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Dive into the research topics where Colleen A. Halliday-Boykins is active.

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Featured researches published by Colleen A. Halliday-Boykins.


Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology | 2006

Juvenile Drug Court: Enhancing Outcomes by Integrating Evidence-Based Treatments.

Scott W. Henggeler; Colleen A. Halliday-Boykins; Phillippe B. Cunningham; Jeff Randall; Steven B. Shapiro; Jason E. Chapman

Evaluated the effectiveness of juvenile drug court for 161 juvenile offenders meeting diagnostic criteria for substance abuse or dependence and determined whether the integration of evidence-based practices enhanced the outcomes of juvenile drug court. Over a 1-year period, a four-condition randomized design evaluated outcomes for family court with usual community services, drug court with usual community services, drug court with multisystemic therapy, and drug court with multisystemic therapy enhanced with contingency management for adolescent substance use, criminal behavior, symptomatology, and days in out-of-home placement. In general, findings supported the view that drug court was more effective than family court services in decreasing rates of adolescent substance use and criminal behavior. Possibly due to the greatly increased surveillance of youths in drug court, however, these relative reductions in antisocial behavior did not translate to corresponding decreases in rearrest or incarceration. In addition, findings supported the view that the use of evidence-based treatments within the drug court context improved youth substance-related outcomes. Clinical and policy implications of these findings are discussed.


Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry | 2004

Multisystemic Therapy Effects on Attempted Suicide by Youths Presenting Psychiatric Emergencies.

Stanley J. Huey; Scott W. Henggeler; Melisa D. Rowland; Colleen A. Halliday-Boykins; Phillippe B. Cunningham; Susan G. Pickrel; James Edwards

OBJECTIVE To evaluate the efficacy of multisystemic therapy (MST) in reducing attempted suicide among predominantly African American youths referred for emergency psychiatric hospitalization. METHOD Youths presenting psychiatric emergencies were randomly assigned to MST or hospitalization. Indices of attempted suicide, suicidal ideation, depressive affect, and parental control were assessed before treatment, at 4 months after recruitment, and at the 1-year posttreatment follow-up. RESULTS Based on youth report, MST was significantly more effective than emergency hospitalization at decreasing rates of attempted suicide at 1-year follow-up; also, the rate of symptom reduction over time was greater for youths receiving MST. Also, treatment differences in patterns of change in attempted suicide (caregiver report) varied as a function of ethnicity, gender, and age. Moreover, treatment effects were found for caregiver-rated parental control but not for youth depressive affect, hopelessness, or suicidal ideation. CONCLUSIONS Results generally support MSTs effectiveness at reducing attempted suicide in psychiatrically disturbed youngsters, whereas the effects of hospitalization varied based on informant and youth demographic characteristics.


Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology | 2008

Statewide Adoption and Initial Implementation of Contingency Management for Substance Abusing Adolescents

Scott W. Henggeler; Jason E. Chapman; Melisa D. Rowland; Colleen A. Halliday-Boykins; Jeff Randall; Jennifer Shackelford; Sonja K. Schoenwald

Four hundred thirty-two public sector therapists attended a workshop in contingency management (CM) and were interviewed monthly for the following 6 months to assess their adoption and initial implementation of CM to treat substance-abusing adolescent clients. Results showed that 58% (n = 131) of the practitioners with at least one substance-abusing adolescent client (n = 225) adopted CM. Rates of adoption varied with therapist service sector (mental health vs. substance abuse), educational background, professional experience, and attitudes toward treatment manuals and evidence-based practices. Competing clinical priorities and client resistance were most often reported as barriers to adopting CM, whereas unfavorable attitudes toward and difficulty in implementing CM were rarely cited as barriers. The fidelity of initial CM implementation among adopters was predicted by organizational characteristics as well as by several demographic, professional experience, attitudinal, and service sector characteristics. Overall, the findings support the amenability of public sector practitioners to adopt evidence-based practices and suggest that the predictors of adoption and initial implementation are complex and multifaceted.


Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology | 2001

At both ends of the gun: testing the relationship between community violence exposure and youth violent behavior.

Colleen A. Halliday-Boykins; Sandra Graham

Much psychological inquiry has focused on understanding the contribution that exposure to urban violence makes to violent behavior among youth. However, other ways in which these variables may be related have been largely overlooked. This study compared four alternative social–ecological models of the link between community violence exposure and violent behavior to determine the degree to which (1) community violence exposure contributes to violent behavior, (2) violent behavior contributes to community violence exposure, (3) both are consequences of common antecedents, and (4) both are manifestations of the same higher order construct. Two hundred and seventy-seven adolescent offenders were interviewed about family, neighborhood, cognitive, and peer characteristics, in addition to violent behavior and community violence exposure. Results suggest that a plausible way to understand the association between community violence exposure and youth violent behavior is to consider both as representations of a general involvement in violence.


Journal of Emotional and Behavioral Disorders | 2005

A Randomized Trial of Multisystemic Therapy With Hawaii's Felix Class Youths.

Melisa D. Rowland; Colleen A. Halliday-Boykins; Scott W. Henggeler; Phillippe B. Cunningham; Terry Lee; Markus J.P. Kruesi; Steven B. Shapiro

Examined 6-month post-recruitment clinical and placement outcomes for 31 youths with serious emotional disturbance (SED) at imminent risk of out-of-home placement in the Hawaii Continuum of Care (COC). Youths were randomly assigned to multisystemic therapy (MST) adapted for SED populations or to Hawaiis existing COC services.Assessments were conducted at intake and 6 months after referral. In comparison with counterparts in the comparison condition, youths in the MST condition reported significant reductions in externalizing symptoms, internalizing symptoms,and minor criminal activity; their caregivers reported near significant increases in social support; and archival records showed that MST youths experienced significantly fewer days in out-of-home placement. The findings generally replicate the favorable short-term outcomes observed previously for MST with youths experiencing SED.


Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology | 2005

Caregiver-Therapist Ethnic Similarity Predicts Youth Outcomes From an Empirically Based Treatment.

Colleen A. Halliday-Boykins; Sonja K. Schoenwald; Elizabeth J. Letourneau

The effects of caregiver-therapist ethnic similarity on youth outcomes from multisystemic therapy (MST), as implemented in dissemination sites, were examined. Consistent with hypotheses, findings confirmed that youths whose caregivers were ethnically matched with their therapists demonstrated greater decreases in symptoms, longer times in treatment, and increased likelihood of discharge for meeting treatment goals relative to youths whose caregivers and therapists were not ethnically matched. In addition, for youths whose caregivers were of mixed ethnic heritage, caregiver-therapist ethnic match was associated with greater improvements in psychosocial functioning. Ethnic match effects on both treatment length and discharge success were partially mediated by therapist adherence to MST. This study shows the importance of examining the effects of both client and therapist ethnicity on outcomes from empirically based treatments.


Journal of Clinical Child and Adolescent Psychology | 2005

Predicting Therapist Adherence to a Transported Family-Based Treatment for Youth

Sonja K. Schoenwald; Elizabeth J. Letourneau; Colleen A. Halliday-Boykins

This study examined relations between therapist, caregiver, and youth characteristics and therapist adherence to multisystemic therapy (MST). Participants were 405 therapists in 45 organizations and the 1,711 families they treated with MST. Therapist perceptions that the flexible hours required to implement MST are problematic predicted lower adherence. Therapist demographic variables, professional training and experience, endorsement of the MST model, perceived difficulty and rewards of doing MST, and perceived similarity to treatments previously used did not predict adherence. Therapist-caregiver similarity on ethnicity and gender predicted higher adherence. Low caregiver education and African American ethnicity predicted higher adherence. With the exception of youth psychosocial functioning, indicators of severity of youth problems did not predict adherence.


Journal of Behavioral Health Services & Research | 2009

Estimating the Differential Costs of Criminal Activity for Juvenile Drug Court Participants: Challenges and Recommendations

Kathryn E. McCollister; Michael T. French; Ashli J. Sheidow; Scott W. Henggeler; Colleen A. Halliday-Boykins

Juvenile drug court (JDC) programs have expanded rapidly over the past 20 years and are an increasingly popular option for rehabilitating juvenile offenders with substance use problems. Given the high cost of crime to society, an important economic question is whether and to what extent JDC programs reduce criminal activity among juvenile offenders. To address this question, the present study added an economic cost analysis to an ongoing randomized trial of JDC conducted in Charleston, South Carolina. Four treatment conditions were included in the parent study: Family Court with usual community-based treatment (FC, the comparison group), Drug Court with usual community-based treatment (DC), DC with Multisystemic Therapy (DC/MST), and DC/MST enhanced with Contingency Management (DC/MST/CM). The economic study estimated the cost of criminal activity for nine specific crimes at baseline (pretreatment) and 4 and 12 months thereafter. A number of methodological challenges were encountered, suggesting that it may be more difficult to economically quantify frequency and type of criminal activity for adolescents than for adults. The present paper addresses methodological approaches and challenges, and proposes guidelines for future economic evaluations of adolescent substance abuse and crime prevention programs.


Journal of Child & Adolescent Substance Abuse | 2008

Developing a Measure of Therapist Adherence to Contingency Management: An Application of the Many-Facet Rasch Model.

Jason E. Chapman; Ashli J. Sheidow; Scott W. Henggeler; Colleen A. Halliday-Boykins; Phillippe B. Cunningham

ABSTRACT A unique application of the Many-Facet Rasch Model (MFRM) is introduced as the preferred method for evaluating the psychometric properties of a measure of therapist adherence to Contingency Management (CM) treatment of adolescent substance use. The utility of psychometric methods based in Classical Test Theory was limited by complexities of the data, including: (1) ratings provided by multiple informants (i.e., youth, caregivers, and therapists), (2) data from separate research studies, (3) repeated measurements, (4) multiple versions of the questionnaire, and (5) missing data. Two dimensions of CM adherence were supported: adherence to Cognitive Behavioral components and adherence to monitoring components. The rating scale performed differently for items in these subscales, and of 11 items evaluated, eight were found to perform well. The MFRM is presented as a highly flexible approach that can be used to overcome the limitations of traditional methods in the development of adherence measures for evidence-based practices.


Journal of Clinical Child and Adolescent Psychology | 2005

Predictors of Treatment Response for Suicidal Youth Referred for Emergency Psychiatric Hospitalization.

Stanley J. Huey; Scott W. Henggeler; Melisa D. Rowland; Colleen A. Halliday-Boykins; Phillippe B. Cunningham; Susan G. Pickrel

This study evaluated factors that predicted poor treatment response for 70 suicidal youth (ages 10 to 17 years; 67% African American) who received either multisystemic therapy (MST) or inpatient psychiatric hospitalization. Following treatment, suicidal youth were classified as either treatment responders or nonresponders based on caregiver or youth report of attempted suicide. Overall, female gender, depressive affect, parental control, caregiver psychiatric distress, and caregiver history of psychiatric hospitalization were associated with suicide attempts. However, controlling for other variables, only depressive affect and parental control predicted treatment nonresponse. These results suggest the need to adapt existing treatments for suicidal youth to better address problems relating to youth depression.

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Scott W. Henggeler

Medical University of South Carolina

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Melisa D. Rowland

Medical University of South Carolina

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Phillippe B. Cunningham

Medical University of South Carolina

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Jason E. Chapman

Medical University of South Carolina

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Jeff Randall

Medical University of South Carolina

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Sonja K. Schoenwald

Medical University of South Carolina

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Steven B. Shapiro

Medical University of South Carolina

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Ashli J. Sheidow

Medical University of South Carolina

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Stanley J. Huey

University of Southern California

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Susan G. Pickrel

Medical University of South Carolina

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