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Dive into the research topics where Marleen Wong is active.

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Featured researches published by Marleen Wong.


Professional Psychology: Research and Practice | 2008

Creating trauma-informed systems: Child welfare, education, first responders, health care, juvenile justice.

Susan J. Ko; Julian D. Ford; Nancy Kassam-Adams; Steven J. Berkowitz; Charles Wilson; Marleen Wong; Melissa J. Brymer; Christopher M. Layne

Children and adolescents who are exposed to traumatic events are helped by numerous child-serving agencies, including health, mental health, education, child welfare, first responder, and criminal justice systems to assist them in their recovery. Service providers need to incorporate a trauma-inform


Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry | 2002

Violence Exposure, Posttraumatic Stress Disorder, and Depressive Symptoms Among Recent Immigrant Schoolchildren

Lisa H. Jaycox; Bradley D. Stein; Sheryl H. Kataoka; Marleen Wong; Arlene Fink; Pia Escudero; Catalina Zaragoza

OBJECTIVE Many recent immigrant children are at risk for violence exposure and related psychological distress resulting from experiences before, during, and after immigration. This study examines the rates of violence exposure and associated symptoms among recent immigrant children in Los Angeles. METHOD 1,004 recent immigrant schoolchildren (aged 8-15 years) were surveyed about their prior exposure to violence and symptoms of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and depression. Participants included children whose native language was Spanish, Korean, Russian, or Western Armenian. RESULTS Participants reported high levels of violence exposure, both personal victimization and witnessing violence, in the previous year and in their lifetimes. Thirty-two percent of children reported PTSD symptoms in the clinical range, and 16% reported depressive symptoms in the clinical range. Although boys and older children were more likely to have experienced violence, girls reported more PTSD and depressive symptoms. Linear multiple regressions revealed that PTSD symptoms were predicted by both recent and lifetime violence exposure (p values < .001 and p < .05, respectively), when depressive symptoms and gender were controlled. On the other hand, depressive symptoms were predicted by recent victimization only (p < .001) when PTSD and gender were controlled. CONCLUSION These findings document the need for interventions addressing the psychological sequelae of violence exposure in immigrant children.


Journal of Behavioral Health Services & Research | 2002

theoretical basis and program design of a school-based mental health intervention for traumatized immigrant children: A collaborative research partnership

Bradley D. Stein; Sheryl H. Kataoka; Lisa H. Jaycox; Marleen Wong; Arlene Fink; Pia Escudero; Catalina Zaragoza

This article describes a collaborative research model for school-based mental health services that targets children who are recent immigrants with violence-related mental health symptoms. The model describes a conceptual framework used in the establishment of an academic-community partnership during the development, evaluation, and implementation of the Mental Health for Immigrants Program (MHIP), a school-based mental health intervention. The article discusses the challenges that occurred and provides specific examples of how a participatory research partnership may work together through all program phases—design through implementation and program evaluation—to meet a specific communitys needs and produce generalizable knowledge. The challenges and limitations of collaborative research approaches also are discussed, with particular emphasis on the role of participatory research in the development and evaluation of school-based mental health programs.


Professional Psychology: Research and Practice | 2008

School-based disaster mental health services: Clinical, policy, and community challenges.

Kristin L. Dean; Audra K. Langley; Sheryl H. Kataoka; Lisa H. Jaycox; Marleen Wong; Bradley D. Stein

The consequences of Hurricane Katrina have far-reaching implications for the mental health system in the Gulf Coast region, with some of the most vulnerable survivors being children and adolescents.


Academic Medicine | 2009

Teaching Community-Based Participatory Research Principles to Physicians Enrolled in a Health Services Research Fellowship

Marjorie S. Rosenthal; Georgina Lucas; Barbara Tinney; Carol M. Mangione; Mark A. Schuster; Kenneth B. Wells; Marleen Wong; Donald F. Schwarz; Lucy Wolf Tuton; Joel D. Howell; Michelle Heisler

To improve health and reduce inequities through health services research, investigators are increasingly actively involving individuals and institutions who would be affected by the research. In one such approach, community-based participatory research (CBPR), community members participate in every aspect of designing and implementing research with the expectation that this process will enhance the translation of research into practice in communities. Because few physician researchers have expertise in such community-based approaches to research, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation leadership expanded the mission of the Robert Wood Johnson Clinical Scholars Program (RWJCSP), which historically focused on health services and clinical research, to include training and mentored experiences in CBPR. The authors discuss the three years of experience (2005–2008) implementing the new community research curricula at the four RWJCSP sites: University of California, Los Angeles; University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia; University of Michigan in Ann Arbor; and Yale University in New Haven. Three common goals and objectives are identified across sites: teaching the principles of CBPR, providing opportunities for conducting CBPR, and making an impact on the health of the communities served. Each site’s different approaches to teaching CBPR based on the nature of the existing community and academic environments are described. The authors use illustrative quotes to exemplify three key challenges that training programs face when integrating community-partnered approaches into traditional research training: relationship building, balancing goals of education/scholarship/relationships/product, and sustainability. Finally, the authors offer insights and implications for those who may wish to integrate CBPR training into their research training curricula.


Family & Community Health | 2009

Accountability and assessment of emergency drill performance at schools.

Marizen Ramirez; Katrina Kubicek; Corinne Peek-Asa; Marleen Wong

Many schools throughout the United States are mandated to hold drills, or operational exercises, to prepare for fires, earthquakes, violence, and other emergencies. However, drills have not been assessed for their effectiveness in improving preparedness at schools. This mixed-methods study measures the quantity and the quality of drills in an urban school district in Los Angeles. Compliance with California mandates was fair; most schools barely met requirements. Drills were not used as opportunities to improve procedures. Sites neither conducted any self-assessments nor made changes to procedures on the basis of performance. Suggestions include developing realistic simulated exercises, debriefing, and better school accountability for drills.


American Journal of Preventive Medicine | 2009

Improving disaster mental health care in schools: a community-partnered approach.

Sheryl H. Kataoka; Erum Nadeem; Marleen Wong; Audra K. Langley; Lisa H. Jaycox; Bradley D. Stein; Phillip Young

BACKGROUND Although schools are often the first institutions to provide recovery efforts for children post-disaster, few studies have involved the school community in research to improve the delivery of these mental health services on campuses. This community-partnered study explores post-disaster counseling services 10 months following Hurricane Katrina. METHODS In July 2006, nine focus groups, consisting of 39 school-based mental health counselors and six program administrators (10 men, 35 women), were conducted following a 2-day clinical training regarding a youth trauma intervention following Hurricane Katrina. Participants discussed the types of services they had been providing prior to the training and potential barriers to delivering services. RESULTS Participants identified high mental health needs of students and described populations that did not seem to be adequately supported by current funding sources, including those with pre-existing traumatic experiences and mental health issues, indirect psychological and social consequences of the storms, and those students relocated to communities that were not as affected. Participants also described the need for a centralized information system. CONCLUSIONS Participants described the need for greater organizational structure that supports school counselors and provides system-level support for services. Implications for next steps of this community-partnered approach are described.


Child and Adolescent Psychiatric Clinics of North America | 2012

Responding to Students with Posttraumatic Stress Disorder in Schools

Sheryl H. Kataoka; Audra K. Langley; Marleen Wong; Shilpa Baweja; Bradley D. Stein

The prevalence of trauma exposure among youth is a major public health concern. Students who have experienced a traumatic event are at increased risk for academic, social, and emotional problems. School can be an ideal setting for mental health professionals to intervene with traumatized students, school staff, and parents both immediately following a traumatic event and when symptoms of posttraumatic stress disorder and other trauma-related mental health problems develop. This article describes evidence-based treatments for posttraumatic stress disorder and outlines practical approaches to use in schools.


The Journal of Pediatrics | 2012

Youth Violence across Multiple Dimensions: A Study of Violence, Absenteeism, and Suspensions among Middle School Children

Marizen Ramirez; Yuan Wu; Sheryl H. Kataoka; Marleen Wong; Jingzhen Yang; Corinne Peek-Asa; Bradley D. Stein

OBJECTIVE To determine how multidimensional measures of violence correlate with school absenteeism and suspensions among middle school youth. STUDY DESIGN A cross-sectional survey was conducted in 2004 with 28 882 sixth graders from an urban school district. Data were collected on role (witness, victim, perpetrator) and mode (verbal, physical, weapons) of past-year violence exposures, and absences and suspensions over 1 academic year. Associations between violence and absenteeism and suspension were estimated using generalized linear models. RESULTS ORs for suspension increased from witnessing to victimization to perpetration and then victimization-perpetration. Among those exposed to weapons, victims (OR(boys) = 1.45; OR(girls) = 1.38) had similar or slightly higher ORs for absenteeism than perpetrators (OR(boys) = 1.39; OR(girls) = 1.17). Boy victims and witnesses of physical violence had similar absenteeism patterns as those unexposed to physical violence. Of all exposed girls, victim-perpetrators had the highest ORs for absenteeism (OR = 1.76). CONCLUSION Exposure to violence correlated with absenteeism and suspension. The strength of these relationships depended on mode and role in exposure. Our cross-sectional data limits our ability to establish causality. Findings have implications for prevention.


Journal of Behavioral Health Services & Research | 2010

School Personnel Perspectives on their School's Implementation of a School-Based Suicide Prevention Program

Bradley D. Stein; Sheryl H. Kataoka; Alison B. Hamilton; Dana Schultz; Gery W. Ryan; Pamela Vona; Marleen Wong

Youth suicide is a national public health priority, with policymakers highlighting schools as an ideal setting in which to deliver suicide prevention programs. Over the past decade, the number of schools implementing such programs has grown substantially, yet little is known about how successfully such programs are being implemented. This study examines the implementation of a district-wide suicide prevention program through key informant interviews with school personnel. Schools with higher rates of implementing district protocols for at-risk students had an organized system to respond to at-risk students, a process for effectively responding to students who were at-risk for suicide, and strong administrative support. In contrast, schools that had lower rates of implementing district protocols relied on a handful of individuals for suicide prevention activities and had limited administrative support. Attention to organizational factors leading to successful implementation of school-based suicide prevention programs may enhance the role of schools in national adolescent suicide prevention efforts.

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Arlene Fink

University of California

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Audra Langley

University of California

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Pamela Vona

University of California

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Lingqi Tang

University of California

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