Review Policy:
It is PROS policy that all PROS practitioners who complete data
collection for a study receive a copy of the manuscript(s) for
review shortly before submission for publication. Written feedback
to the authors is optional. All Child Behavior Study participants
will be credited by practice in core papers submitted for publication.
Participation at this level does not require any data analytic efforts,
manuscript preparation or editing. Practitioners who complete all data
collection and who participate in intermediate editing of manuscripts during
their preparatory phase will also receive formal manuscript acknowledgment,
listing and recognition at PROS meetings.
Authorship Opportunities:
Practitioners who wish to participate as paper authors
on peer-reviewed manuscripts arising from the project will
agree to the Child Behavior Study Publication Policy which
recognizes the network ownership of all data and employs the
JAMA Criteria for Authorship. In short, practitioners wishing
to participate in manuscript analyses and writing will be required
to participate in monthly conference calls for periods of four to
six months, review relevant literature and contribute to the writing
of the papers derived from the data.
Individuals may wish to play a leadership role on one of the Topic
Teams or alternatively to provide practitioner feedback to one of the
Teams at this level. Subsequent results may be presented by practitioners
at national or regional meetings or published in peer-reviewed journals.
For more information on the PROS Review Policy or authorship opportunities,
please contact the PROS central office at pros@aap.org
or call 800/433-9016, extension 7623.
Abstracts
Baker AE, Bocian AB, Winstanley EL, Wasserman RC, Kelleher KJ. The relationship between school performance and mental health: The primary care perspective. Presented at the 1997 Biennial Meeting of the Society for Research in Child Development.
Baker AE, Winstanley EL, Bocian AB, Jansen-McWilliams L, Wasserman RC, Kelleher
KJ, Jellinek MS. Whos having less fun? Internalizing symptoms in primary
care. Presented as a joint platform presentation at the 1998 Pediatric Academic
Societies meeting.
Bocian A, Baker AE, Wasserman RC. Insurance-related barriers to
child mental health referral: a national survey of practicing pediatricians.
Ambulatory Child Health 1997; 3:P137.
Campo JV, Jansen-McWilliams L, Comer DM, Kelleher KJ. Somatization in pediatric
primary care. Presented at the 1998 AACAP annual meeting.
Gardner WG, et al. Child gender differences in primary care clinicians' mental
health care of children and adolescents. Presented at the 2000 and 2001 Enhancing
Outcomes in Women's Health: Translating Psychosocial and Behavioral Research
into Primary Care, Community Interventions, and Health Policy Conference.
Kelleher KJ, Bocian AB, Gardner WP, Nutting PA, Stulp C, Wasserman RC.
Insurance status and clinician recognition of child psychosocial problems.
Ped Res 1996; 39:18A.
Kelleher KJ, Childs GE, Gardner WP, Nutting PA, Stulp C, Wasserman RC. Insurance status and clinician recognition of child psychosocial problems. Presented at the 10th NIMH International Conference on Mental Health Problems in the General Health Care Sector, July 1996.
Kelleher K, McInerny TK, Gardner WP, Wasserman RC, Stulp C.
Changing prevalence of clinician-identified psychosocial problems:
1979-1996. Ambulatory Child Health 1997; 3:P156.
Kelleher KJ, Gardner WP, Childs GE, Wasserman RC, Nutting PA, Rost KM. In-office
primary care management of child psychosocial problems. Presented as a joint
platform presentation at the 1998 Pediatric Academic Societies meeting.
Kelleher KJ, Gardner WP, Childs GE. Management and course of child behavior problems in primary care. Presented at the 12th NIMH International Conference on Mental Health Problems in the General Health Care Sector, July 1998.
McInerny TK, Wasserman RC, Szilagyi PG. Psychosocial and behavioral problems
among uninsured children. Ambulatory Pediatric Association Abstracts Publication
1999; abstract no. 28: P26.
Wasserman RC, Baker AE, Bocian AB, Kelleher KJ, Childs GE, Nutting PA. Do primary care clinicians recognize mental health comorbidity in children with attentional/hyperactivity problems? Presented at the 1996 NIMH International Conference on Mental Health Problems in the General Health Care Sector.
Wasserman RC, Bocian A, Baker A, Childs G, Moore C, Stulp C,
Kelleher K. Attentional and hyperactivity problems seen in primary
care. Ambulatory Child Health 1997; 3:P184.
Manuscripts
Kelleher KJ, Childs GE, Wasserman RC, McInerny TK, Nutting PA,
Gardner WP. Insurance status and recognition of psychosocial problems:
a report from PROS and ASPN. Archives of Pediatrics and Adolescent
Medicine; 1997; 151:1109-1115.
Murphy JM, Kelleher KJ, Pagano ME, Stulp C, Nutting PA, Jellinek MS, Gardner
WP, Childs GE. The family APGAR and psychosocial problems in children: a report
from ASPN and PROS. Journal of Family Practice; 1998; 46(1):54-64.
Campo JV, Jansen-McWilliams L, Comer DM, Kelleher KJ. Somatization in pediatric
primary care: Association with psychopathology, functional impairment, and
use of services. Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent
Psychiatry 1999; 38(9): 1093-1101.
Gardner W, Murphy JM, Childs G, Kelleher K, Pagano M, Jellinek M, McInerny
TK, Wasserman RC, Nutting P, Chiapetta L. The PSC-17: A brief pediatric symptom
checklist with psychosocial problems subscales: A report from PROS and ASPN.
Ambulatory Child Health 1999; 5(3): 225-236.
Kelleher KJ, Moore CD, Childs GE, Angelilli ML, Comer DM. Patient race and
ethnicity in primary care management of child behavior problems: A report
from PROS and ASPN. Medical Care 1999; 37(11): 1092-1104.
Jellinek MS, Murphy JM, Little M, Pagano ME, Comer DM, Kelleher KJ. Use of
the Pediatric Symptom Checklist (PSC) to screen for psychosocial problems
in pediatric primary care: a national feasibility study. Archives of Pediatrics
and Adolescent Medicine 1999; 153(3): 254-260.
McLennan JD, Jansen-McWilliams L, Comer DM, Gardner WP, Kelleher KJ. The
physician belief scale and psychosocial problems in children: A report from
PROS and ASPN. Journal of Developmental and Behavioral Pediatrics 1999;
20: 24-30.
Wasserman
RC, Kelleher KJ, Bocian AB, Baker AE, Childs GE, Indacochea F, Stulp C. Identification
of attentional and hyperactitivity problems in primary care: A report from
PROS and ASPN. Pediatrics electronic pages 1999; 103(3): e38.
Kelleher
KJ, McInerny TK, Gardner WP, Childs GE, Wasserman RC. Increasing identification
of psychosocial problems: 1979-1996. Pediatrics 2000; 105(6): 1313-1321.
Gardner
W, Kelleher KJ, Wasserman R, Childs G, Nutting P, Lilienfeld H, Pajer K. Primary
care treatment of pediatric psychosocial problems: A report from PROS and
ASPN. Pediatrics electronic pages 2000; 106: e44.
McInerny TK, Szilagyi PG, Childs GE, Wasserman RC, Kelleher KJ. Uninsured
children with psychosocial problems: Primary care management. Journal
of the Ambulatory Pediatric Association (as a supplement to Pediatrics)
2000; 106:930-936.
Scholle SH, Gardner W, Harman J, Madlon-Kay DJ, Pascoe J, Kelleher K. Physician
gender and psychosocial care for children: Attitudes, practice characteristics,
identification and treatment. Medical Care 2001; 39: 26-38.
Gardner WP, Nutting PA, Kelleher KJ, Werner JJ, Farley T, Stewart L, Hartsell
M, Orzano AJ. Does the family APGAR effectively measure family functioning?
Journal of Family Practice 2001; 108:347-353.
Gardner W, Pajer KA, Kelleher KJ, Scholle SH, Wasserman RC. Child sex differences
in primary care clinicians' mental health treatment of children and adolescents.
Archives of Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine 2002; 156: 454-459.
Gardner W, Kelleher KJ, Pajer KA, Campo, JV. Primary Care Clinicians' Use
of Standardized Tools to Assess Child Psychosocial Problems. Ambulatory
Pediatrics 2003; 3(4):191195.