1,759 research outputs found
Impact of MAYSI-2 Mental Health Screening in Juvenile Detention
This poster reports on factors that influenced the rapid adoption and implementation of the Massachusetts Youth Screening Instrument-version 2 (MAYSI-2) and the perceived consequences of routine MAYSI-2 mental health screening. Semi-structured interviews and focus groups were conducted with administrators, managers, and front-line staff in juvenile detention centers in three states (n=19). Results will allow us to better inform juvenile justice facilities regarding the conditions under which screening can more often result in increases in mental health services to youth entering the system and help guide future efforts to provide technology to juvenile justice programs in the interest of youths
Impact of Mental Health Screening with the Massachusetts Youth Screening Instrument (MAYSI-2) in Juvenile Detention
Introduction: Recent evidence suggests that the prevalence of mental health disorders among youth entering juvenile pretrial detention centers is two to three times higher than youths in the general population (Teplin, Abram, McClelland, Dulcan & Mericle, 2002). Within the past five years, mental health screening upon entry to a juvenile justice facility has become standard practice across the nation. We know more about the validity and reliability of mental health screening tools used in this context than we do about the factors that facilitate their implementation. If tools are not implemented properly, their adequate validity is virtually lost. Effective screening procedures require attention to how screening instruments are put into place and how they actually function within juvenile justice facilities. Introduced in 2000, the Massachusetts Youth Screening Instrument—Second Version (MAYSI-2; Grisso & Barnum, 2006) is now the most widely used mental health screening tool in juvenile justice secure facilities in the United States
Do Adult MH Services Need to be Developmentally Appropriate?
State level adult mental health administrators express little belief in needing developmentally appropriate services for young adults, and few such programs exist across the country
Measuring homelessness and residential stability: The residential time-line follow-back inventory
Reliable and valid longitudinal residential histories are needed to assess interventions to reduce homelessness and increase community tenure. This study examined the test-retest reliability, sensitivity to change, and concurrent validity of the Residential Time-Line Follow-Back (TLFB) Inventory, a method used to record residential histories in the Collaborative Program to Prevent Homelessness (n = 1,381). The Residential TLFB Inventory yielded temporally stable aggregate measures of duration in residential categories, and it revealed significant differences in change over time when contrasting study groups. A comparison of agency and participant data at one site
The Family Options Project: Implementing an Innovative Intervention for Parents with Mental Illnesses and Their Families
The Family Options Project reflects a productive partnership between researchers and providers at the UMMS Center for Mental Health Services Research and Employment Options, Inc., Marlborough, MA The Family Options Intervention is an evidence-informed psychiatric rehabilitation intervention, developed and tested within the context of a community-based agency setting
Identification of the Infrared Counterpart to a Newly Discovered X-ray Source in the Galactic Center
We present first results of a campaign to find and identify new compact
objects in the Galactic Center. Selecting candidates from a combination of
Chandra and 2MASS survey data, we search for accretion disk signatures via
infrared spectroscopy. We have found the infrared counterpart to the Chandra
source CXO J174536.1-285638, the spectrum of which has strong Br-gamma and HeI
emission. The presence of CIII, NIII, and HeII indicate a binary system. We
suspect that the system is some form of high-mass binary system, either a
high-mass X-ray binary or a colliding wind binary.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures, ApJ accepted, 200
Normative Data for the NeuroCom Sensory Organization Test in US Military Special Operations Forces.
CONTEXT: Postural stability is the ability to control the center of mass in relation to a person\u27s base of support and can be affected by both musculoskeletal injury and traumatic brain injury. The NeuroCom Sensory Organization Test (SOT) can be used to objectively quantify impairments to postural stability. The ability of postural stability to predict injury and be used as an acute injury-evaluation tool makes it essential to the screening and rehabilitation process. To our knowledge, no published normative data for the SOT from a healthy, highly active population are available for use as a reference for clinical decision making.
OBJECTIVE: To present a normative database of SOT scores from a US Military Special Operations population that can be used for future comparison.
DESIGN: Cross-sectional study.
SETTING: Human performance research laboratory.
PATIENTS OR OTHER PARTICIPANTS: A total of 542 active military operators from Naval Special Warfare Combatant-Craft Crewmen (n = 149), Naval Special Warfare Command, Sea, Air, and Land (n = 101), US Army Special Operations Command (n = 171), and Air Force Special Operations Command (n = 121).
MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE(S): Participants performed each of the 6 SOT conditions 3 times. Scores for each condition, total equilibrium composite score, and ratio scores for the somatosensory, visual, and vestibular systems were recorded.
RESULTS: Differences were present across all groups for SOT conditions 1 (P \u3c .001), 2 (P = .001), 4 (P \u3e .001), 5 (P \u3e .001), and 6 (P = .001) and total equilibrium composite (P = .000), visual (P \u3e .001), vestibular (P = .002), and preference (P \u3e .001) NeuroCom scores.
CONCLUSIONS: Statistical differences were evident in the distribution of postural stability across US Special Operations Forces personnel. This normative database for postural stability, as assessed by the NeuroCom SOT, can provide context when clinicians assess a Special Operations Forces population or any other groups that maintain a high level of conditioning and training
Correlates of current menthol cigarette and flavored other tobacco product use among U.S. young adults
Flavored and menthol tobacco products are particularly appealing to young adults. However, little is known about factors associated with their use in this population
Correlates of current menthol cigarette and flavored other tobacco product use among U.S. young adults
Flavored and menthol tobacco products are particularly appealing to young adults. However, little is known about factors associated with their use in this population
How does subjective well-being evolve with age? A literature review
This literature review provides an overview of the theoretical and empirical research in several disciplines on the relation between ageing and subjective well-being, i.e., how subjective well-being evolves across the lifespan. Because of the different methodologies, data sets and samples used, comparison among disciplines and studies is difficult. However, extant studies do show either a U-shaped, inverted U-shaped or linear relation between ageing and subjective well-being
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