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Methodological issues in epidemiological, prevention, and treatment research on drug-exposed women and their children.
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  • Methodological issues in epidemiological, prevention, and treatment research on drug-exposed women and their children.
Utgivning, distribution etc.
  • National Institute on Drug Abuse, Rockville, Md : 1992
Fysisk beskrivning
  • 399 s.
Serietitel - biuppslagsform
  • NIDA research monograph series ; 117
Serietitel - ej biuppslagsform
  • DHHS publication ; 92-1881
Anmärkning: Allmän
  • E-bok
Anmärkning: Innehållsbeskrivning, sammanfattning
  • Methodological issues in prevention research on drug use and pregnancy. Measurement issues in the evaluation of experimental treatment interventions. Role of biological markers in epidemiologic studies of prenatal drug exposure: issues in study design. Detection of prenatal drug exposure in the pregnant woman and her newborn infant. Methodological issues in obtaining and managing substance abuse information from prenatal patients. Who is it going to be? Subject selection issues in prenatal drug exposure research. Subject recruitment and retention for longitudinal research: practical considerations for a nonintervention model. Subject recruitment and retention issues in longitudinal research involving substance-abusing families: a clinical services context. Perinatal substance abuse and AIDS: subject selection, recruitment, and retention. Measures of pregnant, drug-abusing women for treatment research. Assessing acute and long-term physical effects of in utero drug exposure on the perinate, infant, and child. Methodological issues in the assessment of the mother-child interactions of substance-abusing women and their children. Studies of prenatal drug exposure and environmental research issues: the benefits of integrating research within a treatment program. How the environment affects research on prenatal drug exposure: the laboratory and the community. Program and staff characteristics in successful treatment. Process measures in interventions for drug-abusing women: from coping to competence. Alcohol- and drug-dependent pregnant women: laws and public policies that promote and inhibit research and the delivery of services. Mandatory reporting of child abuse and research on the effects of prenatal drug exposure.
Term
Indexterm - Okontrollerad
Personnamn
Institutionsnamn
  • National Institute on Drug Abuse
*000      am a        a
*00118075
*007cr |||||||||||
*008070120s1992||||xxu||||es|||||||||1|eng||
*24510$aMethodological issues in epidemiological, prevention, and treatment research on drug-exposed women and their children.
*260  $aRockville, Md :$bNational Institute on Drug Abuse,$c1992
*300  $a399 s.
*440  $aNIDA research monograph series ;$v117 
*490  $aDHHS publication ; $v92-1881
*500  $aE-bok
*520  $aMethodological issues in prevention research on drug use and pregnancy. Measurement issues in the evaluation of experimental treatment interventions. Role of biological markers in epidemiologic studies of prenatal drug exposure: issues in study design. Detection of prenatal drug exposure in the pregnant woman and her newborn infant. Methodological issues in obtaining and managing substance abuse information from prenatal patients. Who is it going to be? Subject selection issues in prenatal drug exposure research. Subject recruitment and retention for longitudinal research: practical considerations for a nonintervention model. Subject recruitment and retention issues in longitudinal research involving substance-abusing families: a clinical services context. Perinatal substance abuse and AIDS: subject selection, recruitment, and retention. Measures of pregnant, drug-abusing women for treatment research. Assessing acute and long-term physical effects of in utero drug exposure on the perinate, infant, and child. Methodological issues in the assessment of the mother-child interactions of substance-abusing women and their children. Studies of prenatal drug exposure and environmental research issues: the benefits of integrating research within a treatment program. How the environment affects research on prenatal drug exposure: the laboratory and the community. Program and staff characteristics in successful treatment. Process measures in interventions for drug-abusing women: from coping to competence. Alcohol- and drug-dependent pregnant women: laws and public policies that promote and inhibit research and the delivery of services. Mandatory reporting of child abuse and research on the effects of prenatal drug exposure.
*650 4$aAlcoholism
*650 4$aNarcotic dependence
*650 4$aPregnancy
*650 4$aFemale
*650 4$aInfant, newborn
*650 4$aSubstance abuse detection
*650 4$aEpidemiology
*650 4$aMethods
*650 4$aPrenatal exposure delayed effects
*650 4$aMother-child relations
*650 4$aResearch design
*653  $aKvinnor
*653  $aGraviditet
*653  $aBarn
*653  $aAlkoholism
*653  $aNarkomani
*653  $aForskning
*7001 $aKilbey, M. Marlyne$eed.
*7001 $aAsghar, Khursheed$eed.
*7101 $aNational Institute on Drug Abuse$0124050
*85640$uhttps://archives.drugabuse.gov/sites/default/files/monograph117.pdf
^
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