17 results match your criteria: "University of South Carolina College of Social Work[Affiliation]"
Children of color-especially Black and Indigenous children-are disproportionately overrepresented in foster care and experience barriers in accessing services and receiving physical and behavioral healthcare compared to their White counterparts. Although racial disparities in mental health outcomes of children in foster care have been examined systematically, less is known about racial disparities in their physical health outcomes. This systematic review aimed to examine disparities in physical health outcomes (i.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChild Abuse Negl
November 2022
Morgan State University School of Social Work, 1700 East Cold Spring Lane, Jenkins 351, Baltimore, MD 21251, United States of America.
Background: Child maltreatment reporting is critical for case investigation and service disposition. However, reporting discrepancies across informants is a challenge for child welfare services.
Methods: Using data from the Fragile Families and Child Wellbeing Study (n = 3150), the current study examined child-caregiver discrepancies in reporting the frequencies of psychological and physical maltreatment.
Soc Work Health Care
August 2022
University of South Carolina College of Social Work, Columbia, South Carolina, USA.
Research regarding the intersection of social work and integrated care has recently increased. Although research specific to the role and engagement of social workers in integrated care is promising, research regarding attitudes toward social workers on integrated behavioral health (IBH) teams remains scant. This study provides perspective regarding healthcare professionals' attitudes toward the role of social workers on IBH teams.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHealth Soc Care Community
November 2022
University of South Carolina College of Social Work, Columbia, South Carolina, USA.
Grandparents caring for grandchildren has increased globally in the past two decades, but we have a limited understanding of its effects on custodial grandchildren's mental/behavioural health and educational outcomes. This mixed methods systematic review aims to synthesise mental/behavioural health and educational outcomes of custodial grandchildren within custodial grandparent-headed families and with comparison to other types of household structure and further examine factors associated with these outcomes. A systematic review following the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses guidelines was conducted.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSouth Med J
October 2021
From the University of South Carolina College of Social Work, Columbia, Future Psych Solutions, LLC, Columbia, the University of South Carolina Sponsored Awards Management, Columbia, the University of South Carolina College of Pharmacy, Columbia, the University of South Carolina College of Nursing, Columbia, and the Winthrop University College of Arts & Sciences, Rock Hill, South Carolina.
Telehealth can be used to improve rural communities' access to specialized healthcare services and ameliorate rural care barriers. Use of telehealth quickly increased with the COVID-19 pandemic, and universities shifted to online instruction for the safety of students and faculty. This rapid uptake of telehealth and online instruction has created an urgent need for examples of online training for health professional students in telehealth.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Fam Violence
November 2020
University of South Carolina College of Social Work, 1512 Pendleton St Hamilton College, South Carolina 29208 Columbia, USA.
Grandparent kinship caregivers may experience increased parenting stress and mental distress during the COVID-19 pandemic. It may lead to risky parenting behaviors, such as psychological aggression, corporal punishment, and neglectful behaviors towards their grandchildren. This study aims to examine (1) the relationships between parenting stress, mental health, and grandparent kinship caregivers' risky parenting practices, such as psychological aggression, corporal punishment, and neglectful behaviors towards their grandchildren during the COVID-19 pandemic, and (2) whether grandparent kinship caregivers' mental health is a potential mediator between parenting stress and caregivers' psychological aggression, corporal punishment, and neglectful behaviors.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Transplant
November 2020
Northern Illinois University School of Interdisciplinary Health Professions, Dekalb, Illinois, USA.
Background: The COVID-19 pandemic has exposed the vulnerability of many families, including grandparent kinship families, to deal with a health/economic crisis. The fear of COVID-19 plus stay-at-home orders have increased individuals' psychological distress. Moreover, school closures and homeschooling further increased parenting stress among caregivers.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Children in kinship care may be placed in similar neighborhoods as their birth families, which are predominantly characterized as distressed neighborhoods with high poverty and crime rates, poor-quality housing conditions, and few social resources. Disordered neighborhoods are negatively correlated to social support, but this dynamic may vary by race or ethnicity. However, children's previously established attachment and social bonding may offset the negative effects of distressed neighborhoods on child behavioral health.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChild Abuse Negl
December 2020
University of South Carolina College of Social Work, United States.
Background: The neglect of children is a serious global problem. The 1989 United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC) was a major international achievement spurring national efforts to prevent and address neglect. However, the scope of neglect worldwide and progress in addressing it remain unclear.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRespir Med
April 2018
Washington University School of Medicine, Saint Louis, MO, USA. Electronic address:
Objectives: Guidelines recommend that healthcare providers adjust the dose of inhaled corticosteroids (ICS) in asthma patients based on the degree of symptom severity and control. Symptom-based, intermittent ICS therapy (use of ICS together with short acting bronchodilators- symptom-based adjustment: SBA) has been demonstrated to be comparable to guideline-based management by providers in controlled clinical trials. We sought input from African American caregivers and pediatricians on the acceptability and barriers for this alternative management strategy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Public Health
December 2017
Teri Browne is with the University of South Carolina College of Social Work, Columbia. Robert H. Keefe is with the University at Buffalo School of Social Work, State University of New York. Betty J. Ruth is with the Boston University School of Social Work, Boston, MA. Harold Cox is with the Boston University School of Public Health, Boston. Peter Maramaldi is with the Simmons College School of Social Work, Boston. Carrie Rishel is with the West Virginia University School of Social Work, Morgantown. Michele Rountree is with the University of Texas School of Social Work, Austin. Joan Zlotnik is with the National Association of Social Workers, Washington, DC. Jamie Marshall is with the Group for Public Health Social Work Initiatives, Boston.
Social work education plays a critical role in preparing social workers to lead efforts that improve health. Because of the dynamic health care landscape, schools of social work must educate students to facilitate health care system improvements, enhance population health, and reduce medical costs. We reviewed the existing contributions of social work education and provided recommendations for improving the education of social workers in 6 key areas: aging, behavioral health, community health, global health, health reform, and health policy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Am Soc Nephrol
March 2017
Department of Medicine, Division of Renal Medicine, Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, Georgia.
Georgia has the lowest kidney transplant rates in the United States and substantial racial disparities in transplantation. We determined the effectiveness of a multicomponent intervention to increase referral of patients on dialysis for transplant evaluation in the Reducing Disparities in Access to kidNey Transplantation Community Study (RaDIANT), a randomized, dialysis facility-based, controlled trial involving >9000 patients receiving dialysis from 134 dialysis facilities in Georgia. In December of 2013, we selected dialysis facilities with either low transplant referral or racial disparity in referral.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Trauma Stress
August 2016
Institute for Behavioral Health, Heller School for Social Policy and Management, Brandeis University, Waltham, Massachusetts, USA.
An association between combat exposure and postdeployment behavioral health problems has been demonstrated among U.S. military service members returning from Afghanistan or Iraq in predominantly male samples, yet few studies have focused on the experiences of women.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Public Health
August 2014
Mary Jo Larson and Rachel Sayko Adams are with The Heller School for Social Policy & Management, Institute for Behavioral Health, Brandeis University, Waltham, MA. Beth A. Mohr is with The Heller School for Social Policy & Management, Schneider Institutes for Health Policy, Brandeis University. Nikki R. Wooten is with Military Social Work Research and Practice, University of South Carolina College of Social Work, Columbia. Thomas V. Williams is with Methods, Measures, Analyses, Defense Health Cost Assessment and Program Evaluation, Defense Health Agency, Department of Defense, Falls Church, VA.
Objectives: We identified to what extent the Department of Defense postdeployment health surveillance program identifies at-risk drinking, alone or in conjunction with psychological comorbidities, and refers service members who screen positive for additional assessment or care.
Methods: We completed a cross-sectional analysis of 333 803 US Army active duty members returning from Iraq or Afghanistan deployments in fiscal years 2008 to 2011 with a postdeployment health assessment. Alcohol measures included 2 based on self-report quantity-frequency items-at-risk drinking (positive Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test alcohol consumption questions [AUDIT-C] screen) and severe alcohol problems (AUDIT-C score of 8 or higher)-and another based on the interviewing provider's assessment.
Int J Offender Ther Comp Criminol
May 2013
University of South Carolina College of Social Work, DeSaussure College, Columbia, SC 29208, USA.
Women provide support for many vulnerable groups, work that is frequently discounted with gendered stereotypes. One growing vulnerable group is former prisoners who often return to women family members. We completed a qualitative study with 25 former prisoners and criminal justice staff to examine their conceptualizations of the demands placed on women supporters of former prisoners.
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