25 research outputs found

    Pilot to policy: statewide dissemination and implementation of evidence-based treatment for traumatized youth

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    Abstract Background A model for statewide dissemination of evidence-based treatment (EBT) for traumatized youth was piloted and taken to scale across North Carolina (NC). This article describes the implementation platform developed, piloted, and evaluated by the NC Child Treatment Program to train agency providers in Trauma-Focused Cognitive Behavioral Therapy using the National Center for Child Traumatic Stress Learning Collaborative (LC) Model on Adoption & Implementation of EBTs. This type of LC incorporates adult learning principles to enhance clinical skills development as part of training and many key implementation science strategies while working with agencies and clinicians to implement and sustain the new practice. Methods Clinicians (n = 124) from northeastern NC were enrolled in one of two TF-CBT LCs that lasted 12 months each. During the LC clinicians were expected to take at least two clients through TF-CBT treatment with fidelity and outcomes monitoring by trainers who offered consultation by phone and during trainings. Participating clinicians initiated treatment with 281 clients. The relationship of clinician and client characteristics to treatment fidelity and outcomes was examined using hierarchical linear regression. Results One hundred eleven clinicians completed general training on trauma assessment batteries and TF-CBT. Sixty-five clinicians met all mastery and fidelity requirements to meet roster criteria. One hundred fifty-six (55%) clients had fidelity-monitored assessment and TF-CBT. Child externalizing, internalizing, and post-traumatic stress symptoms, as well as parent distress levels, decreased significantly with treatment fidelity moderating child PTSD outcomes. Since this pilot, 11 additional cohorts of TF-CBT providers have been trained to these roster criteria. Conclusion Scaling up or outcomes-oriented implementation appears best accomplished when training incorporates: 1) practice-based learning, 2) fidelity coaching, 3) clinical assessment and outcomes-oriented treatment, 4) organizational skill-building to address barriers for agencies, and 5) linking clients to trained clinicians via an online provider roster. Demonstrating clinician performance and client outcomes in this pilot and subsequent cohorts led to legislative support for dissemination of a service array of EBTs by the NC Child Treatment Program

    Concert recording 2017-11-06

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    [Track 1]. Sebben crudele / Antonio Caldara -- [Track 2]. Orpheus with his lute / William Schuman -- [Track 3]. Heaven help my heart -- [Track 4]. Little elegy / John Duke -- [Track 5]. Bel piacere / G.F. Handel -- [Track 6]. I dreamed a dream from Les Miserables / Claude-Michel Schönberg -- [Track 7]. In questa tomba oscura / Ludwig van Beethoven -- [Track 8]. Lasst mich nur auf meinem Sattel gelten! from Freisinn / Robert Shumann -- [Track 9]. FĂŒr Musik / Robert Franz -- [Track 10]. Edelweiss from The sound of music / Rodgers & Hammerstein -- [Track 11]. Tu lo sai / Giuseppe Torelli -- [Track 12]. GlĂŒck / Max Reger -- [Track 13] Le colibri / Ernest Chausson -- [Track 14] Der Der SchĂ€fer / Hugo Wolf -- [Track 15]. A route to the sky / Jake Heggie -- [Track 16]. Ich liebe dich / Edvard Grieg -- [Track 17]. When it all fall down from Chaplin / Christopher Curtis -- [Track 18]. Voyage a Paris / Francis Poulenc -- [Track 19]. Crucifixion / arr. Hall Johnson -- [Track 20]. Bright is the ring of words / Ralph Vaughan Williams -- [Track 21]. Non t\u27amo piu / Francesco Paolo Tosti -- [Track 22]. Se tu m\u27ami / Alessandro Parisotti -- [Track 23]. I love the way from Something\u27s rotten / Kirkpatrick & Kirkpatrick -- [Track 24]. A madrigal / Herbert Howells -- [Track 25]. El majo discrete / Enrique Granados -- [Track 26]. The roadside fire / Ralph Vaughan Williams -- [Track 27]. Che fiero costume / Giovanni Legrenzi -- [Track 28]. An die Musik / Franz Shubert -- [Track 29]. I will sing new songs of gladness / Anton Dvorak -- [Track 30]. Full fathom five from The tempest / Henry Purcell -- [Track 31]. Nimmerstate Libe / Hugo Wolf -- [Track 32]. Deposuit potentes from Magnificat / Johann Sebastian Bach -- [Track 33]. Vaghissima sembiante / Stefano Donaudy -- [Track 34]. Tormani a vaghegghiar from Alcina / G.F. Handel -- [Track 35]. Nobody knows this little rose / John Duke -- [Track 36]. Let beauty awake / Ralph Vaughan Williams -- [Track 37]. Steal away / arr. Hall Johnson -- [Track 38]. Come paride vezzoso from L\u27elisir d\u27amore / Kirkpatrick & Kirkpatrick -- [Track 39]. Dich, teure Halle from TannhaĂŒser / Richard Wagner -- [Track 40]. Non t\u27accotare all\u27urna / Giuseppe Verdi -- [Track 41]. Zur Rosenzeit / Edvard Grieg

    The James Webb Space Telescope Mission

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    Twenty-six years ago a small committee report, building on earlier studies, expounded a compelling and poetic vision for the future of astronomy, calling for an infrared-optimized space telescope with an aperture of at least 4m4m. With the support of their governments in the US, Europe, and Canada, 20,000 people realized that vision as the 6.5m6.5m James Webb Space Telescope. A generation of astronomers will celebrate their accomplishments for the life of the mission, potentially as long as 20 years, and beyond. This report and the scientific discoveries that follow are extended thank-you notes to the 20,000 team members. The telescope is working perfectly, with much better image quality than expected. In this and accompanying papers, we give a brief history, describe the observatory, outline its objectives and current observing program, and discuss the inventions and people who made it possible. We cite detailed reports on the design and the measured performance on orbit.Comment: Accepted by PASP for the special issue on The James Webb Space Telescope Overview, 29 pages, 4 figure

    The Adverse Childhood Experiences Study and Beyond

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    Protocols for the Sex-Abuse Evaluation

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    Behavioral Markers of Coping and Psychiatric Symptoms among Sexually Abused Children.

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    The current study examined coping and psychiatric symptoms in a longitudinal sample of sexually abused children. Coping was behaviorally coded from children\u27s forensic interviews in the aftermath of sexual abuse. Using principal components analysis, coping behaviors were found to cluster into 3 categories: avoidant, expressive, and positive affective coping. Avoidant coping had predictive utility for a range of psychiatric symptoms, including depressive, posttraumatic stress, anxiety, and dissociative symptoms as well as aggression and attention problems measured 8-36 months following the forensic interview. Specific behaviors, namely fidgetiness and distractibility, were also found to be associated with future symptoms. These findings suggest the predictive utility of avoidant behaviors in general, and fidgetiness and distractibility in particular, among sexually abused children

    Pathways to PTSD, Part II: Sexually Abused Children.

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    OBJECTIVE: The goal of this research was to develop and test a prospective model of posttraumatic stress symptoms in sexually abused children that includes pretrauma, trauma, and disclosure-related pathways. METHOD: At time 1, several measures were used to assess pretrauma variables, trauma variables, and stress reactions upon disclosure for 156 sexually abused children ages 8 to 13 years. At the time 2 follow-up (7 to 36 months following the initial interview), the children were assessed for posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms. RESULTS: A path analysis involving a series of hierarchically nested ordinary least squares multiple regression analyses indicated three direct paths to PTSD symptoms: avoidant coping, anxiety/arousal, and dissociation, all measured during or immediately after disclosure of sexual abuse. Additionally, age and gender predicted avoidant coping, while life stress and age at abuse onset predicted symptoms of anxiety/arousal. Taken together, these pathways accounted for approximately 57% of the variance in PTSD symptoms. CONCLUSIONS: Symptoms measured at the time of disclosure constitute direct, independent pathways by which sexually abused children are likely to develop later PTSD symptoms. These findings speak to the importance of assessing children during the disclosure of abuse in order to identify those at greatest risk for later PTSD symptoms

    Pathways to PTSD, Part II: Sexually Abused Children

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