Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Dahlia Fuentes is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Dahlia Fuentes.


Community Mental Health Journal | 2008

Unmet Needs for Mental Health Services for Latino Older Adults: Perspectives from Consumers, Family Members, Advocates, and Service Providers

Concepción Barrio; Lawrence A. Palinkas; Ann-Marie Yamada; Dahlia Fuentes; Viviana Criado; Piedad Garcia; Dilip V. Jeste

This study qualitatively assessed the need for mental health services among Latino older adults in San Diego, California. The primary mental health issue was depression. Primary organizational barriers to accessing services were language and cultural barriers secondary to a lack of translators, dearth of information on available services, and scarcity of providers representative of the Latino community. Other challenges included a lack of transportation and housing, and the need for socialization and social support. Latino older adults experienced their unmet needs in ways associated with their cultural background and minority status. Age- and culturally-appropriate services are needed to overcome these barriers.


Administration and Policy in Mental Health | 2014

Inter-Organizational Collaboration in the Implementation of Evidence-based Practices Among Public Agencies Serving Abused and Neglected Youth

Lawrence A. Palinkas; Dahlia Fuentes; Megan Finno; Antonio R. Garcia; Ian W. Holloway; Patricia Chamberlain

This study examined the role of inter-organizational collaboration in implementing new evidence-based practices for addressing problem behaviors in at-risk youth. Semi-structured interviews were conducted with 38 systems leaders of probation, mental health, and child welfare departments of 12 California counties participating in a large randomized controlled trial to scale-up the use of Multidimensional Treatment Foster Care. Three sets of collaboration characteristics were identified: (1) characteristics of collaboration process, (2) characteristics of the external environment, and (3) characteristics of participating organizations and individuals. Inter-organizational collaboration enables an exchange of information and advice and a pooling of resources individual agencies may require for successful implementation.


American Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry | 2012

Depression Interventions Among Racial and Ethnic Minority Older Adults: A Systematic Review Across 20 Years

Dahlia Fuentes; María P. Aranda

While there is strong evidence in support of geriatric depression treatments, much less is available with regard to older U.S. racial and ethnic minorities. The objectives of this review are to identify and appraise depression treatment studies tested with samples of U.S. racial and ethnic minority older adults. We include an appraisal of sociocultural adaptations made to the depression treatments in studies meeting our final criteria. Systematic search methods were utilized to identify research published between 1990 and 2010 that describe depression treatment outcomes for older adults by racial/ethnic group, or for samples of older adults who are primarily (i.e., >50%) racial/ethnic minorities. Twenty-three unduplicated articles included older adults and seven met all inclusion criteria. Favorable depression treatment effects were observed for older minorities across five studies that took place in different types of settings and with varying levels of sociocultural adaptations. The effectiveness of depression care remains mixed, although collaborative or integrated care shows promise for African Americans and Latinos. The degree to which the findings generalize to non-English-speaking, low acculturated, and low-income older persons, and to other older minority groups (i.e., Asian and Pacific Islanders, and American Indian and Alaska Natives), remains unclear. Given the high disease burden among older minorities with depression, it is imperative to provide timely, accessible, and effective depression treatments. Increasing their participation in behavioral health research should be a national priority.


Schizophrenia Research | 2005

Tri-ethnic variations of co-morbid substance and alcohol use disorders in schizophrenia

Lori P. Montross; Concepcion Barrio; Ann-Marie Yamada; Laurie A. Lindamer; Shahrokh Golshan; Piedad Garcia; Dahlia Fuentes; Rebecca E. Daly; Richard L. Hough; Dilip V. Jeste

OBJECTIVES This study examined the differential prevalence of substance and alcohol use disorders among European Americans, African Americans, and Latinos with schizophrenia (n = 6424) who received public mental health services in San Diego County during fiscal year 2002-2003. METHODS Data were obtained from the public mental health database used by the San Diego County Mental Health System. Chi-Square analyses and stepwise logistic regression analyses were used to examine differences regarding the prevalence of substance and alcohol use among clients with schizophrenia and schizoaffective disorder, and to analyze the sociodemographic variables associated with this co-morbidity. RESULTS Significant differences in the prevalence of diagnosed co-morbidity were found across the ethnic groups. Rates of co-morbid diagnosis among African Americans (25%) were significantly higher than those among European Americans (22%) and Latinos (19%). Logistic regression results revealed ethnicity was a significant predictor of co-morbid substance and alcohol use, as was being homeless and male. Among Latinos, language preference was also a significant predictor. Latinos who denoted English as their primary language were 1.7 times more likely to be diagnosed with co-morbid substance or alcohol use disorders than Latinos who denoted Spanish. CONCLUSIONS Among people with schizophrenia, there were significant differences in prevalence rates and predictors of diagnosed co-morbid substance and alcohol use disorders. Future research is needed to examine the relationship among language preference, level of acculturation, and subsequent diagnosing barriers for Latinos. Among African Americans, the reasons behind increased co-morbidity rates need to be examined, and homelessness should be carefully addressed among all three ethnic groups.


Field Methods | 2014

A Mixed Methods Approach to Network Data Collection

Eric Rice; Ian W. Holloway; Anamika Barman-Adhikari; Dahlia Fuentes; C. Hendricks Brown; Lawrence A. Palinkas

There is a growing interest in examining network processes with a mix of qualitative and quantitative network data. Research has consistently shown that free recall name generators entail recall bias and result in missing data that affect the quality of social network data. This study describes a mixed methods approach for collecting social network data, combining a free recall name generator in the context of an online survey with network relations data coded from transcripts of semistructured qualitative interviews. The combined network provides substantially more information about the network space, both quantitatively and qualitatively. Although network density was relatively stable across networks generated from different data collection methodologies, there were noticeable differences in centrality and component structure across networks. The approach presented here involved limited participant burden and generated more complete data than either technique alone could provide. We make suggestions for further development of this method.


International Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry | 2009

Access to Public Mental Health Services Among Older Adults with Severe Mental Illness

Todd P. Gilmer; Victoria D. Ojeda; Dahlia Fuentes; Viviana Criado; Piedad Garcia

Limited data are available on how older adults access public mental health systems. This study examines how uninsured or publicly insured older adults with severe mental illness in San Diego County initially accessed the public mental health system, as well as their subsequent use of public mental health services, as compared to younger adults.


Journal of Behavioral Health Services & Research | 2018

Re-Engagement into Care: The Role of Social Support on Service Use for Recurrent Episodes of Mental Health Distress Among Primary Care Patients

Marissa Hansen; Dahlia Fuentes; María P. Aranda

Given high rates of relapse of depression, understanding mechanisms that provide long-term benefits and optimal outcomes for depressed individuals is crucial. The current study examines social support as a relevant component in service use to manage mental health needs for individuals with recurrent depression over a 5-year period. Conducting a secondary data analysis from a randomized clinical trial titled Partners in Care, the study examines direct and moderating effects over two time points of reported 12-month social support on service use for mental health needs at 57-months for an adult sample (n = 991). Direct effects were supported for demographic and need variables. Increased social support at 12-months positively moderated the relationship between health impairment and service use at 57-months. Findings inform and extend the understanding of social support as an important mechanism to care to integrate into the treatment experience, encouraging service use to manage recurrent depressive episodes.Given high rates of relapse of depression, understanding mechanisms that provide long-term benefits and optimal outcomes for depressed individuals is crucial. The current study examines social support as a relevant component in service use to manage mental health needs for individuals with recurrent depression over a 5-year period. Conducting a secondary data analysis from a randomized clinical trial titled Partners in Care, the study examines direct and moderating effects over two time points of reported 12-month social support on service use for mental health needs at 57-months for an adult sample (n = 991). Direct effects were supported for demographic and need variables. Increased social support at 12-months positively moderated the relationship between health impairment and service use at 57-months. Findings inform and extend the understanding of social support as an important mechanism to care to integrate into the treatment experience, encouraging service use to manage recurrent depressive episodes.


Implementation Science | 2011

Social networks and implementation of evidence-based practices in public youth-serving systems: a mixed-methods study

Lawrence A. Palinkas; Ian W. Holloway; Eric Rice; Dahlia Fuentes; Qiaobing Wu; Patricia Chamberlain


American Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry | 2007

Unmet Needs for Services for Older Adults With Mental Illness: Comparison of Views of Different Stakeholder Groups

Lawrence A. Palinkas; Viviana Criado; Dahlia Fuentes; Sally Shepherd; Hans Milian; David P. Folsom; Dilip V. Jeste


Psychiatric Services | 2009

Adherence to antipsychotics among Latinos and Asians with schizophrenia and limited English proficiency

Todd P. Gilmer; Victoria D. Ojeda; Concepción Barrio; Dahlia Fuentes; Piedad Garcia; Nicole M. Lanouette; Kelly C. Lee

Collaboration


Dive into the Dahlia Fuentes's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Lawrence A. Palinkas

University of Southern California

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Dilip V. Jeste

University of California

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Todd P. Gilmer

University of California

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Antonio R. Garcia

University of Pennsylvania

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Concepción Barrio

University of Southern California

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ann-Marie Yamada

University of Southern California

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Eric Rice

University of Southern California

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge