tf: arrange these—how should individual entries be organized
TRANSCRIPT
1
LI Analysis Training Series
Acknowledgement of funding and data sources for GAIN1 data
(Last Revised: 2/20/2012)
Melissa Ives, Rodney Funk, Pamela Ihnes & Michael Dennis
Chestnut Health Systems
Normal, IL 61761
www.gaincc.org
Acknowledgement: This document was developed under contract #270-2007-00004C
from the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA’s)
Center for Substance Abuse Treatment (CSAT). Any opinions about this data are those
of the authors and do not represent official positions of the government or individual
grantees.
Purpose:
Whenever a researcher, evaluator or other staff uses data provided by the GAIN
Coordinating Center, they are required to include a statement recognizing the grants
included in the analysis or report. The author should include an acknowledgement of each
funded entity that provided data, wrote or reviewed the data or text, or provided
procedural oversight. It should also include a disclaimer that use of the data does not
convey any kind of endorsement by the government. Below is an example where you
would replace the bracketed material with descriptions of your project, insert the
appropriate contract and grantee numbers2, and edit the rest as needed to fit your specific
needs. Include the last sentence (“Any opinions about this data…”) as shown below.
The development of this [project, report, manual, etc.] was supported by the
Center for Substance Abuse Treatment (CSAT), Substance Abuse and Mental
Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) contracts [enter SAMHSA/CSAT
contract numbers] using data provided by the following grantees: [enter CSAT
grant numbers]. The authors thank these grantees and their participants for
agreeing to share their data to support this secondary analysis. The opinions
about this data are those of the authors and do not reflect official positions of the
government or individual grantees. Please direct correspondence to [insert name,
address, e-mail address and phone for contact person].
You only need to acknowledge the sites or data sources you used in your analysis or
report (which may be one or multiple sites). Note that if you are examining a subgroup
(e.g., heroin users, females, or clients from rural settings) or using one or more optional
items (e.g., detailed treatment history, pathological gambling), the analysis will be limited
to a subset of sites and should only acknowledge those that are included in the subset.
Below are procedures to identify who needs to be acknowledged based on the final
sample used for the analysis (i.e., after all inclusion/exclusion criteria and subsetting).
1 Global Appraisal of Individual Need (Dennis, White, et al., 2006)
2 Both contract and grant numbers are provided in the table at the end of this document.
2
Procedure:
Once you have received permission (per the Accessing data memo (Ives, Funk, &
Dennis, 2007) and the dataset, and you have selected the final group of records that will
be used, you will need to check which programs and sites need to be acknowledged. To
do this, run a frequency on the variable “XSITE2”:
FREQUENCY XSITE2.
This will give you a list of which sites are included in your data. For the 2010 and later
data sets, the value labels for XSITE2 contain the grant number, program name and grant
location (city or county and state), or these can be found in the tables below. If the
frequency list gives only a list of XSITE2 values, set your SPSS General option (Edit
Options Output Labels tab) for ‘Pivot Table Labeling’ ‘Variable values in labels
list’ to either ‘Labels’ or ‘Values and Labels’ and re-run the frequency above so that you
will see the full list of labels. If you are using the entire CSAT dataset, recall that there
are more than 15 programs including more than 180 sites.
Please use the information provided below to contact specific sites and when listing the
sites whose data are used in your analysis. It is important to include the grant number, the
program, the city, and the principal investigator’s name and contact so that others who
read your document will be able to direct any questions, comments, or requests for
further information to the appropriate person.
CSAT-funded projects
Cannabis Youth Treatment (Study: CYT; CSAT/SAMHSA contracts #270-97-7011,
#270-00-6500, #270-2003-00006) was a multi-site randomized field experiment designed
to adapt five adolescent treatments—Motivational Enhancement Therapy and Cognitive
Behavioral Therapy for Adolescent Cannabis Users: 5 Sessions (MET/CBT5);
MET/CBT12; Adolescent Community Reinforcement Approach (ACRA); Family
Support Network (FSN); and Multidimensional Family Therapy (MDFT) for use in
clinical practice and to field-test their effectiveness in the largest randomized experiment
ever conducted with adolescent marijuana users seeking outpatient treatment.
Primary references:
Dennis, M.L., Babor, T.F., Diamond, G., Donaldson, J., Godley, S.H., Tims, F., Titus, J.,
Webb, C., Herrell, J., & The CYT Steering Committee. (2000). The Cannabis Youth
Treatment (CYT) experiment: Preliminary findings. Rockville, MD: Center for
Substance Abuse Treatment. Retrieved from http://www.recoverymonth.gov
Dennis, M. L., Babor, T. F., Diamond, G., Donaldson, J., Godley, S. H., Titus, J. C. et al.
(2000). Cooperative agreement for a multisite study of the effectiveness of treatment
for cannabis (marijuana) dependent youth. Rockville, MD: Center for Substance
Abuse Treatment.
Dennis, M. L., Godley, S. H., Diamond, G. S., Tims, F. M., Babor, T., Donaldson, J.,
Liddle, H. A., Titus, J. C., Kaminer, Y., Webb, C., Hamilton, N., & Funk, R.R.
3
(2004). The Cannabis Youth Treatment (CYT) study: Main findings from two
randomized trials. Journal of Substance Abuse Treatment, 27(3), 197-213.
Dennis, M. L., Titus, J. C., Diamond, G. S., Donaldson, J., Godley, S. H., Tims, F. M.,
Webb, C., Kaminer, Y., Babor, T., Roebuck, M. C., Godley, M. D., Hamilton, N.,
Liddle, H., Scott, C. K, & the CYT Steering Committee. (2002). The Cannabis Youth
Treatment (CYT) experiment: Rationale, study design, and analysis plans. Addiction,
97(Suppl. 1), S16-S34.
Titus, J. C., & Dennis, M. L. (2006). Cannabis Youth Treatment intervention:
Preliminary findings and implications. H. A. Liddle, & C. L. Rowe (Eds.), Adolescent
substance abuse: Research and clinical advances (pp. 104-126). Cambridge, UK:
Cambridge University Press.
Primary contact: Michael Dennis, [email protected]
CSAT
grant no.
Initial
year
CYT principal investigator or
primary contact
Grantee and (treatment offered)
TI-11317 1997 Frank Tims, [email protected] Operation PAR, St. Petersburg, FL
(OP: MET/CBT5, MET/CBT12,
FSN)
TI-11321 1997 Susan H. Godley,
Chestnut Health Systems, Madison
County, IL (OP: MET/CBT5, A-
CRA, MDFT [multidimensional
family therapy])
TI-11323 1997 Guy Diamond,
Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia,
Philadelphia, PA (OP: MET/CBT5,
A-CRA, MDFT)
TI-11324 1997 Thomas Babor,
University of Connecticut Health
Center, Farmington, CT (OP:
MET/CBT5, MET/CBT12, FSNM)
—
Adolescent Treatment Model (Study: ATM; CSAT/SAMHSA contracts #270-98-7047,
#270-97-7011, #277-00-6500, #270-2003-00006) was a 3-year grant designed to identify
existing adolescent treatment programs that, when evaluated for client outcomes and cost
under a rigorous study design, demonstrated effectiveness and promise for replication.
Primary references:
Stevens, S. J., and Morral, A. R. (Eds.). (2003). Adolescent substance abuse treatment in
the United States: Exemplary models from a national evaluation study. New York:
Haworth Press.
Morral, A.R., McCaffrey, D.F., Ridgeway, G., Mukherji, A., & Beighley, C. (2006). The
relative effectiveness of 10 adolescent substance abuse treatment programs in the
United States. Pittsburgh, PA: RAND Corporation. Retrieved from
http://www.rand.org/pubs/technical_reports/2006/RAND_TR346.pdf.
4
Primary contact: Robert Vincent, [email protected]; Melissa Rael,
CSAT
grant no.
Initial
year
ATM principal investigator or
primary contact
Grantee and (treatment offered)
TI-11422 1998 Sally J. Stevens,
CODAC Behavioral Health Services
of Pima, Tucson, AZ (Residential
and Aftercare)
TI-11423 1998 Contact: John Yu, PhD
PI: Patricia Perry
New York Office of Alcoholism and
Substance Abuse Services, Albany,
NY (3-year step-down treatment:
Residential, Intensive Outpatient,
standard Outpatient)
TI-11424 1998 Marc Fishman,
The Johns Hopkins University,
Baltimore, MD (Inpatient)
TI-11432 1998 Patricia Shane,
Public Health Institute, Berkeley
(Oakland), CA (Residential and
Aftercare)
TI-11433 1998 Andrew Morral,
RAND, Santa Monica, CA
(Residential and Aftercare)
TI-11871 1999 Howard A. Liddle,
University of Miami, Miami, FL
(Intensive Outpatient)
TI-11874 1999 Michael Gordon,
Friends Research Institute,
Baltimore/Catonsville, MD
(Outpatient)
TI-11888 1999 Candice Stewart-Sabin,
Shiprock Behavioral Health Board,
Shiprock, NM (Residential)
TI-11892 1999 Sally J. Stevens,
Suicide Prevention Center, Tempe,
AZ (Intensive Outpatient)
TI-11894 1999 Susan H. Godley,
Chestnut Health Systems,
Bloomington, IL (Outpatient and
Intensive Outpatient)
—
Strengthening Communities–Youth (Study: SCY; CSAT/SAMHSA contracts #277-00-
6500, #270-2003-00006) was a 5-year grant designed to support cooperative agreements
that encouraged communities to strengthen their drug and alcohol identification, referral,
and treatment systems for youth through four national treatment plan strategies: Invest for
Results, No Wrong Door to Treatment, Commit to Quality, and Build Partnerships.
Primary references:
Special issue of the Journal of Psychoactive Drugs (2008) vol. 40 issue 1, edited Doug
Smith ([email protected]).
Dennis, M.L., Ives, M.L., White, M.K. & Muck, R.D. (2008). The Strengthening
Communities for Youth (SCY) initiative: A cluster analysis of services received, their
5
correlates and how they are associated with outcomes. Journal of Psychoactive
Drugs. 40(1), 3-16.
Dennis, M.L., White, M., Ives, M.L., (2009). Individual Characteristics and Needs
Associated with Substance Misuse of Adolescents and Young Adults in Addiction
Treatment. In Carl Leukefeld, Tom Gullotta and Michele Staton Tindall (Eds.),
Handbook on Adolescent Substance Abuse Prevention and Treatment: Evidence-
Based Practice. New London, CT: Child and Family Agency Press.
Primary contact: Robert Vincent, [email protected]; Melissa Rael,
CSAT
grant no.
Initial
year
SCY principal investigator or
primary contact
Grantee and (treatment offered)
TI-13305 2001 Barbara Keehn,
Missouri Department of Mental
Health, St. Louis, MO (IOP, OP,
Residential, Aftercare: CBT)
TI-13308 2002 Peter Panzarella,
State of Connecticut Department of
Children and Families/Hartford
Youth Project, Hartford, CT
(Outpatient/IOP, Residential)
TI-13313 2002 Tom Gerstel,
Adolescent Treatment Center, Inc.,
Oakland, CA (Prevention, Early
Intervention, Outpatient, Intensive
Outpatient, Residential and
Hospital)
TI-13322 2002 Martin Murphy,
Cuyahoga County Board of
Commissioners, Cleveland, OH
(Case Management)
TI-13323 2002 Deirdre Rice-Reese, DRice-
Phoenix Programs of New York,
Inc., New York, NY (MET/CBT5
and MET/CBT12)
TI-13340 2001 John Bolland,
University of Alabama Institute of
Social Science Research, Mobile,
AL (MET/CBT, ACRA, Aftercare)
TI-13344 2002 Aimee Graves,
CODAC Behavioral Health Services
of Pima Co., Inc., Tucson, AZ (Case
Management, Residential, IOP/OP,
and Aftercare)
TI-13345 2002 Sue Landenwich,
Seven Counties Services, Louisville,
KY (Intensive Outpatient, Inpatient,
Residential, and Aftercare)
TI-13354 2002 James Hall, james-a-
University of Iowa Center for
Addiction Research, Iowa City, IA
(Intensive Outpatient)
TI-13356 2001 Susan Godley,
Chestnut Health Systems,
Bloomington, IL (Outpatient)
6
—
Adolescent Residential Treatment (Study: ART; CSAT/SAMHSA contracts #277-00-
6500, #270-2003-00006) was a 3-year grant designed to develop residential and
continuing-care treatment programs specifically for youth age 21 and under, including
aftercare services to keep youth engaged with treatment and prevent relapse. ART sites
were required to enter participants’ residential and aftercare treatment admissions in their
Treatment Transition Logs (TTL) regardless of whether they recruited participants into
the study at admission to residential or aftercare treatment.
Primary references: Not yet available
Primary contact: Robert Vincent, [email protected]; Melissa Rael,
CSAT
grant no.
Initial
year
ART principal investigator or
primary contact
Grantee and (treatment offered)
TI-14090 2002 Rita Sullivan,
On Track, Medford, OR
(Residential and Day Treatment)
TI-14103 2002 William Manov,
cruz.ca.us
Santa Cruz County Health Services
Authority, Santa Cruz City, CA
(Residential)
TI-14188 2002 Elizabeth Whitmore,
Synergy–University of Colorado
School of Medicine, Denver, CO
(Residential and Multisystemic
Treatment Aftercare)
TI-14189 2002 Marc Fishman,
Johns Hopkins University,
Baltimore, MD (Short-term
Residential: ACC)
TI-14196 2002 Janice Lane,
Children and Families of Iowa, Des
Moines, IA (IOP)
TI-14214 2002 Mark Snipes,
Fairbanks Native Association/Life
Givers, Fairbanks, AK (Residential)
TI-14252 2002 Elizabeth Urquhart,
Phoenix House of San Diego, San
Diego, CA (Long-term residential,
Intensive Continuing Care)
TI-14261 2002 Gail Gnazzo, [email protected] Maui Youth and Family Services,
Paia, Maui, HI (Residential and
Continuing Care, Therapeutic
community)
TI-14267 2002 Luis E. Flores, luis@scan-
inc.org
Serving Children & Adolescents in
Need (SCAN) Inc., Laredo, TX
(Intensive Residential)
7
CSAT
grant no.
Initial
year
ART principal investigator or
primary contact
Grantee and (treatment offered)
TI-14271 2002 Lucy Zammarelli,
Willamette Family Treatment
Services, Eugene, OR (Residential,
Outpatient, and Aftercare)
TI-14272 2002 James May, [email protected] Richmond Behavioral Health
Authority, Richmond, VA
(Residential, Outpatient, and
Continuing Care)
TI-14283 2002 Michael Gerrard,
Phoenix Programs of NY, Brooklyn,
NY (ACC)
TI-14311 2002 Valerie Gay, [email protected] Center for Drug Free Living,
Orlando, FL (Residential and
Continuing Care)
TI-14315 2002 Patrick Miley,
Stewart-Marchman Center, Daytona
Beach, FL (In-home Family
Therapy Sessions [BASICS])
TI-14355 2002 Charla Hatch,
Raindancer Youth Services,
Washington County, UT (Enhanced
Residential Treatment)
TI-14376 2002 Leslie Hurtig, [email protected] Philadelphia Health Management
Corporation, Philadelphia, PA
(Residential and Continuing Care)
—
Effective Adolescent Treatment (Study: EAT; CSAT/SAMHSA contract #270-2003-
00006) was a 3-year grant designed to encourage agencies, particularly those in areas
with unmet substance abuse treatment needs, to adopt or expand their use of a treatment
protocol that combined two types of therapy: Motivational Enhancement Therapy and 5-
session Cognitive Behavior Therapy (MET/CBT5).
Primary references:
Dennis, M.L., Ives, M., Muck, R. (2008) A Phase IV Meta Analytic Study of the
Replicability of Motivational Enhancement Therapy/ Cognitive Behavior Therapy for
5 sessions (MET/CBT5) in 36 sites Presentation at the Joint Meeting of Adolescent
Treatment Effectiveness March 25,2008, Washington DC. Available
http://www.jmate.org/JMATE2010/Documents/JMATE2008/Dennis_120_1.pdf
Riley, K.J., Rieckmann, T., & McCarty, D. (2008). Implementation of MET/CBT-5 for
Adolescents. Journal of Behavioral Health Services & Research, 35(3), 304-314
Primary contact: Robert Vincent, [email protected]; Melissa Rael,
8
CSAT
grant no.
Initial
year
EAT principal investigator or
primary contact
Grantee and (treatment offered)
TI-15413 2003 Pat Beauchamp,
Pima Prevention Partnership,
Tucson, AZ (MET/CBT)
TI-15433 2003 Michael Mason,
Georgetown University,
Washington, DC (MET/CBT)
TI-15447 2003 John F. Curry,
Cindy Jones,
Duke University/Drug Abuse
Treatment for Adolescents (DATA),
Durham, NC (MET/CBT)
TI-15461 2003 Robert M. Vincent,
Education Service District 113/True
North, Olympia, WA (MET/CBT)
TI-15467 2003 J. Lynn Taylor,
University of Arkansas for Medical
Sciences, Little Rock, AR
(MET/CBT)
TI-15475 2003 Daniel Rezende,
Connecticut Junior Republic,
Waterbury, CT (MET/CBT)
TI-15478 2003 Frank Tims, [email protected] Operation PAR, Inc., Pinellas Park,
FL (MET/CBT)
TI-15479 2003 Lilas Rajaee-Moore, lilas.rajaee-
State Court Administrator’s Office,
Denver, CO (MET/CBT)
TI-15481 2003 Leonard Kincaid,
Houston Council on Alcohol and
Drug Abuse, Houston, TX
(MET/CBT)
TI-15483 2003 Dick Dillon, [email protected] Preferred Family Healthcare,
Kirksville (St. Louis), MO
(MET/CBT)
TI-15486 2003 Michael S. Levy,
CAB Health and Recovery Services,
Danvers, MA (MET/CBT)
TI-15511 2003 Seprieono Locario,
Urban Indian Health
Board/Generation Seven, Oakland,
CA (MET/CBT: Case Management,
Outpatient Individual and Family
Counseling, and Residential)
TI-15514 2003 Jaimie Clayton,
Oakland Family Services/Marijuana
and Alcohol Free Youth, Pontiac,
MI (MET/CBT)
TI-15545 2003 Donn Levine,
Center for Drug-Free Living,
Orlando, FL (MET/CBT)
TI-15562 2003 Win Turner,
Vermont Alcohol and Drug Abuse
Programs (ADAP)/New England
Institute of Addiction Studies,
Burlington, VT/Augusta, ME
(MET/CBT)
9
CSAT
grant no.
Initial
year
EAT principal investigator or
primary contact
Grantee and (treatment offered)
TI-15670 2003 Vivian B. Brown,
Prototypes Adolescent, Culver City,
CA (MET/CBT)
TI-15671 2003 Julie Payton,
Butler County ADAS Board,
Hamilton, OH (MET/CBT)
TI-15672 2003 Kathy Davis,
Child and Family Services, Lansing,
MI (MET/CBT)
TI-15674 2003 Nancy Paull, [email protected] Stanley Street Treatment and
Resources (SSTAR), Fall River,
MA (MET/CBT, Outpatient and
Case Management)
TI-15678 2003 Elizabeth-Leigh Bradley,
Connecticut Renaissance, Norwalk,
CT (Case-managed Short-term
Outpatient: MET/CBT)
TI-15682 2003 Joe Hromco,
Tualatin Valley Centers/Project
Choice, Portland, OR (MET/CBT)
TI-15686 2003 E. Ann Moore,
Arapahoe House, Thornton, CO
(MET/CBT)
TI-15415 2004 Marsha Bowman,
Border Area Mental Health
Services/Adolescent Substance
Abuse Treatment (U R COOL),
Silver City, NM (MET/CBT)
TI-15421 2004 Cindy Salmoiraghi,
g
Morris Foundation, Inc./Effective
Adolescent Substance Abuse
Treatment (Freedom Program),
Waterbury, CT (MET/CBT)
TI-15438 2004 Jennifer Eckert,
CPC Behavioral
Healthcare/Effective Adolescent
Alcohol and Drug Abuse Treatment
(Project START), Red Bank, NJ
(MET/CBT)
TI-15446 2004 David Hamolsky,
L.U.K Crisis Center/Y.O.U.
Services Model (Moving On
Program), Fitchburg, MA
(MET/CBT)
TI-15458 2004 Donna Burton,
The Mid-Florida Center, Inc./The
Starting Point, Avon Park, FL
(MET/CBT)
TI-15466 2004 Donna Baird,
(cc Kim Bradshaw,
Adventist Healthcare/Potomac
Ridge Behavioral Health, Rockville,
MD (MET/CBT)
10
CSAT
grant no.
Initial
year
EAT principal investigator or
primary contact
Grantee and (treatment offered)
TI-15469 2004 Lisa Moore, [email protected] Council on Alcoholism and Drug
Abuse/Enhanced MET/CBT5
(Cannabis Youth Treatment), Santa
Barbara, CA (MET/CBT)
TI-15485 2004 Stewart Sokol
Tarzana Treatment Center,
Inc./Enhanced Treatment for
Marijuana Dependent Youth,
Tarzana, CA (MET/CBT)
TI-15489 2004 Luis Flores, [email protected] Serving Children and Adolescents in
Need (SCAN), Inc./Students Taking
Action Negating Drugs (STAND),
Laredo, TX (MET/CBT)
TI-15524 2004 James Szabo,
Community Counseling
Center/Effective Adolescent
Treatment (Live SMART),
Pawtucket, RI (MET/CBT)
TI-15527 2004 John Howell,
Today, Inc./MET/CBT Treatment
TODAY (T.R.Y. at TODAY),
Newtown, PA (MET/CBT)
TI-15577 2004 David Mineta, dmineta@aars-
inc.org
Asian American Recovery Services,
Inc./Project Reconnect, Daly City,
CA (MET/CBT)
TI-15584 2004 Fernando Giraldo,
Santa Cruz County/Motivational
Approach to Success (MAS), Santa
Cruz, CA (MET/CBT)
TI-15586 2004 Jeanne Obert, [email protected] Matrix Institute/Effective
Adolescent Alcohol and Drug
Abuse Treatment, Los Angeles, CA
(MET/CBT)
TI-15677 2004 Becky Mason, [email protected] Community Drug Board/The
Adoption of MET/CBT 5 (GREAT),
Akron, OH (MET/CBT)
—
Young Offenders Reentry Program (Study: YORP; CSAT/SAMHSA contract #270-
2003-00006 and #270-2007-00004C) was a 3-year grant designed to successfully
reintegrate sentenced substance-abusing juveniles and young adult offenders into their
families and communities after incarceration by providing treatment and other services
while ensuring safety for the family and community.
Primary reference: Not yet available
11
Primary contact: Kenneth Robertson, [email protected]; George
Samayoa, [email protected]
CSAT
grant no.
Initial
year
YORP principal investigator
or primary contact
Grantee and (treatment offered)
TI-16915 2004
Stephen Betts,
Santa Clara County Bureau of Drug
Abuse Services (Teens in
Transition), San Jose, CA
(Outpatient and Intensive
Outpatient, Case Management:
MET/CBT)
TI-16935 2004 Lyn Levy, [email protected] SPAN, Inc., Boston, MA
(MET/CBT5) (GAIN-Q data only)
TI-16949 2004 Anthony Scott,
University of Texas Health Science
Center San Antonio
(Project STAY), San Antonio, TX
(GAIN-Q only)
TI-16961 2004 Richard Ciampa,
Atlantic Recovery Services, Long
Beach, CA (Group-based Outpatient
Treatment [GBOPT])
TI-16984 2004 Debbie Jossart,
Racine County Human
Services/Zimmerman Consulting,
Racine, WI (Outpatient)
TI-16992 2004 Elizabeth Urquhart,
Phoenix House of San Diego, San
Diego, CA (ACRA)
TI-17046 2004 Bonita Perry-Dean,
Prestera Center for Mental Health
Services, Huntington, WV (ACRA)
TI-17070 2004 Pat Beauchamp,
(cc Trisha Campie,
Pima Prevention Partnership/Pima
County Youth Family Services,
Tucson, AZ (Intensive Outpatient)
TI-16904 2005 José Luis Soria,
Alivane Inc./Renacer (Reborn)
Project El Paso, TX (ACRA)
TI-16928 2005 Frank Tims, [email protected] Operation PAR, Pinellas Park, FL
(FSN)
TI-16939 2005 Stephanie Brown,
Turning Point Center for Youth and
Family Development, Fort Collins,
CO (Intensive Outpatient Dialectical
Behavioral Therapy [DBT], LTR
and Outpatient CBT)
TI-17071 2005 Ivan Rosa,
Hispanic Urban Minority
Alcoholism and Drug Abuse
Outreach Program, Cleveland, OH
(ACC)
12
CSAT
grant no.
Initial
year
YORP principal investigator
or primary contact
Grantee and (treatment offered)
TI-17095 2005 Pamela McCollum
Cobb Country Community Services
Board/Center for Adolescent
Wellness, Smyrna, GA (IOP, ACC)
(GAIN-Q only)
—
Drug Court (Study: DC; CSAT/SAMHSA contract #270-2003-00006 and #270-2007-
00004C) was a 3-year grant designed to provide funds for treatment providers and the
courts to provide alcohol and other drug abuse assessment, treatment, assessment, case
management; and program coordination to juveniles in need of such services.
Primary reference: Not yet available
Primary contact: Ken Robertson, [email protected]; Holly Rogers,
CSAT
grant no.
Initial
year
DC principal investigator or
primary contact
Grantee and (treatment offered)
TI-17433 2005 Luis Flores, [email protected] Serving Children & Adolescents in
Need (SCAN’s Juvenile Drug Court
Project) Inc., Laredo, TX (A-CRA)
TI-17434 2005 Nancy Amodei,
University of Texas Health Science
Center (Project Justice), San
Antonio, TX (MET/Brief Strategic
Family Therapy)
TI-17446 2005 Judith Davila,
[email protected] (cc Rex
Andrea, [email protected];
Maria Maldanado,
Paula Nannizzi,
San Mateo County Human Services
Agency, Belmont, CA
(MET/CBT12)
TI-17475 2005 Albert Senella,
Tarzana Treatment Center/Sylmar
Juvenile Drug Court, Tarzana, CA
(MET/CBT)
TI-17484 2005 Jaimie Clayton,
Oakland Family Services/Family
Focused Juvenile Drug Court,
Pontiac, MI (Intensive Outpatient)
TI-17530 2005 Foster Cook, [email protected]
(cc Suzanne Muir,
University of Alabama at
Birmingham/Enhanced Continuum
of Treatment for Juvenile Drug
Court Participants, Birmingham, AL
(GBOPT)
13
CSAT
grant no.
Initial
year
DC principal investigator or
primary contact
Grantee and (treatment offered)
TI-17476 2006 Stephen Betts,
Santa Clara County Superior Court,
San Jose, CA (OP/CM; Motivational
Interviewing)
TI-17486 2006 Estela Medina,
Terrell Orr,
Travis County Juvenile Court,
Austin, TX (IOP, CBT)
TI-17490 2006 Michael Levy,
CAB Health and Recovery Services,
Salem/Peabody, MA (OP A-CRA)
TI-17517 2006 Neil Gaer,
Phoenix House of New England,
Providence, RI/Springfield, MA (A-
CRA)
TI-17523 2006 Beryl Fletcher,
Wayne County Third Circuit
(Stand Program), Detroit, MI
(MET/CBT12)
TI-17535 2006 Leslie Hurtig, [email protected] Philadelphia Health Management,
Philadelphia, PA (IOP Groups)
TI-17538 2006 Michelle Prather,
Big Horn County Juvenile Drug
Court, Basin/Bighorn, WY (IOP
CBT)
—
Family Drug Court (Study: FDC; CSAT/SAMHSA contract #270-2007-00004C) was a
3-year grant designed to provide funds for treatment providers and the courts to provide
alcohol and other drug abuse assessment, treatment, assessment, case management; and
program coordination to families in need of such services.
Primary reference: Not yet available
Primary contact: Ken Robertson, [email protected]; Holly Rogers,
CSAT
grant no.
Initial
year
FDC principal investigator or
primary contact
Grantee and (treatment offered)
TI-17534 2006 Rick Melendi,
Tampa-Hillsborough County
Dependency Drug Court/
Administrative Office of the
Court, Tampa, FL (ADULTS;
IOP: MET/CBT5)
TI-17547 2006 Chris Swenson-Smith
Christine.Swenson-
Family Drug Court: Pima County
Juvenile Court Center, Tucson, AZ
(Case Management)
14
—
Assertive Adolescent Family Treatment (Study: AAFT; CSAT/SAMHSA contract
#270-2003-00006 and #270-2007-00004C) is a project exploring assertive community
and family interventions for adolescents with substance abuse problems. The project uses
the GAIN as a standardized measure along with the implementation of the Adolescent
Community Reinforcement Approach (A-CRA) for use in clinical practice.
Primary reference: Not yet available
Primary contact: Robert Vincent, [email protected]; Ruby Neville,
[email protected]; Melissa Rael, [email protected]
CSAT
grant no.
Initial
year
AAFT principal investigator or
primary contact
Grantee and (treatment offered)
TI-17604 2006 Bridget Ruiz,
University of Arizona/Las
Mariposas, Tucson, AZ (Outpatient
ACRA/ACC)
TI-17605 2006 Luis Flores, [email protected] Serving Children and Adolescents in
Need (SCAN) Inc., Laredo, TX
(Outpatient A-CRA)
TI-17638 2006 Anthony Scott,
University of Texas Health Science
Center San Antonio (UTHSCSA),
San Antonio, TX (Intensive
Outpatient ACR-A)
TI-17728 2006 Colleen Smith,
Prestera Center for Mental Health
Services, Huntington, WV (School-
based substance abuse treatment
services utilizing the ACRA
treatment model; Case management
services in the home utilizing the
proven ACC model; and
Replacement activities)
TI-17755 2006 Elizabeth Hail,
Centerstone Community Mental
Health Centers, Nashville, TN
(Home- and School-based A-CRA)
TI-17761 2006 Nancy Hamilton,
Operation PAR, Pinellas Park, FL
(Outpatient A-CRA)
TI-17763 2006 Teresa Kramer,
University of Arkansas Medical
Sciences Little Rock, Little Rock,
AR (Outpatient A-CRA, Case
Management)
TI-17765 2006 Martha Varela,
Southern California Alcohol and
Drug Programs, Downey, CA
(Outpatient A-CRA)
15
CSAT
grant no.
Initial
year
AAFT principal investigator or
primary contact
Grantee and (treatment offered)
TI-17769 2006 Pat Beauchamp,
(cc Trisha Campie,
Pima Prevention Partnership
(Family Paths), Tucson, AZ
(Outpatient A-CRA, IOP)
TI-17779 2006 David Hamolsky,
L.U.K. Crisis Center (Continuous
Learning for Youth in Recovery),
Fitchburg, MA (Home-based A-
CRA, Wrap-around case
management)
TI-17786 2006 Alesia Ping-Difiore,
Tarzana Treatment Center, Tarzana,
CA (Family-centered Outpatient A-
CRA, Case Management)
TI-17788 2006 Norma Finkelstein,
normafinkelstein@healthrecover
y.org
Institute for Health and Recovery
(SAFE Project), Cambridge, MA
(Outpatient: Home-based, After
school, and Community-based A-
CRA
TI-17812 2006 Lien Cao, [email protected] Asian American Recovery Services,
San Francisco, CA (A-CRA, Case
Management)
TI-17825 2006 Marylou Erbland,
Center for Success and
Independence, Houston, TX (Long-
term Residential A-CRA, followed
by Home-based A-CRA)
TI-17830 2006 Angie Maldonado,
Center for Drug-Free Living, Cocoa,
FL (Outpatient and Home-based A-
CRA, Case Management)
TI-17589 2007 Jenny Gonzalez,
Westcare California, Fresno, CA
(OP A-CRA)
TI-17646 2007 Hayley Levy,
Special Service for Group, Los
Angeles, CA (OP A-CRA)
TI-17648 2007 Dr. Elizabeth Whitmore,
Univ. of Colorado at Denver and the
Health Science Center, Aurora, CO
(CM; ACC)
TI-17673 2007 Julie Laughlin,
(cc Stevie Hanson,
MHMR of Tarrant County, Fort
Worth, TX (OP A-CRA)
TI-17702 2007 Amy Pepin, [email protected] Child and Family Services,
Manchester, NH (OP A-CRA)
TI-17719 2007 Gladys A. Bush,
Meharry Medical College.
Nashville, TN (IOP A-CRA)
TI-17724 2007 Deborah Best,
Phoenix Programs, Inc., Columbia,
MO (OP A-CRA)
16
CSAT
grant no.
Initial
year
AAFT principal investigator or
primary contact
Grantee and (treatment offered)
TI-17742 2007 Amy Olson,
Ridgeview, Oak Ridge, TN (OP A-
CRA)
TI-17744 2007 Catherine Hoich,
Arapahoe House Inc., Thornton, CO
(CM ACC)
TI-17751 2007 Dennis Huff, [email protected] Native American Community
Health Center, Phoenix, AZ (OP A-
CRA)
TI-17775 2007 Elvin Willie,
Reno Sparks Health and Human
Services, Reno, NV (OP A-CRA)
TI-17817 2007 Dr. Craig Henderson,
Sam Houston State University,
Huntsville, TX (OP A-CRA and
OIT)
TI-17821 2007 Joyce Lime, [email protected] Asian Community Mental Health
Board, Oakland, CA (OP A-CRA)
TI-17831 2007 Denise Williams,
Walden House. San Francisco, CA
(LTR A-CRA)
TI-17847 2007 Pamela Weinberg,
pweinberg@communityalternati
ves.org
Center for Community Alternatives,
Syracuse, NY (OP A-CRA)
TI-17864 2007 Dr. Tom Gregoire,
(cc Dean Kaufmann,
h.us)
Alcohol, Drug & Mental Health
Board, Columbus, OH (OP/CM; A-
CRA/ACC)
TI-20759 2009 Martha Varela;
Southern California Alcohol and
Drug Programs, Downey, CA (OP:
A-CRA/ACC, Motivational
Interviewing)
TI-20781 2009 Angie Maldonado,
Center for Drug-Free Living,
Orlando, FL (OP: A-CRA/ACC)
TI-20798 2009 Frank Scafidi,
The Village South, Inc., Miami, FL
(IOP: A-CRA/ACC)
TI-20806 2009 John Wodarski,
University of Tennessee-Knoxville,
Knoxville, TN (OP: A-CRA/ACC)
TI-20827 2009 John Tavolacci,
Odyssey House, Inc., New York
(Bronx), NY (OP: A-CRA/ACC,
CBT, Motivational Incentives)
TI-20828 2009 Geralyn Simon,
Southwest Louisiana Center for
HealthServices, Lake Charles, LA
(OP: A-CRA/ACC)
TI-20847 2009 Jim Vollendroff,
OV
King County, Seattle, WA (OP: A-
CRA/ACC)
17
CSAT
grant no.
Initial
year
AAFT principal investigator or
primary contact
Grantee and (treatment offered)
TI-20848 2009 Norma Finkelstein,
normafinkelstein@healthrecover
y.org
Institute for Health and Recovery,
Cambridge, MA (OP: A-CRA/ACC)
TI-20849 2009 Luis Flores, [email protected] Serving Children and Adolescents in
Need (SCAN, Inc.), Laredo, TX
(OP: A-CRA/ACC)
TI-20852 2009 Barbara Burks,
Johnson County Mental Health
Center, Mission, KS (OP: A-
CRA/ACC)
TI-20865 2009 Nicole Soroko,
Child and Family Services of New
Hampshire, Manchester, NH (OP:
A-CRA/ACC)
TI-20870 2009 Candace Hodgkins,
chodgkins@gatewaycommunity.
com
Gateway Community Services,
Jacksonville, FL (OP: A-
CRA/ACC)
TI-20910 2009 Jenny Corvalan-Wood,
co.us
Colorado State Judicial Branch,
Denver, CO (OP, IOP: A-
CRA/ACC, MET/CBT5, Functional
Family Therapy, CRAFT)
TI-20946 2009 Anita Bertrand,
Northern Ohio Recovery
Association, Cleveland, OH (IOP:
Motivational Interviewing, CBT, A-
CRA/ACC)
TI-23174 2010 Michael McCann,
Matrix Institute on Addictions, Los
Angeles, CA (OP: A-CRA, ACC)
TI-23186 2010 Kyle Syba, [email protected]
Center for Success and
Independence, Houston, TX (OP:
ACRA, CRAFT, ACC)
TI-23188 2010 Janette Hayden,
Mountain Comprehensive Care
Center, Prestonburg, KY (IOP, OP:
A-CRA/ACC)
TI-23192 2010 Rev. Marcus Harvey,
Strength Incorporated, Pittsburgh,
PA (IOP: A-CRA/ACC)
TI-23195 2010 Leslie Corbiere,
m
Burrell, Inc., Springfield, MO
(Residential, IOP, OP: CBT, A-
CRA/ACC, MET-CBT5)
TI-23196 2010 Pierluigi Mancini,
Clinic for Education, Treatment &
Prevention of Addiction, Inc.,
Norcross, GA (OP: A-CRA/ACC)
TI-23197 2010 Nan Hucker,
Odyssey House Louisiana, Inc.,
New Orleans, LA (IOP, OP: A-
CRA/ACC)
18
CSAT
grant no.
Initial
year
AAFT principal investigator or
primary contact
Grantee and (treatment offered)
TI-23200 2010 Kathy Schiessi,
Community Health Resources,
Windsor, CT (OP: A-CRA and
ACC)
TI-23202 2010 Geoff Milller,
King County, Seattle, WA (OP: A-
CRA/ACC)
TI-23204 2010 Kim Darnsteadt,
The H Group, B.B.T., Inc., West
Frankfort, IL (OP: A-CRA/ACC)
TI-23206 2010 Michael Asinas,
Behavioral Health Network, Inc.,
Springfield, MA (OP: A-
CRA/ACC)
TI-23224 2010 Mary Henderson,
Nicasa, NFP, Round Lake, IL (OP:
A-CRA/ACC)
TI-23228 2010 Esperanza (Hope) Smith,
[email protected] (cc Daniel
Garza [email protected])
AAMA, Inc., San Antonio, TX
(IOP: A-CRA/ACC)
TI-23244 2010 Janet Bunch,
Keystone Substance Abuse
Services, Rock Hill, SC (OP: A-
CRA/ACC)
TI-23247 2010 Tom Camp, [email protected] Operation PAR, Inc., Pinellas Park,
FL (IOP: A-CRA/ACC)
TI-23265 2010 Tari McGinty-Sarratori,
NYS Unified Court System, Erie
County, New York, NY (OP: A-
CRA/ACC)
TI-23270 2010 Julie Vander Schel,
g
Phoenix Houses of New England,
Inc., Providence, RI (OP: A-
CRA/ACC)
TI-23276 2010 Erica Sahlin, [email protected] Stanley Street Treatment and
Resources, Inc., Fall River, MA
(OP: A-CRA/ACC)
TI-23278 2010 Sabrina Jones,
Lorain Co. Alcohol & Drug Abuse
Services, Lorain, OH (IOP, OP: A-
CRA/ACC)
TI-23279 2010 Jenny Corvalan-Wood,
co.us
Colorado Judicial Department,
Denver, CO (IOP, OP: A-
CRA/ACC, GAIN, MET/CBT 5)
TI-23296 2010 Pat Beauchamp,
Pima Prevention Partnership,
Tucson, AZ (OP: A-CRA/ACC)
TI-23298 2010 Jefferson Sa, [email protected] Sunrise Community Counseling
Center, Inc., Los Angeles, CA (IOP:
A-CRA/ACC, BSFT)
TI-23304 2010 Claudia Krueger,
Central City Concern, Portland, OR
(IOP: A-CRA/ACC)
19
CSAT
grant no.
Initial
year
AAFT principal investigator or
primary contact
Grantee and (treatment offered)
TI-23310 2010 Andrea Kuebbeler,
g
Alternatives, Inc., Chicago, IL (OP:
A-CRA/ACC)
TI-23311 2010 Adele Herrera,
PROMESA Systems, Inc., Bronx,
NY (Residential, OP: A-CRA/ACC)
TI-23312 2010 DeDe Sieler,
Brad Finegood,
Clark County Department of
Community Services, Vancouver,
WA (OP: A-CRA/ACC)
TI-23316 2010 Robin Rubin,
Luvina Beckley
Vermont Village Community
Development Corporation, Los
Angeles, CA (Case Management: A-
CRA/ACC)
TI-23322 2010 Minerva Bryant,
River Region Human Services, Inc.,
Jacksonville, FL (OP: A-
CRA/ACC)
TI-23323 2010 Elizabeth Salazar,
Phoenix House of Los Angeles, Inc.,
Lake View Terrace, CA (OP: A-
CRA/ACC)
TI-23325 2010 Martha Varela,
Southern California Alcohol and
Drug Programs, Downey, CA (OP:
A-CRA/ACC)
TI-23336 2010 Marla Zucker, [email protected] Justice Resource Institute, Boston,
MA (Residential, OP: A-
CRA/ACC)
TI-23345 2010 Blanca Landeros,
Aliviane, Inc., El Paso, TX (OP: A-
CRA/ACC)
TI-23346 2010 Wendy Philpot,
Native American Community
Health Center, Inc., Phoenix, AZ
(OP: A-CRA/ACC)
TI-23348 2010 Jodi Smith, [email protected] West End Family Counseling
Services, Ontario, CA (Early
Intervention, IOP, OP: ACRA/ACC,
TF/CBT)
—
Offender Reentry Program (Study: ORP; CSAT/SAMHSA contract # 283-2007-
00003) is a 3-year grant awarded through the Substance Abuse and Mental Health
Services Administration, Center for Substance Abuse Treatment. The purpose of this
program is to expand and/or enhance substance abuse treatment and related recovery and
reentry services to sentenced juvenile and adult offenders returning to the community
from incarceration for criminal/juvenile offenses.
Primary reference: Not yet available
20
Primary contact: Ken Robertson, [email protected]; Jon Berg,
[email protected]; Robert Vincent, [email protected]
CSAT
grant no.
Initial
year
ORP principal investigator or
primary contact
Grantee and (treatment offered)
TI-21580 2009 Nancy Hamilton,
Operation PAR, Inc., Pinellas
Park, FL (OP: A-CRA/ACC)
TI-21585 2009 Cecilia Valasquez,
Gaudenzia DRC, Inc.,
Philadelphia, PA (ADULT; OP:
MET/CBT)
TI-21595 2009 Michael Link,
Gaudenzia, Inc., Wilmington, DE
(ADULT; Residential, OP:
MET/CBT)
TI-21597 2009 Christopher Craddock,
Serving Children & Adolescents in
Need, Inc., Laredo, TX (ADULT;
CBT, Modified Therapeutic
Communities, MET)
TI-21624 2009 Jamie Pipher,
Guidance Clinic of the Middle
Keys, Marathon, FL (ADULT;
IOP: CBT/MET; CCISC; SOAR;
WRAP)
TI-21632 2009 DeLanie Valentine,
Easter Seals-Goodwill Northern
Rocky mountains, Boise, ID
(ADULT; OP, IOP: CBT, Early
Intervention)
TI-21639 2009 Gloria Howard,
Aletheia House, Birmingham, AL
(ADULT; IOP, Case
Management: CBT, Motivational
Interviewing)
TI-21682 2009 Eric Averette,
Health Services Center, Inc.,
Hobson City, AL (ADULT; IOP:
Living in Balance)
TI-21688 2009 Veronica Lewis,
Special Service for Groups, Los
Angeles, CA (ADULT; OP:
TREM)
TI-21705 2009 Peg Rider, [email protected] Intervention, Inc., Westminster,
CO (ADULT; Early Intervention,
OP: CBT/MET, DBT)
TI-21714 2009 William James,
Community Counseling Institute,
Tacoma, WA (OP: A-CRA/ACC)
TI-21748 2009 Newton Sanon,
OIC of Broward County, Fort
Lauderdale, FL (ADULT; OP,
Residential: CBT/MET)
21
CSAT
grant no.
Initial
year
ORP principal investigator or
primary contact
Grantee and (treatment offered)
TI-21774 2009 Karen Ruan,
Orange County Bar Foundation,
Santa Ana, CA (OP: A-
CRA/ACC, Brief Family Therapy)
TI-21788 2009 Lynne Appel,
Southern California Alcohol &
Drug Programs, Inc., Downey, CA
(OP: A-CRA/ACC)
TI-21815 2009 James Schiller,
Argus Community, Inc., Bronx,
NY (ADULT; Residential, OP,
IOP: MTC, IMR, CBT, Solution-
focused therapy)
TI-21948 2009 Jennifer Fillmore,
Indiana Family and Social Service
Administration, Indianapolis, IN
(ADULT; IOP, OP, Case
Management: CBT, Motivational
Interviewing)
TI-22389 2010 Sue Kershaw Sczuroski,
Tides Family Services, Inc., West
Warwick, RI (IOP: MET/CBT5)
TI-22424 2010 David Stockton,
Jodie Corbacho
jcorbacho@gaudenziaoutpatient.
org)
Gaudenzia Erie, Inc., Erie, PA
(ADULT; OP: MET, CBT)
TI-22425 2010 Maureen Dee,
medee@clevelandcatholicchariti
es.org
Catholic Charities Services
Corporation, Cleveland, OH (Case
Management, OP, IOP:
MET/CBT5)
TI-22443 2010 Jorge Perez,
New North Citizens' Council, Inc.,
Springfield, MA (IOP: A-
CRA/ACC)
TI-22513 2010 John Doyel, [email protected]
barbara.ca.us (cc Roberto
Rodriguez, [email protected]
barbara.ca.us)
Santa Barbara County, Santa
Barbara, CA (OP: A-CRA/ ACC)
TI-22544 2010 James Kimbro,
g (cc Brian Bowles
rg)
Phoenix Programs, Inc., Columbia,
MO (Early intervention,
Residential, OP, IOP: MET,CBT)
TI-22603 2010 Terri Hipps, [email protected] BCFS Health and Human
Services, San Antonio, TX (IOP:
CBT, ACRA)
22
CSAT
grant no.
Initial
year
ORP principal investigator or
primary contact
Grantee and (treatment offered)
TI-22622 2010 Tom Brewster,
(cc Angela Bonaguidi,
u)
University of Colorado Denver,
Denver, CO (IOP: MET,CBT,
Matrix, Motivational Interviewing,
Relapse Prevention Therapy)
TI-22658 2010 Millie Lujan
(cc Frank Scafidi
Sanctuary, Incorporated of Guam,
Chalan Pago, GU (Early
Intervention: A-CRA/ACC)
TI-22695 2010 Carla Porter,
Institute for Child & Family
Health, Miami, FL (OP:
Functional Family Therapy)
TI-22721 2010 Terry Maloney,
Amity Foundation, Los Angeles,
CA (IOP: Motivational
Interviewing, Therapeutic
Community Model)
—
Adult Treatment Drug Courts (Study: ATDC; CSAT/SAMHSA contract # 283-2007-
00003) is a 3-year grant designed to provide a coordinated, multi-system approach
designed to combine the sanctioning power of treatment drug courts with effective
treatment services to break the cycle of criminal behavior, alcohol and/or drug use, and
incarceration or other penalties.
Primary reference: Not yet available
Primary contact: Ken Robertson, [email protected]; George
Samayoa, [email protected]; Holly Rogers,
CSAT
grant no.
Initial
year
ATDC principal investigator
or primary contact
Grantee and (treatment offered)
TI-19942 2008 Kelly Zarle, [email protected] City of Jacksonville, Fourth
Judicial Circuit Court of Florida,
Jacksonville, FL (ADULTS; OP:
Living in Balance, Matrix, MET,
self developed protocol)
TI-20117 2008 Kristen Taylor,
Pinellas County Board of County
Commissioners (ADULTS;
MET/CBT12)
23
CSAT
grant no.
Initial
year
ATDC principal investigator
or primary contact
Grantee and (treatment offered)
TI-21551 2009 Jim Downum,
13th
Judicial Circuit
Administrative Office of the
Courts, Tampa, FL (ADULTS;
OP: Matrix)
TI-21874 2009 Tamara Freeman,
Steve Thomas,
Hocking County Municipal Court,
Logan, OH (ADULTS; IOP, OP:
TASC Case Management,
Motivational Interviewing, CBT)
TI-21883 2009 Arlan Melendez,
Reno-Sparks Indian Colony, Reno,
NV (ADULTS; Early
Intervention, OP, IOP: Matrix,
CBT/MET)
TI-21890 2009 Jim Rivers, [email protected] Miami-Dade County, Miami, FL
(ADULTS; Case Management,
Early Intervention, Residential,
OP, IOP)
TI-21892 2009 Angela Parkerson,
Angela.Parkerson@shelbycounty
tn.gov
Shelby County Drug Court,
Memphis, TN (ADULTS; Early
Intervention, OP, IOP, Residential:
Matrix; EAIT)
TI-23056 2010 Susan Bower,
County of San Diego Health and
Human Services Agency, San
Diego, CA (ADULTS; Case
Management, OP, Residential:
Motivational Interviewing, CBT)
TI-23064 2010 Shawn W. Billings,
Stone County Circuit Court,
Galena, MO (ADULTS; IOP, OP:
CBT, MET)
TI-23086 2010 Daniel Peterca,
Cuyahoga County Department of
Justice Affairs, Cleveland, OH
(ADULTS; Residential, OP, IOP:
MET/CBT 5 + CBT 7 supplement)
TI-23096 2010 Rose Mary Heise,
Mid-South Substance Abuse
Commission, East Lansing, MI
(ADULTS; Residential, OP, IOP:
Motivational Interviewing, Anger
Management)
TI-23101 2010 Michelle Ardabily,
County of Pasco, New Port
Richey, FL (ADULTS; IOP:
Motivational Interviewing, MET,
CBT)
—
24
Juvenile Treatment Drug Courts (Study: JTDC; CSAT/SAMHSA contract # 283-
2007-00003) is a 3-year grant awarded through the Substance Abuse and Mental Health
Services Administration, Center for Substance Abuse Treatment. The purpose of this
program is to expand and/or enhance substance abuse treatment services in “problem
solving” courts which use the juvenile drug court model in order to provide alcohol and
drug treatment, recovery support services supporting substance abuse treatment,
screening, assessment, case management, and program coordination to juvenile
defendants/offenders.
Primary reference: Not yet available
Primary contact: Robert Vincent, [email protected]
CSAT
grant no.
Initial
year
JTDC principal investigator or
primary contact
Grantee and (treatment offered)
TI-22838 2010 Randa Bruce-Gonzales,
Bexar County Juvenile Probation,
San Antonio, TX (Early
Intervention: ACRA/ACC)
TI-22856 2010 Margaret Soukup,
ov
King County, Seattle, WA (IOP:
A-CRA/ACC, TF-CBT)
TI-22874 2010 Paula Glodowski-Valla,
Marin County Division of
Alcohol, Drug and Tobacco
Programs, San Rafael, CA (OP:
MET/CBT, MDFT)
TI-22907 2010 Michael Magnani,
NYS Unified Court System/Erie
County, Buffalo, NY (OP, IOP:
MET/CBT)
TI-23025 2010 Michelle Ereaux,
Chippewa Cree Tribal Court, Box
Elder, MT (Early intervention,
Residential, OP, IOP: MOral
Reconation Therapy)
TI-23037 2010 Ian Golden,
Brevard County Board of County
Commissioners, Viera, FL (OP: A-
CRA/ACC)
—
The following studies each receive collaborative funding from several funding sources,
including the Center for Substance Abuse Treatment, the Office of Juvenile Justice and
Delinquency Prevention, and the Robert Woods Johnson Foundation. All are
CSAT/SAMHSA contract #270-2007-00004C.
Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention/Brief Intervention
Residential Treatment (Study: OJJDP-BIRT), a collaboration between OJJDP and
25
CSAT, these grants (up to 18 months) are designed to enhance the capacity of juvenile
courts and juvenile drug courts, improve and increase the availability of Brief
Interventions and Referrals to Treatment (BIRT), and establish partnerships between
juvenile courts and juvenile drug courts to ensure that substance abusing juvenile
offenders receive effective and appropriate treatment.
Primary reference: Not yet available
Primary contact: Robert Vincent, [email protected]
Grant
no.
Initial
year
OJJDP-BIRT principal
investigator or primary contact
Grantee and (treatment offered)
20084 2008 Anne Whiting
Ashland County Health and
Human Services, WI (MET/CBT)
20085 2008 Melissa Conger
Florida Attorneys Office Fourth
Judicial Circuit (MET/CBT)
20086 2008 James Rivers
Miami-Dade County, FL
(MET/CBT)
—
Reclaiming Futures (RF): The following studies use the Reclaiming Futures Model.
The Reclaiming Futures model brings juvenile courts, probation, adolescent substance
abuse treatment, and the community together to reclaim youth. Together, they work to
improve drug and alcohol treatment and connect teens to positive activities and caring
adults.
Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention/RWJF (Study: RF-OJJDP) a
collaboration between the U.S. Justice Department’s office of Juvenile Justice and
Delinquency Prevention (OJJDP) and Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. These 4-year
grants are designed to enhance the capacity of states, state courts, local courts, units of
local government, and Indian tribal governments to serve substance-abusing juvenile
offenders by developing and establishing juvenile drug courts adopting the Reclaiming
Futures model, with Technical Assistance provided through CSAT and RWJF.
Primary reference: Not yet available
Primary contact: Robert Vincent, [email protected]
Grant
no.
Initial
year
RF-OJJDP principal
investigator or primary contact
Grantee and (treatment offered)
655371 2007 Christa Meyers -
Stephen Thomas
Hocking County, Logan, Ohio
(MET/CBT)
26
Grant
no.
Initial
year
RF-OJJDP principal
investigator or primary contact
Grantee and (treatment offered)
655372 2007 Marilyn Gibson
Burrel Behavioral Health, Greene
County, Missouri (CBT and A-
CRA)
655373 2007 Dennis Reilly
New York State Unified Court
System, Nassau County, NY
(APT)
6553743 2007 Pat Beauchamp
Harry Kressler
Pima Prevention Partnership,
Tucson, AZ (MET/CBT, A-CRA,
PGT, OGT, and OCM)
Reclaiming Futures (RF): Juvenile Drug Court (Study: RF-JDC) awarded through the
Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention (OJJDP), the Center for Substance
Abuse Treatment (CSAT) in partnership with the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation
(RWJF), to enhance the capacity of existing juvenile drug courts to serve substance-
abusing juvenile offenders through the integration and implementation of the Juvenile
Drug Court: Strategies in Practice, and the Reclaiming Futures program models.
Primary reference: Not yet available
Primary contact: Robert Vincent, [email protected]
Grant
no.
Initial
year
RF-JDC principal investigator
or primary contact
Grantee and (treatment offered)
TI-20921 2009 Lilas Rajaee-Moore, lilas.rajaee-
Colorado State Judicial Branch,
Denver, CO (OP/IOP: MET/CBT,
A-CRA/ACC)
TI-20925 2009 Darren Dry, Darren-
Cherokee Nation, Tahlequah, OK
(OP: A-CRA/ACC)
TI-20941 2009 Jill Barrios,
v
Ventura County Superior Court,
Oxnard, CA (IOP: MET/CBT,
Seven Challenges)
TI-20938 2010 Khrystal Wagner,
(cc Wade Melton,
Hardin County Juvenile Court,
Kenton, OH (IOP with step-down:
CBT/MET-5, ACRA/ACC)
TI-20920 2010 Kathy Smith,
Travis County, Austin, TX
(Residential, IOP: CYT,
MET/CBT, Theraputic
Community)
3 The OJJDP grant provided to the PIMA Prevention Partnership in Tucson, AZ is not part of the
Reclaiming Futures project.
27
TI-20924 2010 Dawn Williams,
Janelle Sgrignoli
Snohomish County, Everett, WA
(OP, IOP, Residential, Medical
Detox: MET/CBT-5)
—
The following studies are distinct grant programs where some grantees opted to use the
GAIN. Since the number of new grants using the GAIN in any given year tends to be
only a small portion of those funded in that year, all TCE and TCE/HIV grants are listed
in the same table below. (All are CSAT/SAMHSA contracts #270-2003-00006, #270-
2007-00004C, and #277-00-6500.)
Targeted Capacity Expansion (Study: TCE) was designed to address gaps in treatment
capacity by supporting rapid and strategic responses to demands for alcohol and drug
treatment services and innovative solutions to unmet needs in communities with serious,
emerging substance abuse problems. In some years TCE grants were targeted to
adolescents, while in other years the focus was on a different population (though
individual grants serving adolescents may have been funded at that time).
Targeted Capacity Expansion/HIV (Study: TCE) was designed to enhance and expand
substance abuse treatment and outreach and pretreatment services in conjunction with
HIV/AIDS services in African American, Latino/Hispanic, and other racial or ethnic
communities highly affected by the twin epidemics of substance abuse and HIV/AIDS.
Primary references: Not yet available
Primary contact: Robert Vincent, [email protected]; Melissa Rael,
CSAT
grant no.
Initial
year
TCE03 principal investigator or
primary contact
Grantee and (treatment offered)
TI-13190 2003 Frank Tims, [email protected] Operation PAR, Inc., Clearwater,
FL (FSN and MET/CBT12)
TI-13601 2003 Mavis Lloyd,
Russell Kaye,
City of Dallas, Dallas, TX
(Residential, Outpatient, and
Aftercare)
CSAT
grant no.
Initial
year
TCE04 principal investigator or
primary contact
Grantee and (treatment offered)
TI-16386 2004 Pat Beauchamp,
(cc Trisha Campie,
Pima Prevention Partnership/Pima
County Department of Institutional
Health (Success by Design),
Tucson, AZ (IOP: MET/CBT)
TI-16400 2004 Sharon Wood,
Central Virginia Community
Services, Lynchburg, VA
28
(Outpatient FSN, Multisystemic
treatment)
TI-16414 2004 Rachel Spigal,
et
Mid-Columbia Center for Living,
The Dalles, OR (Outpatient
MET/CBT, FSN)
TI-16418 2004 Francine Childs,
ov
(cc Marc Fishman,
Baltimore City Health Department
(Potomac Healthcare Foundation),
Baltimore, MD (MET/CBT5,
Student Assistance) (GAIN-Q
only)
CSAT
grant no.
Initial
year
TCE05 principal investigator or
primary contact
Grantee and (treatment offered)
TI-17334 2005 Luis Flores, [email protected] Serving Children & Adolescents in
Need (SCAN) Inc., Laredo, TX
(ADULTS; Outpatient)
CSAT
grant no.
Initial
year
TCE07 principal investigator or
primary contact
Grantee and (treatment offered)
TI-19313 2007 Elizabeth Hail
Centerstone Community Mental
Health Centers, Inc. Nashville, TN
(A-CRA and ACC)
TI-19323 2007 Jennifer Smith
Central Virginia Community
Services, Lynchburg, VA (A-CRA
and ACC)
29
CSAT
grant no.
Initial
year
TCE-HIV principal investigator
or
primary contact
Grantee and (treatment offered)
TI-14481 2003 Luis Flores, [email protected] Serving Children and Adolescents
in Need (SCAN) Inc., Laredo, TX
(NA) (GAIN-Q only)
TI-18406 2006 Bridget Ruiz,
Arizona Board of Regents,
University of Arizona
(Project DAP— An HIV &
Substance Abuse Relapse
Prevention Project), Tucson, AZ
(NA)
TI-18587 2007 Luis Flores, [email protected] Serving Children and Adolescents
in Need (SCAN) Inc., Laredo, TX
(ADULTS-no 3-month data;
MATRIX)
TI-18671 2007 Marylou Erbland
Center for Success and
Independence, Houston, TX (A-
CRA)
TI-18723 2007 Richard Davidson
Family Service Association of San
Antonio, San Antonio, TX
(MDFT, CRCS)
TI-18735 2007 Gretchen Vaughn,
Greater Bridgeport Adolescent,
Bridgeport, CT (MET/CBT5)
TI-18849 2007 Harry Kressler,
Pima Prevention Partnership,
Tucson, AZ (MET/CBT5 followed
by Project Respect)
TI-19911 2008 Aimee Graves,
[email protected] (cc Claudia
Powell,
CODAC Behavioral Health
Services, Inc., Tucson, AZ
(OP/IOP: MET/CBT)
CSAT
grant no.
Initial
year
Earmarks principal
investigator or primary contact
Grantee and (treatment offered)
TI-17119 2005 Al Fleming, [email protected] Fighting Back, Vallejo, CA (NA)
30
Chestnut Health Systems studies
720 CHS was a pilot study where adults, upon residential discharge from Chestnut
Health Systems in Bloomington, IL, were randomly assigned to usual continuing care or
to usual continuing care plus telephone support. Participants were followed up at 3 and 6
months after residential discharge.
Principle Investigator: Mark Godley ([email protected])
—
Assertive Continuing Care 1 (ACC 1) (NIAAA grant RO1 AA10368) was a study
where adolescents, upon discharge from Chestnut Health Systems in Bloomington, IL,
were randomly assigned to usual continuing care or usual continuing care plus Assertive
Continuing Care (ACC) after residential discharge. The ACC was based on A-CRA.
Participants were followed up at 3, 6, and 9 months after residential discharge.
Principle Investigator: Mark Godley ([email protected])
Primary references: Godley, M. D., Godley, S. H., Dennis, M. L., Funk, R., & Passetti,
L. (2002). Preliminary outcomes from the assertive continuing care experiment for
adolescents discharged from residential treatment. Journal of Substance Abuse
Treatment, 23(1), 21-32
Godley, M. D., Godley, S. H., Dennis, M. L., Funk, R. R., & Passetti, L. L. (2007). The
effect of Assertive Continuing Care on continuing care linkage, adherence, and
abstinence following residential treatment for adolescents with substance use disorders.
Addiction, 102(1), 81-93
—
Assertive Continuing Care 2 (ACC 2) (NIAAA grant RO1 AA10368) included the two
conditions described in ACC1 with the addition of two other conditions, CTM only and
CTM plus ACC, as well as an additional 12-month follow-up wave.
Principle Investigator: Mark Godley ([email protected])
—
Adolescent Outpatient and Continuing Care Study (AOCCS) (NIDA grant RO1 DA
018183) was a 2 x 2 randomized field experiment that examined the impact of two first-
phase office-based outpatient interventions—a brief Motivational Enhancement
Therapy/Cognitive Behavior Therapy (MET/CBT) vs. a best-practice treatment as usual
in an outpatient program—as well as the impact of a second-phase home-based outpatient
Assertive Continuing Care (ACC) vs. usual continuing care. Participants were
31
interviewed at intake and followed up at 3, 6, 9, and 12 months after intake. Interviews
were supplemented with urine testing, electronic record abstraction, and interviews with
participants’ parents to allow for a multi-method perspective, validation, and cost
estimations.
Principle Investigator: Susan Godley ([email protected])
—
Early Re-Intervention (ERI) (NIDA grant R37 DA11323) involved adults from
Chicago, IL who were randomly assigned to a control group or to receive Recovery
Management Checkups at follow-up. ERI 1 followed up participants every quarter up to
24 months post-intake. ERI 2 followed up participants every quarter up to 48 months
post-intake.
Principle Investigator: Michael Dennis ([email protected])
Primary references: Dennis, M. L., Scott, C. K, & Funk, R. (2003). An experimental
evaluation of recovery management checkups (RMC) for people with chronic substance
use disorders. Evaluation and Program Planning, 26(3), 339-352
Scott, C. K, Dennis, M. L., & Foss, M. A. (2005). Utilizing recovery management
checkups to shorten the cycle of relapse, treatment re-entry, and recovery. Drug and
Alcohol Dependence, 78(3), 325-338
Dennis, M. & Scott, C. (2007). Managing Addiction as a Chronic Condition. Addiction
Science & Clinical Practice, 4(1), 45-55
—
Mothers at the Crossroads (MAC) (TI00567, PI 00567) involved pregnant and post-
partum women presenting for residential treatment in Peoria, IL. Participants were
followed up at 6 months after residential discharge.
Primary Contacts: Susan Godley ([email protected]) and Deborah Oberg
Primary reference: Godley, S. H., Funk, R. R., Dennis, M. L., Oberg, D., & Passetti, L.
L. (2004). Predicting response to substance abuse treatment among pregnant and
postpartum women. Evaluation and Program Planning, 27(3), 223-231.
—
Peoria Partners for Recovery (PPR) (SAMHSA Center for Mental Health Services
grant SM53877-01) was designed to improve the treatment access and effectiveness for
people with a serious mental illness alone or with a coexisting substance use disorder
32
who were likely to come into contact with the criminal justice system. The primary goal
of the project was to increase the system’s capacity for diverting people with severe
mental illness and dual disorders (severe mental illness and substance use disorders) from
the criminal justice system at booking, at intake to jail, at trial, and after incarceration.
Principle Investigator: Mark Godley ([email protected])
—
Reclaiming Futures (Robert Wood Johnson Foundation grant #047266) was a five-year
initiative to promote new opportunities and standards of care in juvenile justice by
bringing communities together to improve drug and alcohol treatment, expand and
coordinate services, and find jobs and volunteer work for young people in trouble with
the law.
National Program Director: Laura Nissen ([email protected])
—
Substance Abusers Depression Study (SADS) / Improving Services for Substance
Abusers with Comorbid Depression (CSAT grant TI12541) was designed to identify
the rates of co-occurring depression among adults presenting to substance abuse
treatment in Chestnut’s south region and then experimentally evaluate the impact of
providing feedback to the physician on diagnosis/treatment and a psychiatric case
manager to facilitate compliance.
Principle Investigator: Linda Cottler ([email protected])
Primary Reference: Womack, S., Compton, W. M., Dennis, M. L., McCormick, S.,
Fraser, J., Horton, J., Spitznagel, E. L., & Cottler, L. B. (2004). Improving treatment
services for substance abusers with comorbid depression. American Journal on
Addictions, 13(3), 295-304
33
Bibliography
Dennis, M. L., White, M.., Titus, J. C., & Unsicker, J. (2006). Global Appraisal of
Individual Needs (GAIN): Administration guide for the GAIN and related
measures (version 5). Bloomington, IL: Chestnut Health Systems.
Ives, M., Funk, R., & Dennis, M. L. (2007). Accessing pooled GAIN data (LI Analysis
Training Series). Bloomington, IL: Chestnut Health Systems.