36 results on '"Drazdowski, Tess"'
Search Results
2. Implementation outcomes from a pilot study of training probation officers to deliver contingency management for emerging adults with substance use disorders
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Drazdowski, Tess K., Kelton, Katherine, Hibbard, Patrick F., McCart, Michael R., Chapman, Jason E., Castedo de Martell, Sierra, and Sheidow, Ashli J.
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- 2024
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3. Linkage facilitation services for opioid use disorder: Taxonomy of facilitation practitioners, goals, and activities
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Hogue, Aaron, Satcher, Milan F., Drazdowski, Tess K., Hagaman, Angela, Hibbard, Patrick F., Sheidow, Ashli J., Coetzer-Liversage, Anthony, Mitchell, Shannon Gwin, Watson, Dennis P., Wilson, Khirsten J., Muench, Frederick, Fishman, Marc, Wenzel, Kevin, de Martell, Sierra Castedo, and Stein, L.A.R.
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- 2024
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4. Examining the measurement precision of behavior problems among a sample of primarily rural youth on juvenile probation and their parents
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Viglione, Jill, Childs, Kristina K., Peck, Jennifer H., Chapman, Jason E., Drazdowski, Tess K., McCart, Michael R., and Sheidow, Ashli J.
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- 2023
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5. Child welfare involvement and adjustment among care alumni and their children: A systematic review of risk and protective factors
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Jäggi, Lena, Jaramillo, Jamie, Drazdowski, Tess K., and Seker, Süheyla
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- 2022
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6. College Students' Using Marijuana to Sleep Relates to Frequency, Problematic Use, and Sleep Problems
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Drazdowski, Tess K., Kliewer, Wendy L., and Marzell, Miesha
- Abstract
Objective: Given the rising rates of insufficient sleep and the popularity of marijuana, we investigated using marijuana as a sleep aid, marijuana use frequency, problematic marijuana use, and sleep problems. Participants: Participants included a convenience sample of college students who endorsed using marijuana in the past year from May to December 2013 (N = 354; 68% female, 57% White). Methods: Path analyses investigated if using marijuana to sleep predicted: (1) marijuana use outcomes and (2) sleep problems; and if sleep problems predicted marijuana use outcomes. Results: Using marijuana to sleep was related to increased use and problematic use, as well as worse sleep efficiency. Daytime dysfunction related to sleepiness was associated with elevated levels of marijuana use and problematic use. Similar associations were found across sex and race. Conclusions: College students should be informed of the potential misconceptions between marijuana and improved sleep and provided with evidence-based alternatives to improve their sleep.
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- 2021
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7. Randomized Controlled Trial of an Integrated Family-Based Treatment for Adolescents Presenting to Community Mental Health Centers
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Sheidow, Ashli J., Zajac, Kristyn, Chapman, Jason E., McCart, Michael R., and Drazdowski, Tess K.
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- 2021
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8. Change in anxiety sensitivity and substance use coping motives as putative mediators of treatment efficacy among substance users
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Wolitzky-Taylor, Kate, Drazdowski, Tess K., Niles, Andrea, Roy-Byrne, Peter, Ries, Richard, Rawson, Richard, and Craske, Michelle G.
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- 2018
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9. W153 - Establishing and Engaging Community Partner Boards That Generate the Research Ideas
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Drazdowski, Tess, Hibbard, Patrick, Cruz, Michelle, Boards, JEAP Community, and Investigators, JEAP Initiative
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- 2024
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10. S155 - Recovery Support Services Research Priorities Developed by People With Lived Expertise
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Buell, Eden, Hibbard, Patrick, Sheidow, Ashli, McCart, Michael, and Drazdowski, Tess
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- 2024
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11. Juvenile probation officers delivering an intervention for substance use significantly reduces adolescents' risky sexual behaviours.
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Fix, Rebecca L., Walsh, Colleen S., Sheidow, Ashli J., McCart, Michael R., Chapman, Jason E., and Drazdowski, Tess K.
- Abstract
Background: Risky sexual behaviour (RSB) is a serious public health problem for adolescents. We examined whether a contingency management intervention implemented by juvenile probation officers (JPOs) targeting substance use also impacted RSB. Methods: A total of 218 adolescents on probation were randomly assigned to contingency management or to probation as usual. Results: The substance use intervention delivered by JPOs reduced rates of RSB over time (β = −0.32, P = 0.041 at 6 months; β = −0.32, P = 0.036 at 9 months). Conclusions: Adolescents receiving a substance use intervention from JPOs demonstrated reduced/prevented RSB. Interventions targeting single risk behaviour s in juvenile probation populations should measure changes in other risk behaviour s. Under-resourced communities lacking clinicians might consider JPOs delivering interventions. This study aimed to address risky sexual behaviour among adolescents. We tested the effectiveness of a contingency management intervention by juvenile probation officers, primarily designed to address substance use, on reducing risky sexual behaviour among 218 adolescents on probation. Findings indicated this intervention reduced risky sexual behaviour over time. Interventions focused on individual risk behaviour s among adolescents on probation populations can have positive ripple effects, evidencing a possible approach for underserved communities lacking clinician access. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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12. What parents don't know: Disclosure and secrecy in a sample of urban adolescents
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Jäggi, Lena, Drazdowski, Tess K., and Kliewer, Wendy
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- 2016
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13. Emotion dysregulation, anticipatory cortisol, and substance use in urban adolescents
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Kliewer, Wendy, Riley, Tennisha, Zaharakis, Nikola, Borre, Alicia, Drazdowski, Tess K., and Jäggi, Lena
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- 2016
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14. Cumulative Risk, Emotion Dysregulation, and Adjustment in South African Youth
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Kliewer, Wendy, Pillay, Basil J., Swain, Karl, Rawatlal, Nishola, Borre, Alicia, Naidu, Thirusha, Pillay, Lingum, Govender, Thiroshini, Geils, Cathy, Jäggi, Lena, Drazdowski, Tess K., Wright, Anna W., and Vawda, Naseema
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- 2017
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15. Anxiety-Promoting Parenting Behaviors: A Comparison of Anxious Parents with and without Social Anxiety Disorder
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Budinger, Meghan Crosby, Drazdowski, Tess K., and Ginsburg, Golda S.
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While parenting behaviors among anxious parents have been implicated in the familial transmission of anxiety, little is known about whether these parenting behaviors are unique to specific parental anxiety disorders. The current study examined differences in the use of five specific parenting behaviors (i.e., warmth/positive affect, criticism, doubts of child competency, over-control, and granting of autonomy) in anxious parents with (n = 21) and without (n = 45) social anxiety disorder (SAD) during a 5-minute task with their non-anxious child (aged 7-12 years, M = 9.14). Parents with SAD demonstrated less warmth/positive affect and more criticism and doubts of child competency than did those without SAD. There were no group differences in over-control or granting of autonomy. Findings help clarify inconsistent results in the literature, inform models of familial transmission, and suggest intervention targets for parents with SAD.
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- 2013
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16. Treating Anxiety Disorders in Inner City Schools: Results from a Pilot Randomized Controlled Trial Comparing CBT and Usual Care
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Ginsburg, Golda S., Becker, Kimberly D., and Drazdowski, Tess K.
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Background: The effectiveness of cognitive-behavioral treatment (CBT) in inner city schools, when delivered by novice CBT clinicians, and compared to usual care (UC), is unknown. Objective: This pilot study addressed this issue by comparing a modular CBT for anxiety disorders to UC in a sample of 32 volunteer youth (mean age 10.28 years, 63% female, 84% African American) seen in school-based mental health programs. Methods: Youth were randomly assigned to CBT (n = 17) or UC (n = 15); independent evaluators conducted diagnostic interviews with children and parents at pre- and post-intervention, and at a one-month follow-up. Results: Based on intent-to-treat analyses, no differences were found in response rates between groups with 50 and 42% of the children in CBT, compared to 46 and 57% in UC no longer meeting criteria for an anxiety disorder at post-treatment and follow-up respectively. Similar improvements in global functioning were also found in both treatment groups. Baseline predictors of a positive treatment response included lower anxiety, fewer maladaptive thoughts, less exposure to urban hassles, and lower levels of parenting stress. Therapist use of more CBT session structure elements and greater competence in implementing these elements was also related to a positive treatment response. Conclusions: Findings from this small pilot failed to show that CBT was superior to UC when delivered by school-based clinicians. Large scale comparative effectiveness trials are needed to determine whether CBT leads to superior clinical outcomes prior to dissemination.
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- 2012
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17. The Utility of Clinicians Ratings of Anxiety Using the Pediatric Anxiety Rating Scale (PARS)
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Ginsburg, Golda S., Keeton, Courtney P., and Drazdowski, Tess K.
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Clinician ratings of anxiety hold the promise of clarifying discrepancies often found between child and parent reports of anxiety. The Pediatric Anxiety Rating Scale (PARS) is a clinician-administered instrument that assesses the frequency, severity, and impairment of common pediatric anxiety disorders and has been used as a primary outcome measure in several landmark treatment trials. However, no data on nonanxious youth have been published. The purpose of this study was to address this gap by examining clinician's ratings of anxiety on the PARS in a volunteer sample of youth without anxiety disorders (n = 84;ages 7-12; 51% female, 75% Caucasian). The nonanxious sample was comprised of youth with (At-risk;n = 36) and without (Healthy; n = 48) anxious parents. Data were also used to evaluate the reliability (i.e., internal consistency), convergent, and divergent validity of the clinician-rated PARS. In addition, a receiver operating curve analysis was used to determine optimum cut off scores indicative of clinical levels of anxiety by comparing PARS scores between these nonanxious youth and a clinically anxious sample (n = 77) randomized in the Research Units of Pediatric Psychopharmacology (RUPP) anxiety study (RUPP 2001). Results indicated that anxious and nonanxious youth were significantly different on all PARS severity items. Optimum cutoff scores of 11.5 (5-item total score) and 17.5 (7-item total score) discriminated youth with and without anxiety disorders. Cronbach alphas for the Healthy and At-risk sample were 0.90 and 0.91 and 0.75 and 0.81 for the 5- and 7-item total PARS scores respectively, supporting the measure's internal consistency among nonanxious youth. PARS total scores were positively correlated with other measures of anxiety (i.e., the Screen for Child Anxiety Related Emotional Disorders) for the At-risk but not Healthy subsample. PARS scores were not significantly correlated with depressive symptoms (i.e., Children's Depression Inventory). Overall, findings support the utility of clinician's assessments of anxiety symptoms for nonanxious youth. Using the PARS can help facilitate determining whether a child's anxiety level is more similar to those with or without an anxiety disorder.
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- 2011
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18. Parental Emotional Competence and Parenting in Low-Income Families With Adolescents
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Kliewer, Wendy, Borre, Alicia, Wright, Anna W., Jäggi, Lena, Drazdowski, Tess, and Zaharakis, Nikola
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- 2016
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19. Delinquency, substance use, and risky sexual behaviors among youth who are involved in the justice system and predominantly reside in rural communities: patterns and associated risk factors.
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Childs, Kristina, Viglione, Jill, Chapman, Jason E., Drazdowski, Tess K., McCart, Michael R., and Sheidow, Ashli J.
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SUBSTANCE-induced disorders ,CRIMINAL justice policy ,LATENT class analysis (Statistics) - Abstract
There is a significant gap in research examining the prevalence of problem behaviors among youth involved in the juvenile justice system in rural areas. The current study sought to address this gap by exploring the behavioral patterns of 210 youth who were on juvenile probation in predominantly rural counties and who were identified as having a substance use disorder. First, we examined the correlation among 7 problem behaviors representing different forms of substance use, delinquency, and sexual risk-taking and 8 risk factors related to recent service utilization, internalizing and externalizing difficulties, and social support networks. Then, we used latent class analysis (LCA) to identify distinct behavioral profiles based on the observed problem behaviors. LCA identified a 3-class model representing distinct groups labeled Experimenting (70%), Polysubstance Use + Delinquent Behaviors (24%), and Diverse Delinquent Behaviors (6%). Finally, we assessed differences (i.e., ANOVA, χ
2 ) in each risk factor across the behavioral profiles. Important similarities and differences in the association among the problem behaviors, behavioral profiles, and the risk factors were revealed. These findings underscore the need for an interconnected behavioral health model within rural juvenile justice systems that is able to address youths' multidimensional needs including criminogenic, behavioral, and physical health needs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2023
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20. Demographic risk factors for co-occurring suicidality and cannabis use disorders: Findings from a nationally representative United States sample
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Kelly, Lourah M., Drazdowski, Tess K., Livingston, Nicholas R., and Zajac, Kristyn
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- 2021
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21. Sex and Sexual Identity Differences in Poly-tobacco Use and Psychological Distress in U.S. Adults: Results From the National Health Interview Survey.
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Harper, Leia A, Beck, Kira C, Drazdowski, Tess K, and Li, Christina
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GENDER identity ,PSYCHOLOGICAL distress ,ADULTS ,SOCIAL factors ,HEALTH surveys ,HETEROSEXUALS - Abstract
Introduction: Poly-tobacco use (PTU), or the concomitant use of two or more nicotine and tobacco products, are a growing public health concern. Adults reporting increased psychological distress (PD) experience profound nicotine and tobacco health-related disparities. Sexual minority (SM) adults report more PTU and higher levels of PD than heterosexuals, yet little is known about patterns of nicotine and tobacco use and its relationship to PD in SM populations.Aims and Methods: The purpose of this study was to investigate sexual identity differences in PD and PTU. Data were drawn from the 2016-2018 National Health Interview Survey (N = 83 017), an annual cross-sectional survey of a nationally representative sample of U.S. adults. PD was assessed using the Kessler Psychological Distress Scale (K6). We fit sex-stratified, weighted, adjusted logistic models to compare PTU and PD by sexual identity.Results: PTU was more prevalent in adults with higher K6 scores. Female adults and SM adults had significantly higher K6 scores and were significantly more likely to experience serious PD when compared to their male and heterosexual counterparts.Conclusions: The current study provides a snapshot of trends in PTU in relation to PD, gender, and sexual identity. Findings suggest higher rates of both PD and PTU in SM adults. Further research examining the mechanisms underlying this disparity is critical to the development of effective intervention and prevention strategies.Implications: Little is known about sex and sexual identity differences in the relations between patterns of tobacco product use and PD. This study is the first to examine the effect of gender and sexual identity on both PD and PTU. SMs reported higher rates of PD and were more likely to be poly-tobacco users. As new ways of engaging nicotine/tobacco continue to proliferate, health risks will endure especially for marginalized populations. An increased understanding of the psychological and social correlates of PTU in SMs is warranted. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2023
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22. Juvenile Probation Officer Perceptions of Parental Involvement in Juvenile Probation and With Contingency Management.
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Ingel, Sydney N., Davis, Lynnea R., Rudes, Danielle S., Taxman, Faye S., Hartwell, Taylor N., Drazdowski, Tess K., Mccart, Michael R., Chapman, Jason E., and Sheidow, Ashli J.
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PARENTING ,PROBATION officers ,PARENT attitudes ,PROBATION ,SUBSTANCE abuse - Abstract
Probation is a common sanction for youth substance users, and as such, juvenile probation officers (JPOs) shoulder much of the burden for treatment and rehabilitation. To improve youth outcomes and alleviate some of the burden, JPOs may seek parental involvement in the probation and substance use desistance processes. Using focus group data, we analyzed JPO perceptions of the role parents play in contingency management (CM)—an incentive system designed to produce and reward decreased substance use—and whether they perceived any value in CM. We found that most JPOs perceived parental involvement as critical to the success of both substance use treatment and CM for youth. Our findings also suggest JPOs found parental involvement in CM valuable given that CM was employed on nonstudy clients and future clients. This has implications for the practicality and sustainability of CM as a youth probation intervention. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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23. Misunderstanding and Sensemaking among Juvenile Probation Officers Working with Evidence-Based Practices.
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Ingel, Sydney N., Davis, Lynnea R., Rudes, Danielle S., Hartwell, Taylor N., Drazdowski, Tess K., McCart, Michael R., Chapman, Jason E., Taxman, Faye S., and Sheidow, Ashli J.
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PROBATION officers ,PROBATION ,FOCUS groups ,JUVENILE delinquency - Abstract
Evidence-based practices and programs (EBPs) have been adopted in juvenile probation agencies nationwide to maximize the number of successful probation cases. However, various pragmatic studies have found that JPOs are not yielding the expected benefits when compared to efficacy studies. Using focus group and survey data, the current study sought to increase our understanding of the gap between pragmatic and efficacy studies in juvenile probation settings by examining JPOs' perceptions and utilization of EBPs. The findings suggest that JPOs are misunderstanding how to use EBPs in daily practice, leaving them with negative perceptions of EBPs. Implications for improving JPO understanding and use of EBPs are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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24. Motivations for Prescription Drug Misuse Related to Mental Health Problems in Adults.
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Drazdowski, Tess K., Schulte, Marya, Wolitzky-Taylor, Kate B., Schaper, Holle, and Chapman, Jason E.
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SUBSTANCE abuse risk factors , *MENTAL illness drug therapy , *NARCOTICS , *MOTIVATION (Psychology) , *ANALGESICS , *SUICIDAL ideation , *DRUGS , *MENTAL depression , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *LOGISTIC regression analysis , *EMOTIONS , *ANTIPSYCHOTIC agents , *ADULTS - Abstract
Prescription drug misuse (PDM) is a significant public health problem associated with mental health symptoms. This project investigates the connections between PDM motivations and mental health to inform intervention efforts. Using nationally representative adult data from the 2016–2018 National Survey on Drug Use and Health (N = 128,205; 53% female) this project investigated which motivations for misuse are related to past-year mental health problems including any mental illness, serious mental illness, major depressive episode, and suicidal thoughts. Complex samples logistic regression models of the main motivation of PDM for each mental health problem were conducted separately for each prescription drug class (i.e., opioids, tranquilizers, sedatives, and stimulants) while controlling for demographic characteristics. Adults that reported PDM were more likely than those with no PDM to endorse past year mental health problems. Compared to those that reported PDM of other medications, those misusing prescription opioids and tranquilizers to help with emotions and misusing sedatives to "relax or relieve tension" were more likely to have all categories of mental health problems. Those that misused prescription stimulants to "help study" had lower odds of all mental health problems. While there were differences based on prescription drug class, a range of motivations increased adults' likelihood to have mental health problems and common themes were found across drug classes. While causality is still undetermined, prevention and intervention efforts that are multifaceted and individualized, while broadly providing adults with other ways to cope with negative emotions are likely to help reduce PDM. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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25. Family‐based treatments for disruptive behavior problems in children and adolescents: An updated review of rigorous studies (2014–April 2020).
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Sheidow, Ashli J., McCart, Michael R., and Drazdowski, Tess K.
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BEHAVIOR disorders in children ,TEENAGERS ,ADOLESCENCE ,JUVENILE offenders ,CHILD psychology ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials - Abstract
Disruptive behavior problems in youth are common and costly, lead to adverse outcomes, and are often left untreated. This article builds on previous work by providing an updated evaluation of family‐based treatments based on results from randomized controlled trials (RCTs) for three populations: (1) children with disruptive behavior, (2) adolescents with disruptive behavior, and (3) adolescents with juvenile justice involvement. Using a comprehensive process, 28 new reports on 27 RCTs were identified for the 2014–April 2020 period, which when combined with the prior evidence base of all rigorous RCTs, resulted in 3 well‐established, 11 probably efficacious, and 7 possibly efficacious family‐based treatment categories. Many of the RCTs lent further support to existing treatment categories, more countries were represented, and several RCTs incorporated technology. Notable issues that remain include a limited number of family‐based treatments for adolescents and for youth with juvenile justice involvement, as well as methodological concerns. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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26. A Longitudinal Study of the Bidirectional Relations Between Anxiety Symptoms and Peer Victimization in Urban Adolescents.
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Drazdowski, Tess K., Kliewer, Wendy L., Farrell, Albert, Sullivan, Terri, Roberson-Nay, Roxann, and Jäggi, Lena
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AFFINITY groups , *CULTURE , *SELF-evaluation , *MENTAL health , *VICTIM psychology , *PSYCHOLOGY of middle school students , *RISK assessment , *POVERTY areas , *EXPERIENCE , *SOCIAL anxiety , *CRONBACH'S alpha , *COMPARATIVE studies , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *SEX distribution , *PSYCHOLOGY of high school students , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *RESEARCH funding , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *CHI-squared test , *ANXIETY , *METROPOLITAN areas , *PSYCHOLOGY of school children , *PATH analysis (Statistics) , *DATA analysis software , *PREDICTION models , *BULLYING , *LONGITUDINAL method , *AFRICAN Americans , *PARENTS , *CHILDREN , *ADOLESCENCE - Abstract
The current study examined bidirectional relations between anxious symptoms and two forms of peer victimization (i.e., overt and relational) within an underrepresented sample of urban adolescents during key transition periods (i.e., elementary to middle school; middle school to high school) and the following 2 years. A predominantly African American sample (91%) of 358 adolescents (56% female, mean age = 12.10 years) living in low-income urban areas were assessed annually across 4 years. Using self-report measures, adolescents reported on their past year experiences of anxiety and peer victimization. Longitudinal path analyses tested progressively complex models for each type of victimization. Anxious symptoms predicted both overt and relational victimization at the time of transition (Wave 1 to Wave 2) and the following year (Wave 2 to Wave 3). Furthermore, whereas previous levels of victimization and future anxious symptoms were positively correlated over time, only relational victimization at Wave 1 predicted anxious symptoms at Wave 2. Prior levels of each construct were the strongest predictor of future outcomes (e.g., anxious symptoms at Wave 1 predicting anxious symptoms at Wave 2). Overall, there was little support for bidirectional relations between anxiety symptoms and peer victimization. Intervention and prevention programs seeking to reduce peer victimization or anxiety should start by targeting the symptom/behavior of interest. Interventions that target anxious thoughts and feelings during these key transition times in adolescence should be assessed as areas of priority. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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27. Capacity of juvenile probation officers in low-resourced, rural settings to deliver an evidence-based substance use intervention to adolescents.
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Sheidow, Ashli J., McCart, Michael R., Chapman, Jason E., and Drazdowski, Tess K.
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Substance use is a major public health problem with a host of negative outcomes. Justice-involved youth have even higher risks and lack access to evidence-based interventions, particularly in rural communities. Task-shifting, or redistribution of tasks downstream to an existing workforce with less training, may be an innovative strategy to increase access to evidence-based interventions. Initial findings are presented from a services research trial conducted primarily in rural communities in which an existing workforce, juvenile probation/parole officers (JPOs), were randomized either to learn and deliver contingency management (CM) or to continue delivering probation services as usual (PAU). This study used the prevailing version of CM for adolescents, that is, family-based with behavior modification and cognitive behavioral components. Data included JPOs' self-reports, as well as audio-recorded youth/family sessions with JPOs rated by expert and trained observational coders. Data also included ratings from a comparison study in which therapists were trained and supervised by experts to deliver CM to justice-involved youth/families. Results showed JPOs can feasibly incorporate CM into their services. When adherence of CM JPOs was compared against CM therapists, JPOs delivered significantly more cognitive behavioral components of CM and similar levels of behavior modification components of CM. These findings suggest that JPOs can be leveraged to provide evidence-based substance use interventions like CM in similar, or even greater, capacities to clinically trained therapists. This task-shifting approach could dramatically expand service access for these high-risk youth, particularly in rural areas where substance use services are limited or nonexistent. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2020 APA, all rights reserved). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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28. Community violence exposure, family management practices, and substance use in youth: a cross-cultural study.
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Kliewer, Wendy, Pillay, Basil J., Borre, Alicia, Zaharakis, Nikola, Drazdowski, Tess, and Jäggi, Lena
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VIOLENCE in the community ,SUBSTANCE-induced disorders ,FAMILIES ,YOUTH ,PARENTING - Abstract
Associations between community violence exposure, family management practices, and substance use were compared in a sample of early adolescents in low-income communities from the United States (N = 151; M age = 12.71 years, standard deviation = 0.65; 50.3% female) and South Africa (N = 175; M age = 12.55 years, standard deviation = 0.85; 64.6% female) using home interviews with youth and their maternal caregivers. Past year victimization was associated with recent youth substance use. The moderating role of family management practices varied by type of practice (e.g., parental knowledge, control, solicitation, or child disclosure), reporter, and country. High parental knowledge reported by caregiver was protective against substance use only for South African youth. In youth reports, parental knowledge was protective across the United States and South Africa. Youth reports of their disclosure to parents were negatively associated with substance use in the United States but not South Africa. These data highlight the importance of considering both ecological context and reporter in the links between violence exposure, parenting, and substance use in youth. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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29. A systematic review of the motivations for the non-medical use of prescription drugs in young adults.
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Drazdowski, Tess K.
- Subjects
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PHARMACODYNAMICS , *YOUNG adults & drugs , *DEVELOPMENTAL psychology & motivation , *OPIOIDS , *DRUG therapy , *HEALTH of college students , *SUBSTANCE abuse & psychology , *DRUGS , *MOTIVATION (Psychology) , *STUDENTS , *SYSTEMATIC reviews - Abstract
Background: Young adults (18-25) are most at-risk for the non-medical use of prescription drugs (NMUPD). Understanding this population's motivations for use can help inform efforts to reduce NMUPD. Therefore, this systematic review synthesizes the findings from research on young adults' motivations to engage in NMUPD.Methods: Based on PRISMA guidelines, relevant databases were systematically searched for articles that assessed the motivations for NMUPD in young adults and college-aged students. Search strings included a range of prescription drug classes and terms to ensure an exhaustive review.Results: The search resulted in identifying 353 potential articles after duplicates were removed, and 37 articles were included in the final qualitative synthesis. Of the final articles, the majority investigated the non-medical use of prescription stimulants in U.S. student populations cross-sectionally. Seven studies, either exclusively or in combination with other medications, researched prescription opioids, and five investigated central nervous system depressants. Only one study investigated motivations over time.Conclusion: There are many ways in which the current literature can be expanded, including researching other populations and focusing on prescriptions other than stimulants. Using the medications for their prescribed properties and known side effects emerged as a consistent theme. It was also fairly common for young adults to report recreational motives. Issues with measurement and definitions of key terms (e.g., non-medical) would benefit from consistency in future work. Research on motivations should continue and be incorporated into the larger drug use context, as well as existing prevention and intervention strategies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
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30. Structural equation modeling of the effects of racism, LGBTQ discrimination, and internalized oppression on illicit drug use in LGBTQ people of color.
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Drazdowski, Tess K., Perrin, Paul B., Trujillo, Michael, Sutter, Megan, Benotsch, Eric G., and Snipes, Daniel J.
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LGBTQ+ people , *DRUGS of abuse , *OPPRESSION , *RACISM , *MENTAL illness , *STRUCTURAL equation modeling , *DISCRIMINATION & psychology , *PSYCHOLOGY , *SUBSTANCE abuse & psychology , *ADAPTABILITY (Personality) , *LOCUS of control , *MATHEMATICAL models of psychology , *RESEARCH funding , *HUMAN sexuality , *PSYCHOLOGY of Black people - Abstract
Background: Experiences with lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, or queer (LGBTQ) discrimination and racism have both been associated with mental health problems and illicit drug use. However, the cumulative effects of both forms of discrimination--and resulting internalized oppression--on illicit drug use in LGBTQ people of color (POC) has not been examined in the research literature.Methods: Using online questionnaires, this study collected self-report data from 200 LGBTQ POC about their experiences with racism, LGBTQ discrimination, internalized racism, internalized LGBTQ discrimination, and illicit drug use.Results: Two structural equation models yielded adequate fit indices in which experiences with racism and LGBTQ discrimination led to more internalized oppression, which then led to greater illicit drug use magnitude. LGBTQ discrimination was directly related to increased internalized oppression, which was positively associated with illicit drug use magnitude; the relationship between LGBTQ discrimination and illicit drug use magnitude was mediated by internalized oppression in both models. However, racism and the interaction between racism and LGBTQ discrimination did not show valid direct effects on internalized oppression or indirect effects on illicit drug use magnitude.Conclusions: LGBTQ POC can be the targets of both racism and LGBTQ discrimination, although the current study found that the most psychologically damaging effects may come from LGBTQ discrimination. Interventions meant to decrease or prevent illicit drug use in LGBTQ POC may benefit from helping participants examine the links among LGBTQ discrimination, internalized oppression, and illicit drug use as a coping strategy, focusing on substituting more adaptive coping. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
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31. Use of prescription drugs and future delinquency among adolescent offenders.
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Drazdowski, Tess K., Jäggi, Lena, Borre, Alicia, and Kliewer, Wendy L.
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DRUG prescribing , *DRUGS & crime , *DRUG utilization , *JUVENILE offenders , *PUBLIC health , *LONGITUDINAL method - Abstract
Non-medical use of prescription drugs (NMUPD) by adolescents is a significant public health concern. The present study investigated the profile of NMUPD in 1349 adolescent offenders from the Pathways to Desistance project, and whether NMUPD predicted future delinquency using longitudinal data. Results indicated that increased frequency and recency of NMUPD in adolescent offenders are related to some demographic factors, as well as increased risk for violence exposure, mental health diagnoses, other drug use, and previous delinquency, suggesting that severity of NMUPD is important to consider. However, ANCOVA analyses found that NMUPD was not a significant predictor of drug-related, non-aggressive, or aggressive delinquency 12 months later beyond other known correlates of delinquency. Age, sex, exposure to violence, lower socioeconomic status, more alcohol use, and having delinquency histories were more important than NMUPD in predicting future delinquency. These findings suggest that although NMUPD is an important risk factor relating to many correlates of delinquency, it does not predict future delinquency beyond other known risk factors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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32. Anxiety-Promoting Parenting Behaviors: A Comparison of Anxious Parents with and without Social Anxiety Disorder.
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Crosby Budinger, Meghan, Drazdowski, Tess, and Ginsburg, Golda
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PARENTING ,ANXIETY disorders ,PARENT-child relationships ,PARENTS ,SOCIAL anxiety - Abstract
While parenting behaviors among anxious parents have been implicated in the familial transmission of anxiety, little is known about whether these parenting behaviors are unique to specific parental anxiety disorders. The current study examined differences in the use of five specific parenting behaviors (i.e., warmth/positive affect, criticism, doubts of child competency, over-control, and granting of autonomy) in anxious parents with ( n = 21) and without ( n = 45) social anxiety disorder (SAD) during a 5-minute task with their non-anxious child (aged 7-12 years, M = 9.14). Parents with SAD demonstrated less warmth/positive affect and more criticism and doubts of child competency than did those without SAD. There were no group differences in over-control or granting of autonomy. Findings help clarify inconsistent results in the literature, inform models of familial transmission, and suggest intervention targets for parents with SAD. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2013
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33. Motivations for the nonmedical use of prescription drugs in a longitudinal national sample of young adults.
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Drazdowski, Tess K., Kelly, Lourah M., and Kliewer, Wendy L.
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MEDICATION abuse , *YOUNG adults , *CENTRAL nervous system depressants , *PERSONALITY change , *GENERALIZED estimating equations , *COLLEGE attendance , *CENTRAL nervous system stimulants , *MOTIVATION (Psychology) , *DRUG therapy , *DRUGS , *UNIVERSITIES & colleges , *RESEARCH funding - Abstract
Introduction: People's motivations for nonmedical use of prescription drugs (NMUPD) are not well studied, particularly in longitudinal representative samples. However, understanding which motivations are most popular and how these change over time for specific groups is important to inform interventions for NMUPD.Methods: The current study examined how young adults' motives for NMUPD changed over young adulthood, using a nationally representative sample of 12,223 young adults in 36 cohorts (1976-2012) as part of the Monitoring the Future study across three biennial waves (waves 1, 2, 3: modal ages 19/20, 21/22, and 23/24 years). We investigated these young adults' motivations for using stimulants, central nervous system depressants, and opioids when controlling for possible cohort effects. We included sex and college attendance as potential moderators.Results: Participants commonly reported recreational and self-treatment motivations over time and across drug classes, reporting four to five popular motivations in each drug class. Generalized estimating equations repeated measure analyses revealed relatively stable NMUPD motivations across young adulthood. Participants reported some reductions in experimentation and boredom as motivations for NMUPD and increases in certain self-treatment motivations, depending on prescription drug class. Overall, men were more likely to endorse recreational motivations, whereas women were more likely to endorse self-treatment motivations, though this varied somewhat by prescription drug class. Young adults not enrolled in college courses were more likely to endorse using stimulants nonmedically for different reasons than their peers who were enrolled.Conclusions: NMUPD prevention and treatment efforts tailored to the young adult population should include methods to reduce both self-treatment and recreational use and need to consider prescription drug class, sex, and college attendance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
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34. Nonabstinence among US Adults in Recovery from an Alcohol or Other Drug Problem.
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Pasman E, Evans-Polce RJ, Schepis TS, Engstrom CW, McCabe VV, Drazdowski TK, and McCabe SE
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Objectives: Most US treatment and recovery services are abstinence-based. However, many people in recovery from an alcohol or other drug (AOD) use problem do not abstain completely. This study estimated the prevalence of and characteristics associated with nonabstinence among US adults in recovery., Methods: Nonabstinence-operationalized as past-month use of alcohol, illicit drugs, or nonmedical use of prescription drugs-was estimated among a sample of 3763 US adults in self-identified recovery from the 2022 National Survey on Drug Use and Health, weighted to be nationally representative. Multivariable logistic regression identified factors associated with nonabstinence., Results: An estimated 65.2% (95% confidence interval [CI] = 62.6-67.8) of adults in self-identified recovery reported past-month AOD use. Half (50.8%) reported alcohol use, and one-third (33.2%) reported cannabis use. Females had lower odds of use than males (adjusted odds ratio [AOR] = 0.73, 95% CI = 0.54-0.99), and lesbian/gay-identified individuals had greater odds of use than heterosexual/straight-identified individuals (AOR = 2.39, 95% CI = 1.13-5.07). Greater religiosity (AOR = 0.90, 0.84-0.96) and mutual aid attendance (AOR = 0.16, 95% CI = 0.06-0.27) were associated with lower odds of use. Significant differences were not detected for self-reported health, psychological distress, and other measures of functioning. However, relative to those without a past-year substance use disorder (SUD), odds of nonabstinence were greater among those with one mild (AOR = 14.60, 9.05-23.55), one moderate or severe (AOR = 13.05, 7.06-24.14), and multiple (AOR = 23.33, 10.59-51.37) past-year SUDs., Conclusions: Most US adults who self-identified as in recovery from an AOD use problem were nonabstinent. Treatment and recovery services may improve engagement and outcomes by supporting nonabstinent goals., Competing Interests: The authors report no conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2024 American Society of Addiction Medicine.)
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- 2024
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35. Leveraging Parents and Peer Recovery Supports to Increase Recovery Capital in Emerging Adults With Polysubstance Use: Protocol for a Feasibility, Acceptability, and Appropriateness Study of Launch.
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Drazdowski TK, Castedo de Martell S, Sheidow AJ, Chapman JE, and McCart MR
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- Adolescent, Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Young Adult, Pilot Projects, Feasibility Studies, Parents psychology, Parents education, Peer Group, Substance-Related Disorders rehabilitation, Substance-Related Disorders therapy
- Abstract
Background: Emerging adults (aged 18-26 years) are the most at-risk yet underserved age group among people with substance use disorder, especially rural emerging adults, and polysubstance use is common. Recovery capital is lower among emerging adults than older adults, and evidence-based treatments are typically unavailable or not developmentally tailored, especially in rural areas. Both supportive parents (or parental figures) and peer recovery support services (PRSS) can be leveraged to better support these emerging adults. Previous research indicates parents can be engaged to deliver contingency management (CM), an extensively researched evidence-based intervention for substance use., Objective: This protocol describes a funded pilot of Launch, a novel, scalable service package that pairs web-based coaching for parents to deliver CM for emerging adults (CM-EA) at home and in-person PRSS with educational and vocational goal setting. Specifically, this protocol describes feasibility, acceptability, and appropriateness testing (implementation-related outcomes) and steps taken to prepare for a future large-scale trial of Launch., Methods: Upon the recruitment of 48 emerging adult and parent pairs from sites serving primarily rural clients, participants will be randomized into 1 of 3 conditions for this randomized controlled trial: virtual parent coaching to deliver CM-EA, in-person PRSS for emerging adults, or both sets of services. Emerging adult eligibility includes polysubstance use, a substance use disorder, and availability of a consenting parent. Emerging adults will be interviewed at baseline and 6 months about substance use, quality of life, recovery capital, parental relationship, and Launch implementation-related outcomes (6-month follow-up only). Parents, peer workers delivering PRSS, and parent CM-EA coaches will be interviewed about implementation-related outcomes at the end of the study period. Peer workers and CM-EA coaches will be asked to complete checklists of services delivered after each session. Finally, payers and providers will be interviewed for additional insights into Launch implementation and to identify key outcomes of Launch. Data analysis for emerging adult outcomes will be primarily descriptive, but parent CM-EA training adherence will be assessed using nested mixed-effects regression models of repeated measures., Results: Launch is currently ongoing, with funding received in August 2023, and is expected to end in September 2025, with data analysis and results in December 2026. Participants are expected to begin enrolling in June 2024., Conclusions: While this pilot is limited by the small sample size and restriction to emerging adults with an involved parent, this is mitigated by the study's strengths and is appropriate for the pilot stage. Launch uses an innovative combination of existing strategies to generate better outcomes for emerging adults while remaining scalable. This pilot will provide insights into the feasibility and acceptability of Launch from the perspectives of service recipients, providers, and payers to inform a larger-scale effectiveness trial., Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT06414993; https://clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT06414993., International Registered Report Identifier (irrid): PRR1-10.2196/60671., (©Tess K Drazdowski, Sierra Castedo de Martell, Ashli J Sheidow, Jason E Chapman, Michael R McCart. Originally published in JMIR Research Protocols (https://www.researchprotocols.org), 22.07.2024.)
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- 2024
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36. Juvenile Probation Officers' Perceptions of Sanctions and Incentives as Compliance Strategies.
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Ingel SN, Drazdowski TK, Rudes DS, McCart MR, Chapman JE, Taxman FS, and Sheidow AJ
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In juvenile probation, noncompliance with probation conditions is a common occurrence. To deal with this, juvenile probation officers (JPOs) may use different strategies, such as sanctions and incentives. This study uses survey and focus group data from 19 JPOs to evaluate their perceptions of the effectiveness of sanctions and incentives in reducing youth noncompliance, specifically in the form of substance use. Results show that there are two distinct groups of JPOs: those who believe sanctions are an effective deterrent strategy and those who do not. Perceptually and demographically these two groups contain significant differences. Notably, both groups have similar views of social incentives, but JPOs who believe sanctions are ineffective are significantly more likely to have positive views of tangible incentives. This study has implications for how the field of juvenile probation can target JPO perceptions to move toward incentive-based strategies rather than sanction-based strategies for reducing youth substance use., Competing Interests: DECLARATION OF INTEREST The authors report no conflict of interest.
- Published
- 2022
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