@article{3611802f4cc34dd0a6896d5c961d2bdf,
title = "Measuring child mental health status for services research",
keywords = "Child psychopathology, Impairment, Measurement, Service use, Socioeconomic status",
author = "Sheny Glied and Hoven, {Christina W.} and {Bowen Garrett}, A. and Moore, {Robert E.} and Philip Leaf and Bird, {Hector R.} and Sherryl Goodman and Darrel Regier and Margarita Alegria",
note = "Funding Information: Data analysis was funded by NIMH Grant No. R01 MH52698-01. We would like to thank the original MECA collaborators for the use of these data. The MECA Program is an epidemiologic methodology study performed by four independent research teams in collaboration with staff of the Division of Clinical Research, which was reorganized in 1992 with components now in the Division of Epidemiology and Services Research and the Division of Clinical and Treatment Research, of the NIMH, Rockville, MD. The NIMH Principal Collaborators are Darrel A. Regier, MD, MPH, Ben Z. Locke, MSPH, Peter S. Jensen, MD, William E. Narrow, MD, MPH, Donald S. Rae, MA, John E. Richters, PhD, Karen H. Bourdon, MA, and Margaret T Roper, MS. The NIMH Project Officer was William J. Huber. The Principal Investigators and Coinvestigators from the four sites are as follows: Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia, UOI MH46725: Mina K. Dulcan, MD, Benjamin B. Lahey, PhD; Donna J. Brogan, PhD, Sherryl Goodman, PhD, and Elaine W Flagg, PhD; Research Foundation for Mental Health at New York State Psychiatric Institute (Columbia University), New York, NY, UOI MH46718: Hector R. Bird, MD, David Shaffer, MD, MyrnaWeissman,PhD, Patricia Cohen, PhD, Denise Kandel, PhD, Christina Hoven, DrPH, Mark Davies, MPH, Madelyn S. Gould, PhD, and Agnes Whitaker, MD; Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut, UOI MH46717: Mary Schwab-Stone, MD, Philip J. Leaf, PhD, Sarah Hor-witz, PhD, and Judith H. Lichtman, MPH; University of Puerto Rico, San Juan, Puerto Rico, UOI MH46732: Glorisa Canino, PhD, Maritza Rubio-Stipec, MA, Milagros Bravo, PhD, Margarita Alegria, PhD, Julio Ribera, PhD, Sara Huertas, MD, Michael Woodbury,MD, and Jose Bauermeister. Computer analysis for this study was supported by Mental Health Research Grant MH30906.",
year = "1997",
doi = "10.1023/A:1025098607720",
language = "English (US)",
volume = "6",
pages = "177--190",
journal = "Journal of Child and Family Studies",
issn = "1062-1024",
publisher = "Springer New York",
number = "2",
}