Périodique
Women, Co-occurring Disorders, and Violence Study: evaluation design and study population
(L'étude "Femmes, comorbidité et violence". Evaluation de la méthode de recherche et de la population examinée)
Auteur(s) :
MAC HUGO G. J. ;
N. KAMMERER ;
E. W. JACKSON ;
L. S. MARKOFF ;
GATZ M. ;
M. J. LARSON ;
MAZELIS R. ;
HENNIGAN K.
Article en page(s) :
91-107
Refs biblio. :
96
Domaine :
Plusieurs produits / Several products
Langue(s) :
Anglais
Thésaurus mots-clés
SEXE FEMININ
;
COMORBIDITE
;
VIOLENCE
;
RECHERCHE
;
METHODE
;
EVALUATION
;
COHORTE
;
PRISE EN CHARGE
Note générale :
Journal of Substance Abuse Treatment, 2005, 28, (2), 91-107
Note de contenu :
tabl.
Résumé :
ENGLISH :
The Women, Co-occurring Disorders, and Violence Study (WCDVS) was a multi-site cooperative study to evaluate new service models for women with co-occurring mental health and substance use disorders and a history of physical and/or sexual abuse. Despite common features in the service interventions and evaluation procedures, diversity across the nine sites plus differences introduced by non-random assignment led to numerous methodological challenges. This article describes the design, measurement, and analysis decisions behind the WCDVS and lays the foundation for understanding participant-level outcomes and service costs. This article also describes the study population, as recruited and following attrition at the 6-month follow-up, in order to address the threat of selection bias to inferences drawn from this multi-site study. (Editor's abstract.)
ENGLISH :
The Women, Co-occurring Disorders, and Violence Study (WCDVS) was a multi-site cooperative study to evaluate new service models for women with co-occurring mental health and substance use disorders and a history of physical and/or sexual abuse. Despite common features in the service interventions and evaluation procedures, diversity across the nine sites plus differences introduced by non-random assignment led to numerous methodological challenges. This article describes the design, measurement, and analysis decisions behind the WCDVS and lays the foundation for understanding participant-level outcomes and service costs. This article also describes the study population, as recruited and following attrition at the 6-month follow-up, in order to address the threat of selection bias to inferences drawn from this multi-site study. (Editor's abstract.)
Affiliation :
NH-Dartmouth Psychiatric Research Center, 2 Whipple Place, Suite 202, Lebanon, NH 03766. E-mail : gregory.mchugodartmouth.edu
Etats-Unis. United States.
Etats-Unis. United States.
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