful program implementation to inform future program use and dissemination.
16
After 10 Years: A Vision Forward for Progress in Community Health Partnerships
Suzanne M. Dolwick Grieb,Latrice C. Pichon,Simona Kwon,Karen Hye-cheon Kim Yeary,Darius Tandon +4 more
TL;DR: It is hoped that community and academic stakeholders will be able to use these priorities as a guide to their community-engaged research in the coming years.
Acceptability and preliminary outcomes of a peer‐led depression prevention intervention for African American adolescents and young adults in employment training programs
TL;DR: In this article, the acceptability and preliminary outcomes from an open trial of a depression prevention intervention for low-income African American adolescents and young adults in employment training programs were examined.
6
Association of home visitors' and mothers' attachment style with family engagement.
Elizabeth McFarlane,Lori Burrell,Loretta Fuddy,Darius Tandon,D. Christian Derauf,Philip Leaf,Anne K. Duggan +6 more
TL;DR: The authors found that mothers with high attachment anxiety were less trusting of highly anxious home visitors and more trusting of avoidant home visitors, while home visitors high on attachment avoidance were more likely to respond to these issues.