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Recovery and relapse in multiproblem families following community based multidisciplinary treatment
Date Issued
1999
Date Available
2014-01-29T09:28:57Z
Abstract
In a comparative group outcome study of 47 multiproblem families which received treatment from multidisciplinary
child and family mental health services teams and 47 waiting list controls, it was found that treated cases showed
significant improvement over the course of three months during which they attended the service. Improvement
occurred in children's behavioural adjustment and maternal psychological health. Waiting list controls did not
improve significantly on either of these variables during the three month treatment period. However, mean scores
of the treatment group at nine months follow-up were not significantly better than pretreatment scores, indicating
that gains made during treatment were lost at follow-up. An analysis of the clinical significance of changes in
children's adjustment showed that while 41% of children moved from the clinical to the normal range during the
course of treatment, all had relapsed at six-month follow up. These results point to the importance of developing a
chronic care rather than an acute care approach to service provision for multiproblem families.
child and family mental health services teams and 47 waiting list controls, it was found that treated cases showed
significant improvement over the course of three months during which they attended the service. Improvement
occurred in children's behavioural adjustment and maternal psychological health. Waiting list controls did not
improve significantly on either of these variables during the three month treatment period. However, mean scores
of the treatment group at nine months follow-up were not significantly better than pretreatment scores, indicating
that gains made during treatment were lost at follow-up. An analysis of the clinical significance of changes in
children's adjustment showed that while 41% of children moved from the clinical to the normal range during the
course of treatment, all had relapsed at six-month follow up. These results point to the importance of developing a
chronic care rather than an acute care approach to service provision for multiproblem families.
Type of Material
Journal Article
Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Journal
Irish Journal of Psychology
Volume
20
Issue
1
Start Page
69
End Page
88
Copyright (Published Version)
1999 Taylor & Francis
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
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Recovery_&_relapse_1999x.pdf
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