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Published in: The Journal of Behavioral Health Services & Research 2/2017

01-04-2017

The Strengths of Youth in a Public Behavioral Health System: Measurement Choices, Prevalence Rates, and Group Differences

Authors: Sarah Accomazzo, PhD, Valerie B. Shapiro, PhD, Nathaniel Israel, PhD, B. K. Elizabeth Kim, PhD

Published in: The Journal of Behavioral Health Services & Research | Issue 2/2017

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Abstract

Youth with severe emotional and behavioral problems receiving services in public behavioral health systems have strengths that are understudied in research and underutilized in practice. This study explores four alternative strategies (individual item scores, the number of “actionable” strengths, subscales, and a total composite) for summarizing the strengths of youth assessed with the Child and Adolescent Needs and Strengths (CANS) in a large, urban, public behavioral health system. The paper examines whether these summarization strategies produce divergent understandings of the prevalence of strengths across gender, age, and racial groups. Analyses suggest that youth enter this system with high levels of strengths. There are few group differences in strengths across the diverse summarization strategies. Though the practice-preferred method of using individual strengths items provides the most interpretable information about strengths, the aggregation strategies may be useful for programs and systems. Implications for policy and practice are discussed.
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Metadata
Title
The Strengths of Youth in a Public Behavioral Health System: Measurement Choices, Prevalence Rates, and Group Differences
Authors
Sarah Accomazzo, PhD
Valerie B. Shapiro, PhD
Nathaniel Israel, PhD
B. K. Elizabeth Kim, PhD
Publication date
01-04-2017
Publisher
Springer US
Published in
The Journal of Behavioral Health Services & Research / Issue 2/2017
Print ISSN: 1094-3412
Electronic ISSN: 2168-6793
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11414-016-9547-2

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