Network


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

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Julie B. Kaplow is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Julie B. Kaplow.


Current Pediatrics Reports | 2018

Impact of Natural Disasters on Children Receiving Palliative Care Lessons Learned from Hurricane Harvey

Jared Rubenstein; Julie B. Kaplow; Benjamin Moresco; Tammy I. Kang

Purpose of ReviewTo discuss the implications of natural disasters for pediatric palliative care patients and suggest a series of best practices for pediatric palliative care patients, their families, and their healthcare providers.Recent FindingsData from the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina provide insight into the effects of natural disasters on children with chronic medical conditions. We supplement this with details from our recent experience caring for pediatric palliative care patients during Hurricane Harvey as well as new data about grief and bereavement in the context of natural disasters.SummaryPediatric palliative care patients are a group that should be considered at high risk in the setting of a natural disaster. They are at increased risk of new medical problems or exacerbations of chronic conditions. Additionally, their past history places them at increased risk for disturbances in their psychosocial functioning including posttraumatic stress syndrome. This highlights the need for increased involvement of pediatric palliative care teams in preparation for a natural disaster, during the event, and in the aftermath.


School Psychology Quarterly | 2018

Evaluating referral, screening, and assessment procedures for middle school trauma/grief-focused treatment groups.

Stevie N. Grassetti; Ariel A. Williamson; Joanna Herres; Roger Kobak; Christopher M. Layne; Julie B. Kaplow; Robert S. Pynoos

There is a need to delineate best practices for referring, assessing, and retaining students suspected of posttraumatic stress (PTS) and maladaptive grief (MG) in school-based treatment. Evidence-based risk-screening procedures should accurately include students who are appropriate for group treatment and exclude students who do not require treatment or who are better served by other forms of intervention and support. We described and evaluated the sequence of steps used to screen 7th- and 8th-grade students (N = 89) referred by school staff as candidates for an open trial of group-based Trauma and Grief Component Therapy for Adolescents (TGCTA; Saltzman et al., in press). We used t tests to compare included versus excluded students on PTS symptom and MG reaction scores (University of California at Los Angeles Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Reaction Index; Grief Screening Scale) during the group screen, individual interview, and treatment-implementation phases. Logistic regressions tested the incremental utility of including measures of both trauma exposure and related emotional and conduct problems (Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire) in the screening battery. Results suggest that the group screen helped to detect mental health needs and that the individual interview further identified students with PTS and emotional problems. Conduct problems and trauma exposure predicted attrition among students who qualified for treatment. MG incrementally predicted students who advanced from the group screening to the individual interview, and trauma exposure incrementally predicted attrition from treatment. Findings yield implications for improving research and practice, including procedures for enhancing school-based referral, screening, assessment, and selection procedures.


Journal of Traumatic Stress | 2018

Out of the Mouths of Babes: Links Between Linguistic Structure of Loss Narratives and Psychosocial Functioning in Parentally Bereaved Children: Loss Narratives and Functioning in Children

Julie B. Kaplow; Britney M. Wardecker; Christopher M. Layne; Ethan Kross; Amanda Burnside; Robin S. Edelstein; Alan R. Prossin

This study examined links between the language bereaved children use to describe the death of their caregiver and childrens psychological/behavioral functioning and coping strategies. Participants included 44 children (54.5% male) aged 7 to 12 (M = 9.05) years who were bereaved by the death of a caregiver. Children were assessed via self- and caregiver-report measures and an in-person interview regarding the loss of their caregiver. Childrens loss narratives gathered through in-person interviews were transcribed and subjected to textual analysis. Linguistic categories included pronouns and verb tense. Drawing from linguistic and self-distancing theories, we hypothesized that childrens use of language reflecting self-distancing (third-person pronouns and past tense) or social connectedness (first-person plural pronouns) would be negatively associated with psychological/behavioral distress and avoidant coping. Similarly, we expected that childrens use of self-focused language (first-person singular pronouns and present tense) would be positively associated with psychological/behavioral distress and avoidant coping. As hypothesized, preliminary findings suggest that children who employed more self-distancing language and used more social connectedness words reported less avoidant coping, rs = .40-.42. Also as hypothesized, children who employed more self-focused language had higher levels of self-reported posttraumatic stress symptoms, r = .54, and avoidant coping, r = .54, and higher parent-reported psychological/behavioral distress, r = .43. Implications for theory-building, risk screening, and directions for future research with bereaved youth are discussed.


Journal of Traumatic Stress | 2018

Validation of the Persistent Complex Bereavement Disorder (PCBD) Checklist: A Developmentally Informed Assessment Tool for Bereaved Youth: Persistent Complex Bereavement Disorder Checklist

Julie B. Kaplow; Christopher M. Layne; Benjamin Oosterhoff; Hayley Goldenthal; Kathryn H. Howell; Rachel Wamser-Nanney; Amanda Burnside; Karen Calhoun; Daphne Marbury; Laura Johnson-Hughes; Molly Kriesel; Mary Beth Staine; Marian Mankin; LaTanya Porter-Howard; Robert S. Pynoos

The inclusion of Persistent Complex Bereavement Disorder (PCBD) in the DSM-5 appendix signifies a call for research regarding the distinguishing features and clinical utility of proposed PCBD criteria. Rigorously constructed tools for assessing PCBD are lacking, especially for youth. This study evaluated the validity and clinical utility of the PCBD Checklist, a 39-item measure designed to assess PCBD criteria in youth aged 8 to18 years. Test construction procedures involved: (a) reviewing the literature regarding developmental manifestations of proposed criteria, (b) creating a developmentally informed item pool, (c) surveying an expert panel to evaluate the clarity and developmental appropriateness of candidate items, (d) conducting focus groups to evaluate the comprehensibility and acceptability of items, and (e) evaluating psychometric properties in 367 bereaved youth (Mage = 13.49, 55.0% female). The panel, clinicians, and youth provided favorable content validity and comprehensibility ratings for candidate items. As hypothesized, youth who met full PCBD criteria, Criterion B (e.g., preoccupation with the deceased and/or circumstances of the death), or Criterion C (e.g., reactive distress and/or social/identity disruption) reported higher posttraumatic stress and depressive symptoms than youth who did not meet these criteria, ηp2 = .07-.16. Youth who met Criterion C reported greater functional impairment than youth who did not, ηp2 = .08-.12. Youth who qualified for the traumatic bereavement specifier reported more frequent posttraumatic stress symptoms than youth who did not, ηp2 = .04. Findings support the convergent, discriminant, and discriminant-groups validity, developmental appropriateness, and clinical utility of the PCBD Checklist.


Archives of Suicide Research | 2018

Cause of Caregiver Death and Surviving Caregiver Coping Style Predict Thwarted Belongingness in Bereaved Youth

Michelle E. Roley-Roberts; Ryan M. Hill; Christopher M. Layne; Hayley Goldenthal; Julie B. Kaplow

Both bereavement and thwarted belongingness serve as risk markers for youth suicide-related behaviors. This study examined candidate predictors of thwarted belongingness among bereaved youth, including caregiver cause of death and surviving caregiver coping style. A group of 43 caregiver-bereaved families (58 children aged 7–13-years-old) participated in a longitudinal study investigating associations between hypothesized bereavement-related contextual factors and youth thwarted belongingness. Cause of caregiver deaths included anticipated deaths preceded by illness (37%; nu2009=u200916), sudden natural deaths (25.6%; nu2009=u200911), accidental deaths (20.9%; nu2009=u20099), death by suicide (9.3%; nu2009=u20094), and death from drug overdose (7.0%; nu2009=u20093). Children’s thwarted belongingness was significantly higher among youth bereaved by suicide compared to youth bereaved by sudden natural death, accident, and anticipated death by illness. Surviving caregivers’ use of behavioral disengagement and positive reinterpretation and growth as coping strategies at Time 1 predicted lower thwarted belongingness in children at Time 2. Implications for risk screening and assessment of suicide risk among bereaved youth are discussed.


Translational Issues in Psychological Science | 2016

Trajectories of binge drinking differentially mediate associations between adolescent violence exposure and subsequent adjustment in young adulthood.

Benjamin Oosterhoff; Julie B. Kaplow; Christopher M. Layne


PsycTESTS Dataset | 2018

Involvement in Organized Activities Survey

Benjamin Oosterhoff; Julie B. Kaplow; Laura Wray-Lake; Katherine Gallagher


Archive | 2018

Associations between dimensions of religiosity and adjustment among bereaved youth

Evan Rooney; Benjamin Oosterhoff; Julie B. Kaplow


Adolescent Psychiatry | 2018

The Interplay between Posttraumatic Stress and Grief Reactions in Traumatically Bereaved Adolescents: When Trauma, Bereavement, and Adolescence Converge

Ida Dancyger; Christopher M. Layne; Julie B. Kaplow; Benjamin Oosterhoff; Ryan M. Hill; Robert S. Pynoos


Archive | 2017

Introduction: What is Trauma and Grief Component Therapy for Adolescents (TGCTA)?

William R. Saltzman; Christopher M. Layne; Robert S. Pynoos; Erna Olafson; Julie B. Kaplow; Barbara W. Boat

Collaboration


Dive into the Julie B. Kaplow's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Amanda Burnside

Loyola University Chicago

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Barbara W. Boat

University of Cincinnati Academic Health Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Erna Olafson

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ryan M. Hill

Baylor College of Medicine

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Alan R. Prossin

University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge