J
Jeffrey Draine
Researcher at Temple University
Publications - 91
Citations - 4672
Jeffrey Draine is an academic researcher from Temple University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Mental health & Mental illness. The author has an hindex of 37, co-authored 91 publications receiving 4419 citations. Previous affiliations of Jeffrey Draine include Mental Health Services & University of Pennsylvania.
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Role of social disadvantage in crime, joblessness, and homelessness among persons with serious mental illness.
TL;DR: The authors critically analyze the approach used in much of the psychiatric services literature to infer links between mental illness and social problems and finds the impact of mental illness on crime, unemployment, and homelessness appears to be much smaller than that implied.
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Improving police response to persons with mental illness: a multi-level conceptualization of CIT.
TL;DR: A conceptual model of police response to persons with mental illness is presented that accounts for officer, organizational, mental health system and community level factors likely to influence implementation and effectiveness of CIT and other approaches.
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Subjective burden among family members of mentally ill adults: relation to stress, coping, and adaptation
Phyllis Solomon,Jeffrey Draine +1 more
TL;DR: Interventions directed toward improving self-efficacy and coping strategies may be important mediators of subjective burden.
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The working alliance and consumer case management.
TL;DR: While there was no difference in the strength of the alliance between the consumer and nonconsumer teams of case managers, there were positive relationships between alliance and some outcomes, including quality of life, symptomatology, attitudes toward medication compliance, and satisfaction with mental health treatment.
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Outcomes of police contacts with persons with mental illness: the impact of CIT.
Amy C. Watson,Victor Ottati,Melissa Morabito,Jeffrey Draine,Amy N. Kerr,Amy N. Kerr,Beth Angell +6 more
TL;DR: Moderator analysis indicates that CIT had its biggest effect on increasing direction to services and decreasing "contact only" among officers who have a positive view of mental health services and who know a person with mental illness in their personal life.