Searched for: person:hoagwk01
Overlooked and underserved: "action signs" for identifying children with unmet mental health needs
Jensen, Peter S; Goldman, Eliot; Offord, David; Costello, Elizabeth J; Friedman, Robert; Huff, Barbara; Crowe, Maura; Amsel, Lawrence; Bennett, Kathryn; Bird, Hector; Conger, Rand; Fisher, Prudence; Hoagwood, Kimberly; Kessler, Ronald C; Roberts, Robert
OBJECTIVE: The US Surgeon General has called for new approaches to close the mental health services gap for the large proportion of US children with significant mental health needs who have not received evaluation or services within the previous 6 to 12 months. In response, investigators sought to develop brief, easily understood, scientifically derived "warning signs" to help parents, teachers, and the lay public to more easily recognize children with unmet mental health needs and bring these children to health care providers' attention for evaluation and possible services. METHOD: Analyses of epidemiologic data sets from >6000 children and parents were conducted to (1) determine the frequency of common but severely impairing symptom profiles, (2) examine symptom profile frequencies according to age and gender, (3) evaluate positive predictive values of symptom profiles relative to Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders diagnoses, and (4) examine whether children with 1 or more symptom profiles receive mental health services. RESULTS: Symptom-profile frequencies ranged from 0.5% to 2.0%, and 8% of the children had 1 or more symptom profile. Profiles generated moderate-to-high positive predictive values (52.7%-75.4%) for impairing psychiatric diagnoses, but fewer than 25% of children with 1 or more profiles had received services in the previous 6 months. CONCLUSIONS: Scientifically robust symptom profiles that reflect severe but largely untreated mental health problems were identified. Used as "action signs," these profiles might help increase public awareness about children's mental health needs, facilitate communication and referral for specific children in need of evaluation, and narrow the child mental health services gap.
PMCID:3387881
PMID: 22025589
ISSN: 0031-4005
CID: 167894
Statewide CBT Training for Clinicians and Supervisors Treating Youth: The New York State Evidence Based Treatment Dissemination Center
Gleacher, Alissa A; Nadeem, Erum; Moy, Amanda J; Whited, Andria L; Albano, Anne Marie; Radigan, Marleen; Wang, Rui; Chassman, Janet; Myrhol-Clarke, Britt; Hoagwood, Kimberly Eaton
In recent years, several states have undertaken efforts to disseminate evidence-based treatments to agencies and clinicians in their children's service system. In New York, the Evidence Based Treatment Dissemination Center adopted a unique translation-based training and consultation model in which an initial 3-day training was combined with a year of clinical consultation with specific clinician and supervisor elements. This model has been used by the New York State Office of Mental Health for the past 3 years to train 1,210 clinicians and supervisors statewide. This article describes the early adoption and initial implementation of a statewide training program in cognitive-behavioral therapy for youth. The training and consultation model and descriptive findings are presented; lessons learned are described. Future plans include a focus on sustainability and measurement feedback of youth outcomes to enhance the continuity of this program and the quality of the clinical services.
PMCID:4865263
PMID: 27182190
ISSN: 1063-4266
CID: 2145492
The Development and Evaluation of a Parent Empowerment Program for Family Peer Advocates
Rodriguez, James; Olin, S S; Hoagwood, Kimberly E; Shen, Sa; Burton, Geraldine; Radigan, Marleen; Jensen, Peter S
Family-to-family services are emerging as an important adjunctive service to traditional mental health care and a vehicle for improving parent engagement and service use in children's mental health services. In New York State, a growing workforce of Family Peer Advocates (FPA) is delivering family-to-family services. We describe the development and evaluation of a professional program to enhance Family Peer Advocate professional skills, called the Parent Engagement and Empowerment Program (PEP). We detail the history and content of PEP and provide data from a pre/post and 6-month follow up evaluation of 58 FPA who participated in the first Statewide regional training effort. Self-efficacy, empowerment, and skills development were assessed at 3 time points: baseline, post-training, and 6-month follow-up. The largest changes were in self-efficacy and empowerment. Regional differences suggest differences in Family Peer Advocate workforce across areas of the state. This evaluation also provides the first systematic documentation of Family Peer Advocate activities over a six-month period. Consistent with peer specialists within the adult health care field, FPA in the children's mental health field primarily focused on providing emotional support and service access issues. Implications for expanding family-to-family services and integrating it more broadly into provider organizations are described.
PMCID:4223802
PMID: 25382959
ISSN: 1062-1024
CID: 2612142
Youth Top Problems: using idiographic, consumer-guided assessment to identify treatment needs and to track change during psychotherapy
Weisz, John R; Chorpita, Bruce F; Frye, Alice; Ng, Mei Yi; Lau, Nancy; Bearman, Sarah Kate; Ugueto, Ana M; Langer, David A; Hoagwood, Kimberly E
OBJECTIVE: To complement standardized measurement of symptoms, we developed and tested an efficient strategy for identifying (before treatment) and repeatedly assessing (during treatment) the problems identified as most important by caregivers and youths in psychotherapy. METHOD: A total of 178 outpatient-referred youths, 7-13 years of age, and their caregivers separately identified the 3 problems of greatest concern to them at pretreatment and then rated the severity of those problems weekly during treatment. The Top Problems measure thus formed was evaluated for (a) whether it added to the information obtained through empirically derived standardized measures (e.g., the Child Behavior Checklist [CBCL; Achenbach & Rescorla, 2001] and the Youth Self-Report [YSR; Achenbach & Rescorla, 2001]) and (b) whether it met conventional psychometric standards. RESULTS: The problems identified were significant and clinically relevant; most matched CBCL/YSR items while adding specificity. The top problems also complemented the information yield of the CBCL/YSR; for example, for 41% of caregivers and 79% of youths, the identified top problems did not correspond to any items of any narrowband scales in the clinical range. Evidence on test-retest reliability, convergent and discriminant validity, sensitivity to change, slope reliability, and the association of Top Problems slopes with standardized measure slopes supported the psychometric strength of the measure. CONCLUSIONS: The Top Problems measure appears to be a psychometrically sound, client-guided approach that complements empirically derived standardized assessment; the approach can help focus attention and treatment planning on the problems that youths and caregivers consider most important and can generate evidence on trajectories of change in those problems during treatment.
PMID: 21500888
ISSN: 0022-006x
CID: 167896
Use of psychotropic medication guidelines at child-serving community mental health centers as assessed by clinic directors
Stevens, Jack; Kelleher, Kelly J; Wang, Wei; Schoenwald, Sonja K; Hoagwood, Kimberly E; Landsverk, John
This study assessed the proportion of large, child-serving community mental health centers that used medication guidelines. Two hundred clinic directors from across the country completed an hour-long semi-structured interview, and 152 of these directors answered whether or not medication guidelines were used at their clinics. Half of these clinics' directors reported that their prescribers followed any form of medication guidelines. Governmental agencies and professional medical societies were among the most common sources of information regarding which specific guidelines to follow. Utilization of standardized child outcome measures, but not the employment of a child psychiatrist, was related to following medication guidelines. Despite the mental health field's recent emphasis on disseminating evidence-base practice, many directors reported their clinics did not use any pediatric medication guidelines.
PMID: 20878547
ISSN: 0010-3853
CID: 167895
Advancing Intervention Research in School Psychology: Finding the Balance Between Process and Outcome for Social and Behavioral Interventions
Cappella, Elise; Reinke, Wendy M; Hoagwood, Kimberly E
School psychology research focused on child outcomes is critical for understanding which social and behavioral interventions affect children in schools. Yet effective interventions fulfill their promise when they fit their implementation contexts, are implemented well with existing resources, and can be sustained or scaled up to new populations. Process research to inform the work that occurs before outcome evaluation and during scale-up efforts remains under-specified. Toward this aim, we provide a conceptual model and guiding themes for conducting rigorous and responsive intervention development in school contexts. We introduce how the articles in this special series exemplify these themes and illuminate the methodological and conceptual approaches to this work. Documenting the research steps of intervention development, implementation, and dissemination may help to advance theoretical models of intervention science as well as guide school psychologists to build and install programs that allow more children to succeed in school.
ISI:000299021100001
ISSN: 0279-6015
CID: 1838692
Tuning Up While Driving: The Evidence-based Practitioner
Salerno, Anthony; McKay, Mary; Hoagwood, Kimberly
ORIGINAL:0010531
ISSN: n/a
CID: 1912312
Implementation of CBT for Youth Affected by the World Trade Center Disaster: Matching Need to Treatment Intensity and Reducing Trauma Symptoms
Hoagwood, Kimberly Eaton; Felton, Chip; Donahue, Sheila; Appel, Anita; Rodriguez, James; Murray, Laura; Fernandez, David; Legerski, Joanna; Chung, Michelle; Gisis, Jacob; Sawaya, Jennifer; Weaver, Jamie; Mehta, Sudha; Levitt, Jessica Mass; Radigan, Marleen; Foster, Jameson; Abramovitz, Robert; Abright, Reese; D'Amico, Peter; Constantino, Giussepe; Epstein, Carrie; Havens, Jennifer; Kaplan, Sandra; Newcorn, Jeffrey; Perez, Moises; Silva, Raul; de Bocanegra, Heike Thiel; Vogel, Juliet
An implementation study of cognitive-behavioral therapies (CBT) was conducted for traumatized youth in a postdisaster context. Headed by the New York State Office of Mental Health, the study targeted youth (N = 306) ages 5-21 affected by the World Trade Center disaster. They received either trauma-specific CBT or brief CBT skills depending upon the severity of trauma symptoms. Clinicians were trained to deliver these interventions and received monthly consultation. A regression discontinuity design was used to assess optimal strategies for matching need to service intensity. At 6-months postbaseline, both groups had improved. Rate of change was similar despite differences in severity of need. The implications for the implementation of evidence-based treatments postdisaster are discussed
ISI:000285520900006
ISSN: 0894-9867
CID: 121339
Impact of Empowerment Training on the Professional Work of Family Peer Advocates
Olin, SS; Hoagwood, KE; Rodriguez, J; Radigan, M; Burton, G; Cavaleri, M; Jensen, PS
A pilot study using a prospective design examined the impact of a collaboratively developed training model, called the Parent Empowerment Program (PEP), for professionally-employed family peer advocates who work with caregivers of children with mental health needs. This training used a combination of didactic, practice exercises, and group discussion. It targeted specific mental health knowledge content and collaborative skills to facilitate the work of family peer advocates in empowering caregivers. Co-delivered by a family peer advocate and clinician, the training consisted of a 40-hour face-to-face training, followed by six monthly face-to-face booster sessions. A total of 15 advocates participated in assessments conducted at baseline and post-training. This group of experienced family peer advocates showed no significant increase in knowledge about mental health content, but post-training assessments indicated increased collaborative skills and mental health services self-efficacy. This initial evaluation has implications for expanding training and support for the emergent workforce of professionally-employed family peer advocates in children's mental health.
PMCID:2976547
PMID: 21076659
ISSN: 0190-7409
CID: 167897
Aligning Research and Policy on Social-Emotional and Academic Competence for Young Children
Nadeem, Erum; Maslak, Kristi; Chacko, Anil; Hoagwood, Kimberly Eaton
RESEARCH FINDINGS: The purpose of this article is to describe current education policies as they relate to the promotion of social, emotional, and academic (SEA) development and competence for young children. Academic and social-emotional competencies are described and conceptualized as developmentally linked, reciprocal processes that should be supported by education in an integrated, holistic manner. PRACTICE OR POLICY: The article reviews major public policies and national initiatives that have implications for the education of young children (e.g., Head Start, No Child Left Behind, IDEA) and highlights opportunities within these policies to promote programs that can support SEA competencies, as well as the limitations of these policies. The article also includes a review of the limitations of existing resources available to educators to identify evidence-based programs that support SEA competencies and concludes with recommendations for better alignment between research and policy to support SEA competencies.
PMCID:4306577
PMID: 25632216
ISSN: 1040-9289
CID: 1456262