National Institute on Drug Abuse Keep your Brain Healthy - Keep your Body Healthy
Link to Home Page Link to About NIDA Link to Whats New Link to In the News Link to Publications Link to Spanish Publications Link to Funding Information
Go
Information for - see right links Student Information Index link Parent-Teacher Information Index link Researcher Information Index link

NIDA Research Monograph

Treatment for Drug Exposed Women and Their Children

NIDA Research Monograph, Number 166 [Printed in 1996]


If you have the Acrobat reader plug-in for Netscape or Internet Explorer click on the document link and you will be able to view and/or print out the pages. If you have trouble viewing the document in your browser window, download the document (Windows users - right click on the link and Save as...) to your computer and get Adobe Acrobat Reader (free) in order to view it.


To download all of the PDF documents in an archive format, choose the type you wish to download, decompress the file with the decompression software on your computer, then view using Adobe Acrobat Reader.

Macintosh - Monograph166.hqx (870K)
Windows 3.1/95/NT - MONOG166.ZIP (640K)


Click on link to go to page

Table of Contents

Introduction to the Perinatal-20 Treatment Research Demonstration Program-----1
Elizabeth R. Rahdert

I. PROGRAM IMPLEMENTATION AND TREATMENT RESEARCH

Building Bridges: Treatment Research Partnerships in the Community-----6
Ira J. Chasnoff, Paul R. Marques, Irma H. Strantz,
James Farrow, and Shoni Davis

Conducting a Treatment Research Project in a Medical Center-Based Program for Chemically Dependent Pregnant Women-----22
Ellen Mason

Two Therapeutic Communities for Substance-Abusing Women and Their Children------32
Peggy Glider, Patrick Hughes, Rod Mullen,
Shirley Coletti, Lee Sechrest, Robert Neri,
Bobbi Renner, and Donna Sicilian

II. SUBJECT SELECTION, RECRUITMENT, AND RETENTION

Case Management: A Method of Addressing Subject Selection and Recruitment Issues------52
Mary Ann LaFazia, Jeanne Kleyn, Jean Lanz, Teri Hall,
Kris Nyrop, Kenneth D. Stark, Christopher Hansen, and
D. Heather Watts

Issues in Subject Recruitment and Retention With Pregnant and Parenting Substance-Abusing Women------68
Judy Howard and Leila Beckwith

Recruitment and Retention of Adolescent Women in Drug Treatment Research-------87
Lawrence A. Palinkas, Catherine J. Atkins, Pamela Noel,
and Christopher Miller

Retention Issues Involving Drug-Abusing Women in Treatment Research-------110
Robert A. Lewis, Deborah L. Haller, Doreen Branch,
and Karen S. Ingersoll

III. MEASUREMENT

The Psychosocial History: An Interview for Pregnant and Parenting Women in Substance Abuse Treatment and Research-------123
Marilee Comfort and Karol A. Kaltenbach

Assessment of Perinatal Substance Abusers: Experiences of One Perinatal-20 Project-------143
Deborah L. Haller and Karen S. Ingersoll

Kinchart-Sociograms as a Method for Describing the Social Networks of Drug-Using Women-------163
Anitra Pivnick

Factors To Consider When Using Hair as a Cocaine-Exposure Measure for Mothers or Newborns-------183
Paul R. Marques

The NICU Network Neurobehavioral Scale: A Comprehensive Instrument To Assess Substance-Exposed and High-Risk Infants-------198
Edward Z. Tronick and Barry M. Lester

Measurement of the Early Rearing Environment: Caregiver-Child Interaction-------205
Leila Beckwith

Measures of Service Utilization-------225
Mary E. McCaul and Dace S. Svikis


IV. DATA MANAGEMENT AND ANALYSIS
A Database Model for Studies of Cocaine-Dependent Pregnant Women and Their Families-------242
Peter A. Charpentier and Richard S. Schottenfeld

Designing a Research Database Management System-------254
Kathryn S. Dawson and Sidney H. Schnoll

Compensating for Deficiencies in Perinatal Data Sets: Parametric Perspectives-------272
A. Scott Tippetts and Paul R. Marques

Analysis and Use of Qualitative Data-------292
Souraya Sidani and Lee Sechrest


Advanced Search | FAQs | Accessibility | Site Map | Help | NIDA Home | Privacy Policy | FOIA (NIH) | Employment |
National Institutes of Health logo Department of Health and Human Services Logo

The National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) is part of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), a component of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Questions? See our Contact Information. Last updated on Thursday, May 9, 2002.