Youth Mental Health First Aid (YMHFA) is a widely adopted professional development tool that helps educators across the United States improve their mental health literacy. Data from a pretest/posttest evaluation of the YMHFA training delivered at five schools are used to explore whether various YMHFA outcomes differ for teachers who have and have not received previous mental health training. Specifically, the current study compares scores on confidence, knowledge, negative attitudes, and intentions to intervene prior to completing the YMHFA program (i.e., at baseline), the rate of change in each measure, and satisfaction with the training across teachers with and without previous mental health prevention training. Our findings showed that teachers with previous training scored higher on confidence, mental health knowledge, and intentions to intervene at baseline and experienced different patterns of change after completion of the YMHFA training program, compared to teachers without prior training. Negative attitudes and training satisfaction did not reveal differences across training experiences. Study findings offer important program and policy implications about teachers’ training experiences, as well as the value of implementing YMHFA as a universal training in educational settings.
(Publisher abstract provided.)