Network


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

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Jacob Kraemer Tebes is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Jacob Kraemer Tebes.


Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease | 1995

A Comparison of the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-III-R and Clinical Diagnoses

Jeanne L. Steiner; Jacob Kraemer Tebes; William H. Sledge; Martha Loukides Walker

The relationship between diagnoses generated by the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-III-R Personality Disorders (SCID) and by nonstructured psychiatric interviews was examined. The purposes were to evaluate which DSM-III-R diagnoses were most reliably chosen, and to compare diagnostic practices between two clinical sites. Diagnoses generated by researchers using the patient version of the SCID and by psychiatric interviews were compared for 100 patients. The participants had been randomly assigned to one of two acute treatment sites within the same institution, as part of a larger study of an alternative to inpatient hospitalization. Overall reliability between the SCID and the clinicians, as determined by weighted Kappa, was poor. There was considerable variability among the major diagnostic categories, with higher agreement for schizophrenia and bipolar disorder than for others. The agreement for schizoaffective disorder was extremely low. There were also significant differences in the patterns of diagnoses between the two sites. The patient version of the SCID appears to produce results that are very different from clinical practice, which, in turn, may be influenced strongly by location.


Social Service Review | 2006

Changes in Placement among Children in Foster Care: A Longitudinal Study of Child and Case Influences

Christian M. Connell; Jeffrey J. Vanderploeg; Paul Flaspohler; Karol H. Katz; Leon Saunders; Jacob Kraemer Tebes

Using Cox regression modeling, this longitudinal study examines child and case characteristics associated with changes in placement among 5,909 Rhode Island children in foster care. Results suggest that half of all children experience at least one placement change while in care. Infants change placements least, and risk increases with child age. Emergency shelter settings have the highest risk of placement change, followed by nonrelative settings, group home settings, and relative foster care. The reasons for removal from the home and the history of previous placements also predict placement changes, as do the interactions between foster care setting and some child characteristics.


Social Science & Medicine | 2014

Historical trauma as public narrative: A conceptual review of how history impacts present-day health

Nathaniel Vincent Mohatt; Azure B. Thompson; Nghi D. Thai; Jacob Kraemer Tebes

Theories of historical trauma increasingly appear in the literature on individual and community health, especially in relation to racial and ethnic minority populations and groups that experience significant health disparities. As a consequence of this rapid growth, the literature on historical trauma comprises disparate terminology and research approaches. This critical review integrates this literature in order to specify theoretical mechanisms that explain how historical trauma influences the health of individuals and communities. We argue that historical trauma functions as a public narrative for particular groups or communities that connects present-day experiences and circumstances to the trauma so as to influence health. Treating historical trauma as a public narrative shifts the research discourse away from an exclusive search for past causal variables that influence health to identifying how present-day experiences, their corresponding narratives, and their health impacts are connected to public narratives of historical trauma for a particular group or community. We discuss how the connection between historical trauma and present-day experiences, related narratives, and health impacts may function as a source of present-day distress as well as resilience.


Child Maltreatment | 2007

The impact of parental alcohol or drug removals on foster care placement experiences: A matched comparison group study

Jeffrey J. Vanderploeg; Christian M. Connell; Colleen Caron; Leon Saunders; Karol H. Katz; Jacob Kraemer Tebes

Research has established the coincidence of parental alcohol and other drug (AOD) use and child maltreatment, but few studies have examined the placement experiences and outcomes of children removed because of parental AOD use. The present study examines demographic characteristics and placement experiences of children removed from their homes because of parental AOD use (n = 1,333), first in comparison to the remaining sample of children in foster care (n = 4,554), then in comparison to a matched comparison group of children in foster care who were removed for other reasons (n = 1,333). Relative to the comparison sample, children removed for parental AOD use are less likely to experience co-occurring removal because of neglect and physical or sexual abuse and are more likely to be placed in relative foster care. In addition, these children remain in care longer, experience similar rates of reunification, and have significantly higher rates of adoption.


Journal of Drug Education | 1992

Two-year follow-up of a social-cognitive intervention to prevent substance use

David L. Snow; Jacob Kraemer Tebes; Michael W. Arthur; Renee C. Tapasak

This study presents two-year follow-up results of the Adolescent Decision-Making Program initially implemented when students were in their sixth grade. The intervention was found to maintain a positive effect on mean tobacco use, but no differences were observed for mean alcohol, marijuana, or hard drug use. In a test of the differential effectiveness of the intervention, program students living with married parents reported lower mean tobacco use than control students living with married parents and program and control students living with single parents. Logistic regression analyses examining the proportion of users at follow-up revealed a negative program effect for alcohol and no differences for the other substances. Subsequent attrition analyses strongly suggested that the positive effect for tobacco use at follow-up was most likely even stronger, and that the negative effect for alcohol was spurious. The importance of examining both program and attrition effects when evaluating the impact of longitudinal preventive interventions was emphasized, and the need to consider alternative models to guide the conceptualization and evaluation of adolescent substance use prevention programs was discussed.


American Journal of Orthopsychiatry | 2011

Suicidality and depression among african american adolescents: the role of family and peer support and community connectedness.

Samantha L. Matlin; Sherry Davis Molock; Jacob Kraemer Tebes

Rates of suicide are increasing among African American adolescents and pose a significant public health concern. One area that has received little attention is the relationship between various types of social support and suicide, and the extent to which support moderates the relationship between depressive symptoms and suicidality. A total of 212 African American adolescents completed in-school surveys on three types of social support: family support, peer support, and community connectedness. The survey also addressed depressive symptoms and suicidality, as measured by reasons for living, a cognitive measure of suicide risk. Hierarchical multiple regression analyses were used to examine direct and moderating relationships between types of social support and suicidality. The results indicated that increased family support and peer support are associated with decreased suicidality, and peer support and community connectedness moderated the relationship between depressive symptoms and suicidality. Over a third of the variability in reasons for living was predicted by family support, peer support, and community connectedness. Implications for research and preventative interventions for African American adolescents are discussed.


American Journal of Community Psychology | 2002

Patterns of Substance Use in Early Through Late Adolescence

Kinga Zapert; David L. Snow; Jacob Kraemer Tebes

This study examined patterns of substance use throughout adolescence. A cluster analytic approach was used to identify subgroups of adolescents on the basis of their levels of substance use from early through late adolescence (Grades 6 through 11). Six distinct clusters of substance users emerged—2 groups representing relatively stable patterns of substance use from early through late adolescence (i.e., nonusers and alcohol experimenters), and 4 groups of users showing escalating patterns of substance use (i.e., low escalators, early starters, late starters, and high escalators). The study provides a comprehensive view of adolescent substance use by examining the progression of use from early to late adolescence, demonstrates the usefulness of studying patterns of use across multiple substances, and underscores the importance of building classification schemes based on repeated measurements of substance use to reflect changes over time. Implications of the findings for future research and for identifying high-risk subgroups of adolescents for purposes of intervention based on timing and pattern of escalation are discussed.


Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology | 1992

Panel attrition and external validity in adolescent substance use research

David L. Snow; Jacob Kraemer Tebes; Michael W. Arthur

Panel attrition threatens external validity in adolescent substance use research. A 7-year adolescent panel was examined to determine whether attrition effects varied by (a) type of substance assessed and (b) method of measurement and type of statistical analysis. Chi-squares and multivariate analyses of variance revealed that study dropouts were more likely to use substances and reported higher mean use of substances at baseline than stayers; attrition effects varied by substance; and mean use comparisons were more likely to detect attrition effects than use-nonuse comparisons. Implications of these findings for adolescent substance use research are discussed.


Child Abuse & Neglect | 2009

Maltreatment Following Reunification: Predictors of Subsequent Child Protective Services Contact after Children Return Home.

Christian M. Connell; Jeffrey J. Vanderploeg; Karol H. Katz; Colleen Caron; Leon Saunders; Jacob Kraemer Tebes

OBJECTIVES This study examined risk of maltreatment among children exiting foster care using a statewide sample of children reunified between 2001 and 2004 in Rhode Island. The objectives were: (1) to compare rates of maltreatment following parental reunification for youth in care as a result of maltreatment with those in care for other reasons; and (2) to assess the effects of child, family, and case characteristics on rates of re-maltreatment among children placed in foster care due to maltreatment. METHOD A longitudinal dataset of all reunified cases was matched with state records of substantiated Child Protective Service (CPS) investigations. Two Cox proportional hazards models were tested. The first model compared rates of subsequent maltreatment for two groups: children in foster care as a result of maltreatment, and those in care for other reasons. The second model investigated the effects of child, family, and case characteristics on re-maltreatment rates for those in care as a result of maltreatment. RESULTS Children in foster care due to maltreatment were significantly more likely to be maltreated following reunification. Among children in foster care due to maltreatment, factors that raised risk for re-maltreatment included a previous foster care placement, exiting care from a non-relative foster home, and removal due to neglect. Older adolescents had lower rates of re-maltreatment than infants. Child neglect was the primary type of recurrent maltreatment that occurred following reunification. CONCLUSIONS Supports are needed for families about to be reunified, particularly when the removal was prompted by incidents of abuse or neglect. Incidents of neglect are particularly likely and appropriate services should specifically target factors contributing to neglect. Cases involving youth with a history of repeated foster care placement or in which non-relative placements are utilized may need additional supports. PRACTICE IMPLICATIONS This study suggests that services should be developed to minimize the risk for recurrent maltreatment following reunification. Services would be most useful for high-risk cases prior to reunification and during the first year following reunification. Understanding the risks associated with maltreatment will help guide development of appropriate interventions.


Substance Use & Misuse | 2004

Cognitive transformation as a marker of resilience

Jacob Kraemer Tebes; Julie T. Irish; Mary Jo Puglisi Vasquez; David V. Perkins

Individuals often report positive, transformative changes in response to adversity. Cognitive transformation involves a turning point in a persons life characterized by: (1) the recognition that coping with adversity resulted in new opportunities; and, (2) the reevaluation of the experience from one that was primarily traumatic or threatening to one that is growth-promoting. Cognitive transformation often signifies enhanced adaptation to adverse circumstances, and thus, is a marker of resilience. The present study examined the relationship of cognitive transformation to indicators of resilience among 35 acutely bereaved young adults and a nonbereaved comparison group. Findings strongly supported the hypothesis that transformation predicts resilience, and may reduce ones risk trajectory to enhance adaptation. Results are discussed in terms of their implications for research on resilience, and on recovery from acute or chronic adverse circumstances, including addiction.

Collaboration


Dive into the Jacob Kraemer Tebes's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jaak Rakfeldt

Southern Connecticut State University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Nghi D. Thai

Central Connecticut State University

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge