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The Fort Bragg continuum of care for children and adolescents: Mental health outcomes over 5 years.
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References
2000
Year
Adolescent Behavioral HealthMental Health InterventionMental HealthControversial Early ResultsChild Mental HealthPrimary CareYouth Well-beingMental Health CounselingHealth Services ResearchHealth SciencesTeen Mental HealthPsychiatryOutcomes ResearchChildren's Mental HealthMental Health OutcomesNursingContinuum-treated ChildrenCommunity Mental HealthChild HealthFort Bragg ContinuumAdolescent Primary CarePediatricsComparison ChildrenMedicineChild PsychiatryYouth Behavioral Health
Controversial early results of the Fort Bragg mental-health-effectiveness study indicated that the continuum of care did not produce better outcomes (i.e., children's rate of improvement was the same in both the demonstration and comparison sites). The present study considered outcomes at 5-year follow-up to examine long-term effects from the continuum of care. A random regression longitudinal model analyzed 10 key outcome variables measured 7 times. Long-term outcomes in continuum-treated children were no better than those of comparison children; results are consistent with those of earlier studies.
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