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Browsing by Subject "Dual System Involvement"

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    Young Adults with Behavioral Health Services and Justice System Involvement
    (2022-09-21) Hong, Saahoon
    Communimetrics highlights the team approach to sharing a vision and its goals via communication, while psychometrics focuses on efforts to identify, measure, and interpret psychological attributes and characteristics. I utilized ANSA data to identify unobserved subgroups and detect the intersectionality of dual system involvement (e.g., mental health and the criminal justice system), demographic characteristics, behavioral health needs, and race/ethnicity. Such intersectionality could be critical in the team process to assist and strengthen person-centered mental health recovery. I will also discuss the practical implications of critical factors associated with their behavioral health recovery to develop the outcome-oriented intervention.
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    Young Adults with the Mental Health and Criminal Justice System Involvement: A Preliminary Study
    (2023-01-15) Hong, Saahoon; Walton, Betty; Kim, Hea-Won; Moynihan, Stephanie
    This study examined the intersection of characteristics, behavioral health needs, and strengths for young adults with dual involvement in the mental health and criminal justice systems. Findings predicted dual system involvement with the following ANSA items: 1) substance use; 2) gender; 3) depression; 4) anxiety; 5) volunteering (strength); 6) developmental; 7) impulse control; 8) residential stability; 9) parental/caregiver role, and 10) anger control. The most significant predictor associated with the dual system involvement, differentiating from the non-dual system involvement, was substance use followed by gender and depression. More young men than young women had substance use needs. Young adults with dual system involvement presented higher rates of actionable ratings on depression and impulse control than their counterparts.
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