38 results on '"Barnert, Elizabeth S."'
Search Results
2. Health and Care Needs of Young Adults Exiting Jail.
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Barnert, Elizabeth S., Jara, Jessica, Lee, Joyce, Vassar, Stefanie, Tunador, Felix, Abrams, Laura, Grella, Christine, and Wong, Mitchell
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COMPETENCY assessment (Law) ,CRIMINAL justice system ,CORRECTIONAL institutions ,PRISON psychology ,SUBSTANCE abuse ,MULTIPLE regression analysis ,PSYCHOLOGICAL vulnerability ,MEDICAL care ,HEALTH status indicators ,HUMAN services programs ,MEDICAL care use ,COMPARATIVE studies ,T-test (Statistics) ,INDEPENDENT living ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,CHI-squared test ,REHABILITATION ,HOUSING ,ODDS ratio ,MEDICAL needs assessment ,LONGITUDINAL method ,COMORBIDITY ,SOCIAL case work ,ADOLESCENCE - Abstract
Reentry is a difficult juncture for young adults (ages 18–24 years), who simultaneously face challenges of emerging adulthood. Although their health-related needs may be substantial, little is reported on young adults' reentry health care and social service needs. Furthermore, empirical measurements of factors affecting their engagement in reentry services after jail are lacking. We sought to describe health needs and predictors of linkages to reentry services for the 2,525 young adult participants in the Whole Person Care–LA Reentry program (WPC Reentry). Descriptive statistics were calculated and chi-square tests, t tests, and logistic regression were performed to identify factors associated with linkage to WPC Reentry postrelease compared with only engaging with WPC Reentry prerelease. Most participants (72.6%) were male, 80.2% were Hispanic or Black, and 60.9% had been unhoused. Mental health (57.2%) and substance use disorders (45.8%) were common, physical health was overall good (mean Charlson Comorbidity Index score 0.53), and social needs, especially housing, were high (40.7%). Older age (i.e., closer to 25 years) and history of being unhoused were associated with higher postrelease engagement in WPC Reentry (age: odds ratio [OR] = 1.06, p = .01; history of being unhoused: OR = 1.18, p = .05). Attentiveness to younger clients and to addressing housing needs may be key for successful reentry care linkages. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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3. Youth Justice at a Crossroads: Twenty-First Century Progressive Reforms and Lessons to Inform the Path Forward.
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Lesnick, Julia, Abrams, Laura S., and Barnert, Elizabeth S.
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TWENTY-first century ,LITERATURE reviews ,CHILDREN'S rights ,TRAUMA-informed practice ,LAW reform ,JUVENILE offenders - Abstract
The US juvenile legal system changed substantially during the twenty-first century. Notable shifts occurred with progressive reform trends aimed to promote developmentally aligned, trauma-informed, and equitable youth justice systems. Now, in an increasingly complex and polarized landscape, the future of progressive change for youth justice faces a crossroads, with some calling for transformation and others advocating a path of continued gradual reform. In this critical literature review, we analyze the role of leading paradigms (i.e., developmental neuroscience, trauma-informed practice, children's rights, racial equity, the medical model, and abolition) driving patterns of progressive reform in the US juvenile legal system during the twenty-first century. From this review, we reflect on strengths and limitations of predominant paradigms that have guided progressive change in youth justice and offer key lessons to inform the path forward. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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4. Therapeutic Dance for the Healing of Sexual Trauma: A Systematic Review.
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Lee, Joyce, Dhauna, Janeet, Silvers, Jennifer A., Houston, Meredith H., and Barnert, Elizabeth S.
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TREATMENT of emotional trauma ,ONLINE information services ,PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems ,DANCE therapy ,FRAIL elderly ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,EVIDENCE-based medicine ,SEXUAL trauma ,MEDICAL care research ,MENTAL healing ,INTERPERSONAL relations ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,RESEARCH funding ,MEDLINE - Abstract
Therapeutic dance has been increasingly used as a treatment modality for sexual trauma, yet its evidence-based efficacy has not yet been catalogued. We therefore conducted a systematic review to summarize the existing evidence for therapeutic dance as an intervention for healing after sexual trauma. We searched 5 major databases to identify intervention studies on the use of therapeutic dance for individuals with histories of sexual trauma. Studies were included based on the following criteria: 1) the study involves individuals who have been exposed to sexual trauma; 2) the study reports on any form of dance as a therapeutic intervention; and 3) the study reports on dance intervention outcomes. A total of 1,686 sources were identified. Of these, 11 articles met eligibility criteria and were assessed. Reported outcomes were extracted and organized into emergent domains. We found that therapeutic dance acts upon three broad domains—affect, self, and interpersonal relationships – and can be delivered in diverse settings. Across the studies, dance showed benefits on outcomes. However, a significant weakness of the current peer-reviewed literature is the lack of robust empirical intervention research on dance therapy. Overall, the emerging literature suggests that therapeutic dance is a potential intervention for those who have experienced sexual trauma. The review findings presented here can be used to inform practitioners and systems of care targeted for those who have been subject to sexual trauma. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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5. Beyond the Manuscript: A Minimum Age for California's Juvenile Legal System: Lessons on Collaborative Research to Drive Legislative Change and Leveraging Collaborative Partnerships to Protect the Human Rights of Children Involved in the United States' Juvenile Justice System
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Barnert, Elizabeth S., Goemann, Melissa Coretz, Gozani, Dafna, and Strelnick, Hal
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JUVENILE justice administration ,JUVENILE offenders ,CHILDREN'S rights ,JUSTICE administration ,HUMAN rights ,YOUNG adults ,MEDICAL partnership - Abstract
I'm the Senior Policy Counsel for the National Juvenile Justice Network, or NJJN, and we're focused on helping our members in state organizations all around the country to work on youth justice reform. States' Juvenile Justice System Welcome to Progress in Community Health Partnerships' latest episode of our Beyond the Manuscript podcast. After California had passed its legislation and we had finished all the articles and the youth justice advocates in California who we had partnered with had kind of moved on to other very important topics that they were working on, I said to Laura, "It's time to go national. [Extracted from the article]
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- 2023
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6. A Minimum Age for California's Juvenile Legal System: Lessons on Collaborative Research to Drive Legislative Change.
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Barnert, Elizabeth S. and Abrams, Laura S.
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JUSTICE administration ,SOCIAL workers ,AGE groups ,JUVENILE offenders ,LEGISLATIVE bills ,AGE - Abstract
The Problem: Most U.S. states lack a minimum age of juvenile legal jurisdiction, which leaves young children vulnerable to a harsh, punitive system that causes lifelong adverse health and social outcomes. However, partnership between academics, advocates, and policymakers can catalyze legislative change to set minimum ages. Purpose of Article: We, an academic pediatrician and social worker, describe our stakeholder-policymaker-academic partnered research that led to the passage of California Senate Bill 439, which excludes children under age 12 from eligibility for juvenile legal prosecution. To stimulate future efforts, we also describe how the initial partnership led to a national coalition through which we are partnering with stakeholders across the United States to influence minimum age laws nationwide. Key Points: Stakeholder–policymaker–academic partners can contribute synergistically in the research-to-policymaking process. Conclusions: Through a stakeholder–policymaker–academic partnership, we were able to influence the passage of a minimum age law for the juvenile legal system in California. Lessons learned in this collaboration can be applied by researchers across disciplines who wish to influence policy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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7. "It was there when I came home": young adults and jail reentry in the context of COVID-19.
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Abrams, Laura S., Reed, Taylor A., Bondoc, Christopher, Acosta, Desiree R., Murillo, Mary, and Barnert, Elizabeth S.
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COVID-19 pandemic ,COVID-19 ,YOUNG adults ,STAY-at-home orders ,SOCIAL services ,JAILS - Abstract
In this study, the authors explore how young adults navigated the dual challenges of the COVID-19 pandemic and jail reentry in a large urban environment. Fifteen young adults (aged 18–25) participated in up to nine monthly semi-structured interviews to discuss their experiences of reentry during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic (i.e., spring and summer 2020). Participants held mixed attitudes and beliefs about COVID-19. Several participants viewed the pandemic as a hoax, while others took the pandemic more seriously, particularly if their friends and family members had contracted the virus. Yet nearly all participants viewed the pandemic as having a relatively minimal impact on their lives compared to the weight of their reentry challenges and probation requirements. Young adults described COVID-19 stay-at-home orders as limiting their exposure to negative influences and facilitating compliance with probation requirements. However, resource closures due to COVID-19, including schools, employment programs, and social services presented barriers to reentry success. The authors draw upon these findings to pose implications for interventions supporting young adult reentry. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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8. Juvenile confinement exacerbates adversity burden: A neurobiological impetus for decarceration.
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Orendain, Natalia, Galván, Adriana, Smith, Emma, Barnert, Elizabeth S., and Chung, Paul J.
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MENTAL health services ,JUVENILE justice administration ,CURIOSITY ,DELINQUENT behavior ,RECIDIVISM rates - Abstract
Every year, about 700,000 youth arrests occur in the United States, creating significant neurodevelopmental strain; this is especially concerning as most of these youth have early life adversity exposures that may alter brain development. Males, Black, and Latinx youth, and individuals from low socioeconomic status households have disproportionate contact with the juvenile justice system (JJS). Youth confined in the JJS are frequently exposed to threat and abuse, in addition to separation from family and other social supports. Youths’ educational and exploratory behaviors and activities are substantially restricted, and youth are confined to sterile environments that often lack sufficient enrichment resources. In addition to their demonstrated ineffectiveness in preventing future delinquent behaviors, high recidivism rates, and costs, juvenile conditions of confinement likely exacerbate youths’ adversity burden and neurodevelopmentally harm youth during the temporally sensitive window of adolescence. Developmentally appropriate methods that capitalize on adolescents’ unique rehabilitative potential should be instated through interventions that minimize confinement. Such changes would require joint advocacy from the pediatric and behavioral health care communities. “The distinct nature of children, their initial dependent, and developmental state, their unique human potential as well as their vulnerability, all demand the need for more, rather than less, legal and other protection from all forms of violence (United Nations Committee on the Rights of the Child, 2007).” [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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9. Implementation of Canada's youth justice minimum age of 12: implications for children in Canada and globally.
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Barnert, Elizabeth S., Gallagher, Devan, Lei, Haoyi, and Abrams, Laura S.
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Youth justice minimum age thresholds vary widely and are garnering increased global attention. In 1984, legislation in Canada excluded all children under age 12 from its youth justice system, yet few studies have examined implementation of the statute. We interviewed 22 experts across Canada to understand how the law functions and to guide responses in Canada and other nations. We used an inductive, thematic analysis process. Experts reported that excluding children under 12 from Canada's youth justice system has been effective in eliminating juvenile legal processing for children under 12, and promoting responses that identify and address the root causes of children's disruptive behavior outside of the legal system. Experts noted that addressing key gaps in funding and community service provision can reduce service variation by geography, race or ethnicity, socio-economic status, and ability or disability status and can enhance youths' success. Canada's experience suggests that for optimal implementation, minimum age laws should be coupled with robust funding and sufficient service provision to achieve racial justice and health equity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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10. Policy solutions to end gaps in Medicaid coverage during reentry after incarceration in the United States: experts' recommendations.
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Barnert, Elizabeth S., Scannell, Christopher, Ashtari, Neda, and Albertson, Eleanor
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HEALTH policy ,PRISONERS ,RESEARCH methodology ,INTERVIEWING ,RECIDIVISM ,MEDICAID ,POLICY sciences ,THEMATIC analysis ,STATISTICAL sampling ,INSURANCE ,CRIMINAL justice system - Abstract
Aims: We sought to gather experts' perspectives on Medicaid coverage gaps during reentry to identify high-yield policy solutions to improve the health of justice-involved individuals in the United States. Subject and methods: We interviewed 28 experts at the intersection of Medicaid and criminal justice via telephone between November 2018 and April 2019. Interviewees included Medicaid administrators, health and justice officials, policy makers, and health policy researchers. We performed thematic analysis of semi-structured interview transcripts to identify emergent themes and distill policy recommendations. Results: Three themes emerged: 1) Medicaid coverage gaps during reentry contribute to poor health outcomes and recidivism, 2) excessive burden on justice-involved people to re-activate Medicaid leads to coverage gaps, and 3) scalable policy solutions exist to eliminate Medicaid coverage gaps during reentry. Policy recommendations centered on ending the federal "inmate exclusion," delaying Medicaid de-activation at intake, and promoting re-activation by reentry. Experts viewed coverage gaps as problematic, viewed current approaches as inefficient and burdensome, and recommended several policy solutions. Conclusion: By pursuing strategies to eliminate Medicaid gaps during reentry, policymakers can improve health outcomes and efficiency of government spending on healthcare, and may reduce cycles of incarceration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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11. Applying a Health Development Lens to Canada's Youth Justice Minimum Age Law.
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Barnert, Elizabeth S., Gallagher, Devan, Haoyi Lei, and Abrams, Laura S.
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- 2022
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12. Reducing Medicaid Coverage Gaps for Youth During Reentry.
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Scannell, Christopher, Albertson, Elaine Michelle, Ashtari, Neda, and Barnert, Elizabeth S.
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HEALTH policy ,INSTITUTIONAL cooperation ,HEALTH services accessibility ,CORRECTIONAL institutions ,ATTITUDES of medical personnel ,WORK ,RESEARCH methodology ,EXECUTIVES ,INTERVIEWING ,COMPARATIVE studies ,QUALITATIVE research ,QUALITY assurance ,EXPERIENTIAL learning ,INDEPENDENT living ,RESEARCH funding ,INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,ELIGIBILITY (Social aspects) ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,JUVENILE offenders ,MEDICAID ,JURY ,REHABILITATION ,THEMATIC analysis ,INSURANCE ,CRIMINAL justice system - Abstract
Although many justice-involved youth (JIY) rely on Medicaid, due to the federal "inmate exclusion" Medicaid is often suspended or terminated upon youth's intake to detention, which can lead to coverage gaps at release. We interviewed 28 experts on Medicaid and the justice system and conducted thematic analysis to identify solutions for reducing Medicaid coverage gaps during reentry. Participants viewed coverage gaps during reentry as a significant public health problem to which JIY are especially vulnerable. Recommended solutions for reducing coverage gaps for JIY included (a) leave Medicaid activated, (b) reactivate Medicaid before or during reentry, (c) enhance interagency collaboration, and (d) address societal context to ensure health care access for Medicaid-eligible JIY. Doing so may improve health outcomes and reduce cycles of youth incarceration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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13. Adolescent Protective and Risk Factors for Incarceration through Early Adulthood.
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Barnert, Elizabeth S., Perry, Raymond, Shetgiri, Rashmi, Steers, Neil, Dudovitz, Rebecca, Heard-Garris, Nia J., Zima, Bonnie, and Chung, Paul J.
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PRISONERS ,HISPANIC Americans ,RISK assessment ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,BEHAVIOR disorders ,PARENTING ,TEENAGERS' conduct of life ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,SEX crimes ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,JUVENILE offenders ,STATISTICAL sampling ,WHITE people ,LONGITUDINAL method ,EDUCATIONAL attainment ,AFRICAN Americans - Abstract
With 2.3 million individuals incarcerated in the United States, incarceration remains a pressing social influence on health. While risk factors for incarceration are known, research has been slow to identify protective factors. Characterizing adolescent protective and risk factors for incarceration outcomes can inform interventions to prevent incarceration. Using survey data from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health, we tested the influence of adolescent risk and protective factors for incarceration of young people. We used ordinal logistic regressions, investigating the relationship between adolescent characteristics (wave I, grades 7–12) with two outcomes: incarceration onset (no incarceration, onset of incarceration as a juvenile, and onset of incarceration as an adult) and incarceration frequency (never incarcerated, incarcerated once, incarcerated more than once) during adolescence and into adulthood (N = 12,136, wave IV, ages 24–32). Adolescent protective factors against incarceration onset and higher incarceration frequency centered on education, including a higher grade point average and a higher likelihood of having future plans to attend college. Risk factors included disruptive behavior, physical or sexual abuse in childhood, parental incarceration, and living with a stepfather figure. Stratified analyses suggested that Latinos may have unique risk profiles compared to African American and White youth. The educational system may be a locus for protective interventions promoting academic achievement and educational aspirations. Understanding both incarceration risk and protective factors may allow interventions to be tailored appropriately. Highlights: Nationally representative study examined risk factors and protective factors in adolescence associated with incarceration. Protective factors in adolescence centered on educational success and future educational plans. Latino youth appeared to have differences in incarceration risk factors as compared to youth from other racial groups that warrant further examination. Educational success may be a locus for the prevention of incarceration in adolescence and adulthood. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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14. Correction to: The Criminalization of Young Children and Overrepresentation of Black Youth in the Juvenile Justice System.
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Abrams, Laura S., Mizel, Matthew L., and Barnert, Elizabeth S.
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A correction to this paper has been published: https://doi.org/10.1007/s12552-021-09324-5 [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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15. The Criminalization of Young Children and Overrepresentation of Black Youth in the Juvenile Justice System.
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Abrams, Laura S., Mizel, Matthew L., and Barnert, Elizabeth S.
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The American juvenile justice system is characterized by the overrepresentation of youth of color that is particularly acute for Black children even at young ages. Despite policy solutions targeting this problem, the Black-White gap in juvenile justice involvement continues to widen. Using mixed methods, this study examines rates of disproportionality among younger children (under age 12) in the state of California juvenile justice system alongside stakeholder views on the causes of and solutions for overrepresentation. We find that at each stage of the juvenile justice system the overrepresentation of Black youth increases relative to White youth. Consistent with the literature, stakeholders attribute this problem to early phases of the system (i.e., school discipline, arrests) where more discretion is applied. They also suggest that alternatives to formal systems involvement would help to remedy overrepresentation. These findings lend support to minimum age laws that uniformly exclude younger children from the juvenile justice system altogether. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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16. Collaborative Responses to Commercial Sexual Exploitation as a Model of Smart Decarceration.
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Abrams, Laura S, Godoy, Sarah M, Bath, Eraka P, and Barnert, Elizabeth S
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HUMAN trafficking prevention ,ABUSE of girls ,GENDER & society ,VICTIMS ,WOMEN-born women ,CRIMINAL justice system ,CHILD sexual abuse - Abstract
Historically, youths who are affected by commercial sexual exploitation (CSE) in the United States have been implicated as perpetrators of crime and overrepresented in the juvenile justice system. As an intriguing example of the "smart decarceration" social work grand challenge, policy and practice initiatives have converged to decriminalize cisgender girls and young women experiencing CSE by reframing them as victims of exploitation rather than as criminals. To date, these efforts have largely focused on gender-specific programming for cisgender girls and young women. In this article, the authors describe how federal, state, and local policy and practice innovations have supported reframing CSE as a form of child maltreatment and rerouted girls and young women from the juvenile justice system to specialized services. Using Los Angeles County as a case example, the authors detail how innovative prevention, intervention, and aftercare programs can serve as models of smart decarceration for CSE-affected cisgender girls and young women with the potential to address the needs of youths with diverse gender and sexual identities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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17. Fierce Autonomy: How Girls and Young Women Impacted by Commercial Sexual Exploitation Perceive Health and Exercise Agency in Health Care Decision-Making.
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Godoy, Sarah M., Abrams, Laura S., Barnert, Elizabeth S., Kelly, Mikaela A., and Bath, Eraka P.
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AUTONOMY (Psychology) ,DECISION making ,HEALTH attitudes ,INTERVIEWING ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RESEARCH funding ,SEX crimes ,WOMEN'S health ,JUDGMENT sampling ,HUMAN trafficking - Abstract
Prior research has examined the high health care needs and vulnerabilities faced by survivors of commercial sexual exploitation (CSE), yet their perspectives are frequently absent. We sought to understand the narratives and views of individuals affected by CSE on their bodies, health, and motivations to seek health care treatment. Twenty-one girls and young women ages 15 to 19 years with self-identified histories of CSE participated in the study. All participants had current or prior involvement in the juvenile justice and/or child welfare systems. Data collection included brief questionnaires, followed by semi-structured individual interviews. The interviews took place between March and July 2017 and were analyzed using iterative and inductive techniques, using the shared decision-making model as a guide. "Fierce Autonomy" emerged as a core theme, depicting how past traumas and absence of control led the girls and young women to exercise agency and reclaim autonomy over decisions affecting their health. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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18. The Role of Parent Engagement in Overcoming Barriers to Care for Youth Returning Home After Incarceration.
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Barnert, Elizabeth S., Lopez, Nathalie, Pettway, Bria, Keshav, Nivedita, Abrams, Laura S., Zima, Bonnie, and Chung, Paul J.
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CHI-squared test ,CORRECTIONAL institutions ,ETHNIC groups ,HEALTH services accessibility ,INTERVIEWING ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL needs assessment ,MOTIVATION (Psychology) ,PARENT-child relationships ,PARENTING ,RACE ,SEX distribution ,SURVEYS ,TRANSPORTATION ,QUALITATIVE research ,FAMILY relations ,HOME environment ,QUANTITATIVE research ,THEMATIC analysis ,PARENT attitudes - Abstract
We sought to understand the role of parent engagement in overcoming barriers to care for youth re-entering the community following incarceration. For this mixed methods study, we conducted quantitative surveys on healthcare needs and access with youth (n = 50) at 1-month post-incarceration, and semi-structured interviews with a subset of these youth (n = 27) and their parents (n = 34) at 1, 3, and 6-months post-incarceration (total 94 interviews). Differences by race/ethnicity and gender were assessed using Chi square test of proportions. We performed thematic analysis of interview transcripts to examine the role of parent engagement in influencing youths' access to healthcare during reentry. Most youth were from racial/ethnic minority groups and reported multiple ACEs. Girls, compared to boys, had higher ACE scores (p = 0.03), lower family connectedness (p = 0.03), and worse general health (p = 0.02). Youth-identified barriers to care were often parent-dependent and included lack of: affordable care (22%), transportation (16%), and accompaniment to health visits (14%). Two major themes emerged from the qualitative interviews: (1) parents motivate youth to seek healthcare during reentry and (2) parents facilitate the process of youth seeking healthcare during reentry. Parents are instrumental in linking youth to healthcare during reentry, dispelling prevailing myths that parents of incarcerated youth are inattentive and that youth do not want their help. Efforts that support and enhance parent engagement in access to care during reentry, such as by actively involving parents in pre-release healthcare planning, may create stronger linkages to care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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19. When Is a Child Too Young for Juvenile Court? A Comparative Case Study of State Law and Implementation in Six Major Metropolitan Areas.
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Abrams, Laura S., Barnert, Elizabeth S., Mizel, Matthew L., Bedros, Antoinette, Webster, Erica, and Bryan, Isaac
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JUVENILE courts ,METROPOLITAN areas ,LEGAL education ,STATE laws ,PETITIONS ,CASE studies - Abstract
There is a dearth of knowledge concerning statutes and practices designed to protect younger children from formal juvenile court petitions. This case study examines minimum age laws and related statutes in the six largest U.S. states and explores implementation of these policies and practices in major metropolitan areas within these states. The primary study methods included legal analysis and stakeholder interviews. Legal analysis identified diverse minimum age laws across states and complex statutes related to children's capacity to stand trial and competency. Stakeholders across the six cases agreed that the state should protect young children from formal delinquency petitions when possible. Discretionary statutes and practices appeared to play a key yet inconsistent role in excluding younger children from juvenile court. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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20. Barriers to Health Care for Latino Youths During Community Reentry After Incarceration: Los Angeles County, California, 2016–2018.
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Barnert, Elizabeth S., Lopez, Nathalie, and Chung, Paul J.
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CULTURE ,HEALTH services accessibility ,HEALTH status indicators ,PSYCHOLOGY of Hispanic Americans ,INTERVIEWING ,JOB security ,MATHEMATICAL models ,PRISONERS ,RESEARCH methodology ,REHABILITATION of people with mental illness ,PERSONAL space ,POVERTY ,PSYCHOLOGICAL stress ,QUALITATIVE research ,THEORY ,RESIDENTIAL patterns ,COMMUNICATION barriers ,THEMATIC analysis ,CAREGIVER attitudes ,INDEPENDENT living ,ADOLESCENCE - Abstract
Objectives. To examine barriers to health care for Latino youths during reentry after incarceration. Methods. For this in-depth qualitative study, we conducted 69 semistructured interviews with 22 Latino youths and their parents at 1, 3, and 6 months after incarceration. We performed thematic analysis of interview transcripts, from which a preliminary conceptual model emerged describing barriers to care for Latino youths. We then conducted trajectory analyses of dyadic youth–caregiver pairs to test the conceptual model. We collected longitudinal interviews in Los Angeles County, California, from November 2016 to March 2018. Results. Beyond recognized stressors experienced by youths during reentry, most of which families related to poverty and neighborhood environment, Latino youths also experienced cultural barriers to care (i.e., self-reliance and pride, religiosity and reproductive care as taboo, preference for home remedies, language) as well as barriers to care because of undocumented status (i.e., fear of deportation, job insecurity). Conclusions. Reentry is challenging, and Latino youths face additional barriers to care during reentry related to culture and legal status, but have cultural strengths. Increased access to culturally sensitive, safety-net health care, regardless of immigration status, may reduce health inequalities for Latino youths undergoing reentry. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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21. Is a Minimum Age of Juvenile Court Jurisdiction a Necessary Protection? A Case Study in the State of California.
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Abrams, Laura S., Barnert, Elizabeth S., Mizel, Matthew L., Bryan, Isaac, Lim, Lynn, Bedros, Antoinette, Soung, Patricia, and Harris, Michael
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JUVENILE delinquency ,JUVENILE courts ,CHILD protection services ,JUVENILE justice administration ,CRIME databases - Abstract
Several U.S. states are considering setting or raising a minimum age of juvenile court jurisdiction. However, there is scant evidence to suggest if a state minimum age law would protect children from developmentally inappropriate proceedings beyond existing capacity and competency statutes. To address this central question, this case study focuses on the state of California and considers (a) existing state laws, (b) state juvenile crime data, and (c) opinions of diverse juvenile justice stakeholders. Triangulated analysis found that a low number of California children below the age of 12 years are petitioned in juvenile court and most are referred for misdemeanor or status offenses. Existing legal protections are present yet inconsistently implemented. A minimum age law would address some of these policy gaps. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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22. Key Population Health Outcomes for Children with Medical Complexity: A Systematic Review.
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Barnert, Elizabeth S., Coller, Ryan J., Nelson, Bergen B., Thompson, Lindsey R., Tran, John, Chan, Vincent, Padilla, Cesar, Klitzner, Thomas S., Szilagyi, Moira, and Chung, Paul J.
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CHILDREN'S health ,CHRONIC diseases in children ,CONTENT analysis ,FAMILIES ,HEALTH promotion ,PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems ,EVALUATION of medical care ,MEDICAL quality control ,MEDLINE ,SCIENTIFIC observation ,QUALITY assurance ,SCALE analysis (Psychology) ,SELF-efficacy ,STATISTICS ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,QUALITATIVE research ,WELL-being ,POPULATION health ,CROSS-sectional method ,RETROSPECTIVE studies - Abstract
Introduction: Despite the significant healthcare policy and program implications, a summary measure of health for children with medical complexity (CMC) has not been identified. It is unclear whether existing population health approaches apply to CMC. We conducted a systematic review of the existing peer-reviewed research literature on CMC to describe the health outcomes currently measured for CMC. Methods: We searched MEDLINE and PsycINFO by linking combinations of key words from three groups of concepts: (1) pediatric, (2) medical complexity, and (3) chronicity or severity. Study eligibility criteria were research studies including CMC with any outcome reported. Data on the outcomes were systematically extracted. Iterative content analysis organized outcomes into conceptual domains and sub-domains. Results: Our search yielded 3853 articles. After exclusion criteria were applied, 517 articles remained for data extraction. Five distinct outcome domains and twenty-four sub-domains emerged. Specifically, 50% of the articles studied healthcare access and use; 43% family well-being; 39% child health and well-being; 38% healthcare quality; and 25% adaptive functioning. Notably lacking were articles examining routine child health promotion as well as child mental health and outcomes related to family functioning. Conclusions: Key health domains for CMC exist. Adaptations of existing sets of metrics and additional tools are needed to fully represent and measure population health for CMC. This approach may guide policies and programs to improve care for CMC. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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23. Substance use Initiation among Justice-Involved Youths: Evidence from the Pathways to Desistance Study.
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Baggio, Stéphanie, Heller, Patrick, Barnert, Elizabeth S., Tran, Nguyen Toan, Gétaz, Laurent, and Wolff, Hans
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SUBSTANCE abuse prevention ,AGE distribution ,JUVENILE delinquency ,JUVENILE offenders ,SUBSTANCE abuse ,TEENAGERS' conduct of life ,AT-risk people ,TRANSITIONAL programs (Education) - Abstract
This study aimed to identify substance use initiation among justice-involved adolescents transitioning into adulthood. Lifetime use of 11 substances was extracted from the U.S. Pathways to Desistance Study (N = 1,354) and modeled using latent class/transition analyses. Users were categorized into five classes: no/occasional use of alcohol and cannabis; alcohol, cigarette, and cannabis; stimulants; sedatives and hallucinogenic drugs; and all substance use. Justice-involved youths initiate substance use very early on, with substance users having already initiated substances between ages 16 and 23 on average. Those who used few substances at age 16 on average were likely to initiate illicit substances before age 23. Our findings support the importance of ensuring timely access to substance use prevention for this vulnerable population. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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24. Parents' Adverse and Positive Childhood Experiences and Offspring Involvement With the Criminal Legal System.
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Barnert, Elizabeth S., Schlichte, Lindsay M., Tolliver, Destiny G., La Charite, Jaime, Biely, Christopher, Dudovitz, Rebecca, Leifheit, Kathryn, Russ, Shirley, Sastry, Narayan, Yama, Cecile, Slavich, George M., and Schickedanz, Adam
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- 2023
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25. COVID-19 and Youth Impacted by Juvenile and Adult Criminal Justice Systems.
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Barnert, Elizabeth S.
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- 2020
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26. A Healthy Life for a Child With Medical Complexity: 10 Domains for Conceptualizing Health.
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Barnert, Elizabeth S., Coller, Ryan J., Nelson, Bergen B., Thompson, Lindsey R., Klitzner, Thomas S., Szilagyi, Moira, Breck, Abigail M., and Chung, Paul J.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Child incarceration and long-term adult health outcomes: a longitudinal study.
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Barnert, Elizabeth S., Abrams, Laura S., Tesema, Lello, Dudovitz, Rebecca, Nelson, Bergen B., Coker, Tumaini, Bath, Eraka, Biely, Christopher, Li, Ning, and Chung, Paul J.
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JUVENILE delinquency ,PRISONS & society ,CHILDREN'S health ,CRIMINAL justice system ,HEALTH outcome assessment ,STATISTICS on Black people ,STATISTICS on Hispanic Americans ,AGE distribution ,COMPARATIVE studies ,HEALTH status indicators ,LONGITUDINAL method ,PRISONERS ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,MENTAL health ,RESEARCH ,RESEARCH funding ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,EVALUATION research - Abstract
Purpose Although incarceration may have life-long negative health effects, little is known about associations between child incarceration and subsequent adult health outcomes. The paper aims to discuss this issue. Design/methodology/approach The authors analyzed data from 14,689 adult participants in the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health (Add Health) to compare adult health outcomes among those first incarcerated between 7 and 13 years of age (child incarceration); first incarcerated at>or=14 years of age; and never incarcerated. Findings Compared to the other two groups, those with a history of child incarceration were disproportionately black or Hispanic, male, and from lower socio-economic strata. Additionally, individuals incarcerated as children had worse adult health outcomes, including general health, functional limitations (climbing stairs), depressive symptoms, and suicidality, than those first incarcerated at older ages or never incarcerated. Research limitations/implications Despite the limitations of the secondary database analysis, these findings suggest that incarcerated children are an especially medically vulnerable population. Practical implications Programs and policies that address these medically vulnerable children's health needs through comprehensive health and social services in place of, during, and/or after incarceration are needed. Social implications Meeting these unmet health and social service needs offers an important opportunity to achieve necessary health care and justice reform for children. Originality/value No prior studies have examined the longitudinal relationship between child incarceration and adult health outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Confining Children in Adult Prisons and Premature Mortality—New Evidence to Inform Policy Action.
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Barnert, Elizabeth S.
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- 2023
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29. Predictors of Poor School Readiness in Children Without Developmental Delay at Age 2.
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Nelson, Bergen B., Dudovitz, Rebecca N., Coker, Tumaini R., Barnert, Elizabeth S., Biely, Christopher, Ning Li, Szilagyi, Peter G., Larson, Kandyce, Halfon, Neal, Zimmerman, Frederick J., and Chung, Paul J.
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- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Improving Health Care for the Future Uninsured in Los Angeles County: A Community-Partnered Dialogue.
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Iyer, Sharat P., Jones, Andrea, Talamantes, Efrain, Barnert, Elizabeth S., Kanzaria, Hemal K., Detz, Alissa, Daskivich, Timothy J., Jones, Loretta, Ryan, Gery W., and Mahajan, Anish P.
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MEDICALLY uninsured persons ,COMMUNITY health services ,MEDICAL quality control ,PATIENT satisfaction ,PRESSURE groups ,PATIENT Protection & Affordable Care Act ,MEDICAL care ,STATISTICS on medically uninsured persons ,COMMUNITY health services administration ,HEALTH services accessibility ,RESEARCH funding ,INSTITUTIONAL cooperation - Abstract
Objective: To understand the health care access issues faced by Los Angeles (LA) County's uninsured and residually uninsured after implementation of the Affordable Care Act (ACA) and to identify potential solutions using a community-partnered dialogue.Design: Qualitative study using a community-partnered participatory research framework.Setting: Community forum breakout discussion.Discussants: Representatives from LA County health care agencies, community health care provider organizations, local community advocacy and service organizations including uninsured individuals, and the county school district.Main Outcome Measures: Key structural and overarching value themes identified through community-partnered pile sort, c-coefficients measuring overlap between themes.Results: Five overarching value themes were identified - knowledge, trust, quality, partnership, and solutions. Lack of knowledge and misinformation were identified as barriers to successful enrollment of the eligible uninsured and providing health care to undocumented individuals. Discussants noted dissatisfaction with the quality of traditional sources of health care and a broken cycle of trust and disengagement. They also described inherent trust by the uninsured in "outsider" community-based providers not related to quality.Conclusions: Improving health care for the residually uninsured after ACA implementation will require addressing dissatisfaction in safety-net providers, disseminating knowledge and providing health care through trusted nontraditional sources, and using effective and trusted partnerships between community and health care agencies with mutual respect. Community-academic partnerships can be a trusted conduit to discuss issues related to the health care of vulnerable populations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2015
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31. Incarcerated Youths' Perspectives on Protective Factors and Risk Factors for Juvenile Offending: A Qualitative Analysis.
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Barnert, Elizabeth S., Perry, Raymond, Azzi, Veronica F., Shetgiri, Rashmi, Ryan, Gery, Dudovitz, Rebecca, Zima, Bonnie, and Chung, Paul J.
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JUVENILE offenders' attitudes ,JUVENILE delinquency ,POOR youth ,DELINQUENT behavior ,JUVENILE offenders ,PSYCHOLOGY ,SOCIAL history ,YOUTH services ,PREVENTION ,CRIME prevention ,ATTENTION ,ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,DISCIPLINE of children ,INTERVIEWING ,LOVE ,PEER pressure ,RESEARCH funding ,RISK assessment ,ROLE models ,QUALITATIVE research ,ADOLESCENCE - Abstract
Objectives. We sought to understand incarcerated youths' perspectives on the role of protective factors and risk factors for juvenile offending. Methods. We performed an in-depth qualitative analysis of interviews (conducted October-December 2013) with 20 incarcerated youths detained in the largest juvenile hall in Los Angeles. Results. The adolescent participants described their homes, schools, and neighborhoods as chaotic and unsafe. They expressed a need for love and attention, discipline and control, and role models and perspective. Youths perceived that when home or school failed to meet these needs, they spent more time on the streets, leading to incarceration. They contrasted the path through school with the path to jail, reporting that the path to jail felt easier. All of them expressed the insight that they had made bad decisions and that the more difficult path was not only better but also still potentially achievable. Conclusions. Breaking cycles of juvenile incarceration will require that the public health community partner with legislators, educators, community leaders, and youths to determine how to make success, rather than incarceration, the easier path for disadvantaged adolescents. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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32. Long Journey Home: Family Reunification Experiences of the Disappeared Children of El Salvador.
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Barnert, Elizabeth S., Stover, Eric, Ryan, Gery, and Chung, Paul
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FAMILY reunification ,FAMILIES ,MISSING children ,MISSING persons - Abstract
Established in 1 994, Salvadoran Asociacion Pro-Busqueda de Niñas y Niños Desaparecidos (Association for the Search of Disappeared Children) has located 384 children, often with the aid of DNA evidence, of the more than 500 who went missing or were abducted during El Salvador's civil war. Families in other countries who were unaware of the forced separations adopted many of these children. Between 2005 and 2009, we conducted semi-structured interviews with twenty-six children, now young adults aged twenty-four to thirty-four years, who had been reunited with their biological families. We found that we could conceptually categorize the process of separation and reunification into six phases: pre-disappearance, disappearance, separation, searching, reunion, and reunification. While these young adults said that reunification was extremely important, they often found this stage psychologically challenging, given their new identities and their uncertainty about how they would reintegrate back--if at all--into their biological families. We call this process "ambiguous reunification." [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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33. Setting a US National Minimum Age for Juvenile Justice Jurisdiction.
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Tolliver, Destiny G., Abrams, Laura S., and Barnert, Elizabeth S.
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- 2021
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34. Commercial Sexual Exploitation During Adolescence: A US-Based National Study of Adolescent to Adult Health.
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Barnert, Elizabeth S., Bath, Eraka, Heard-Garris, Nia, Lee, Joyce, Guerrero, Alma, Biely, Christopher, Jackson, Nicholas, Chung, Paul J., and Dudovitz, Rebecca
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SEX trafficking ,EVALUATION of medical care ,STATISTICS ,HEALTH services accessibility ,SUBSTANCE abuse ,HOSPITAL emergency services ,FUNCTIONAL status ,HEALTH status indicators ,RETROSPECTIVE studies ,ACQUISITION of data ,RACE ,HELP-seeking behavior ,ADOLESCENT health ,SEX distribution ,MEDICAL care use ,SEX crimes ,MEDICAL records ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,INTERPERSONAL relations ,MENTAL depression ,ETHNIC groups ,LOVE ,LONGITUDINAL method ,PARENTS ,EDUCATIONAL attainment - Abstract
Objectives: National data on the health of children and adolescents exposed to commercial sexual exploitation (CSE) are lacking, during both adolescence and adulthood. Using nationally representative data, we examined the health of male and female adolescents in grades 7-12 who experienced CSE exposure and subsequent adult health outcomes and access to health care. Methods: Our retrospective cohort study used data from Waves I-IV of the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health (1994-2008) to characterize relationships between CSE exposure before or during adolescence and health during adolescence and adulthood. The analytic sample included 10 918 adult participants aged 24-34 in Wave IV. We performed bivariate analyses, stratified by sex, to quantify the relationship between CSE exposure before or during adolescence and adolescent and adult health outcomes. Results: Four percent of participants reported having a CSE exposure before or during adolescence (5% of males, 3% of females). Factors associated with CSE exposure among adolescents included race/ethnicity, parental education level, previous abuse, same-sex romantic attractions, history of ever having run away from home, and substance use. During adolescence, exposure to CSE was associated with worse overall health, depressive symptoms, and suicidal thoughts for both males and females. In adulthood, adolescent CSE exposure was associated with depression among males and functional limitations among females. A higher percentage of males with CSE exposure before or during adolescence, compared with their non–CSE-exposed peers, used the emergency department as their usual source of care during adulthood. Conclusions: CSE exposure before or during adolescence was associated with poor adolescent and adult health outcomes and health care access. Observed differences between males and females warrant further exploration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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35. Exploring an intensive meditation intervention for incarcerated youth.
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Barnert, Elizabeth S., Himelstein, Samuel, Herbert, Sarah, Garcia‐Romeu, Albert, and Chamberlain, Lisa J.
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HEALTH promotion ,CONTENT analysis ,FOCUS groups ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDITATION ,PRISON psychology ,RESEARCH evaluation ,SURVEYS ,T-test (Statistics) ,PILOT projects ,WELL-being ,THEMATIC analysis ,PRE-tests & post-tests ,CONTROL groups ,ADOLESCENCE - Abstract
Background We examined the experiences of incarcerated adolescent males ( N = 29) who participated in a one-day meditation retreat and 10-week meditation programme. Method Self-report surveys assessing mindfulness, self-regulation, impulsivity and stress; behavioural assessments; and focus group data were examined. Results We observed significantly higher scores in self-regulation ( p = .012) and psychometric markers demonstrated psychological enhancement. No behavioural change was observed. Six themes emerged: enhanced well-being, increased self-discipline, increased social cohesiveness, expanded self-awareness, resistance to meditation and future meditation practice. Conclusions Early evidence suggests that meditation training for incarcerated youth is a feasible and promising intervention. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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36. Linking Juvenile Justice Research to Policy Action: Engaging Community Partners and Policy Makers to Achieve Change.
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Barnert, Elizabeth S.
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- 2020
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37. Responding to Parental Incarceration As a Priority Pediatric Health Issue.
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Barnert, Elizabeth S. and Chung, Paul J.
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- 2018
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- View/download PDF
38. How Does Incarcerating Young People Affect Their Adult Health Outcomes?
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Barnert, Elizabeth S., Dudovitz, Rebecca, Nelson, Bergen B., Coker, Tumaini R., Biely, Christopher, Ning Li, and Chung, Paul J.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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