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Published in: Community Mental Health Journal 2/2011

01-04-2011 | Original Paper

Predictors of Follow-Up Completion Among Runaway Substance-Abusing Adolescents and their Primary Caretakers

Authors: Rikki Patton, Natasha Slesnick, Denitza Bantchevska, Xiamei Guo, Yunhwan Kim

Published in: Community Mental Health Journal | Issue 2/2011

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Abstract

Follow-up rates reported among longitudinal studies that focus on runaway adolescents and their families are relatively low. Identifying factors associated with follow-up completion might be useful for improving follow-up rates and therefore study validity. The present study explored how individual- and family-level constructs, as well as research project activities, influence the follow-up completion rate among runaway adolescents (N = 140) and their primary caregiver. Results showed that follow-up completion rates decreased as the number of research assistants (RA) assigned to each case increased and as participants’ address changes increased. Additionally, among adolescents, more frequent alcohol use was associated with lower follow-up rates. The current findings suggest that researchers should (1) design their research so that one RA is assigned to each specific case, and (2) adjust their retention strategies to account for the differences in follow-up rates based upon the participants’ drug of choice and residential stability.
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Metadata
Title
Predictors of Follow-Up Completion Among Runaway Substance-Abusing Adolescents and their Primary Caretakers
Authors
Rikki Patton
Natasha Slesnick
Denitza Bantchevska
Xiamei Guo
Yunhwan Kim
Publication date
01-04-2011
Publisher
Springer US
Published in
Community Mental Health Journal / Issue 2/2011
Print ISSN: 0010-3853
Electronic ISSN: 1573-2789
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10597-009-9281-9

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