This volume of "Research in Community and Mental Health" is divided into two main sections: social networks within and between organizations and social networks and interpersonal relationships.
| ISBN | 155938140X | | Volumes | 1 | | ISBN13 | 9781559381406 (What's this?) | | Weight (grammes) | 577 | | Publisher | Emerald Group Publishing Limited | | Published in | Bingley | | Imprint | JAI Press Inc. | | Series editor | Morrissey, Joseph (Shep Center for Health Services Research, North | | Format | Hardback | | Series ISSN | 0192-081 | | Publication date | 27 Jul 1998 | | Series title | Research in Community & Mental Health S. | | Library of Congress | RA | | Height (mm) | 229 | | DEWEY | 362.1 | | Width (mm) | 152 | | DEWEY edition | DC21 | | Spine width (mm) | 26 | | Pages | 284 | | Academic level | Undergraduate, Postgraduate, Professional / Scholarly | | Part volume | Social Networks and Mental Illness | |
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In memoriam - keeping things complicated - reflections on the contributions of James R. Greenley, Sue E. Estroff. Part 1 Social networks within and between organizations: leadership structures in case management teams - an application of social network analysis, Cynthia M. Webster et al; alternative strategies for creating systems of care for children - a network analysis of parent-designed and provider-designed service arrangements, Jason W. Beckstead et al; a network approach to mental health treatment of children - a sectoral explanation for system fragmentation, Katherine L. Woodard and Patrick Doreian; measuring change in mental health services co-ordination under managed mental health care for children and adolescents, Craig Anne Helfinger and Denine Northrup; network evolution to a system of managed care for adults with serious mental illness - a case study of the Tucson experiment, Keith G Provan et al; the impact of managed care on service systems for persons who are homeless and mentally ill, Matthew C. Johnsen et al; method for analyzing and comparing social structure in networks of mental health organizations, Michael O. Calloway et al. Part 2 Social networks and interpersonal relationships: a family network-based model of access to child mental health services, E. Jane Costello et al; gender, social networks and quality of life among young adults with schizophrenia, Beth Angell and Mary Ann Test; social networks, influence processes, HIV-risk, behaviour among intravenous drug users, Mark Tausig; the social network context of caregiving in mental illness, Eric R. Wright; predicting consumer consent to interview primary kinship network members, Richard Tessler et al.