1992
DOI: 10.1016/1054-139x(92)90070-r
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Health and health needs of homeless and runaway youth A position paper of the Society for Adolescent Medicine

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Cited by 160 publications
(70 citation statements)
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“…Approximately two million U.S. adolescents leave home without parental permission each year (Farrow, Deisher, Brown, Kulig, & Kipke, 1992;Greenblatt & Robertson, 1993). Homeless young people have been defined as those between 12 and 24 years of age who have spent at least one night on the streets, in a public place (e.g., parks, under highway overpasses, abandoned buildings), or in a shelter (Greene & Ringwalt, 1997;Thompson, Safyer, & Pollio, 2001).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Approximately two million U.S. adolescents leave home without parental permission each year (Farrow, Deisher, Brown, Kulig, & Kipke, 1992;Greenblatt & Robertson, 1993). Homeless young people have been defined as those between 12 and 24 years of age who have spent at least one night on the streets, in a public place (e.g., parks, under highway overpasses, abandoned buildings), or in a shelter (Greene & Ringwalt, 1997;Thompson, Safyer, & Pollio, 2001).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For example, 64% of a sample of homeless youth in Los Angeles met the DSM-III criteria for clinical depression compared to a 7% prevalence rate of clinical depression seen in community and school samples of youth (Unger et al, 1998). Homeless youth also report much higher rates of health problems, both acute and chronic, than similarly aged urban youths (Adlaf, Zdanowicz, & Smart, 1996;Ensign & Santelli, 1998;Farrow, Deisher, Brown, Kulig, & Kipke, 1992).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Cependant, cela ne sera possible que s'il existe une véritable articulation entre les différentes ressources, un solide partenariat entre les lieux d'intervention. Car au-delà de la volonté exprimée d'une nécessaire coordination entre les ressources intervenant auprès des personnes itinérantes, de nombreuses études (Subber et a/., 1988;Athey, 1991 ;Farrow et a/., 1992) démontrent que les services sont non seulement fragmentés, mais se font aussi concurrence en plus de répondre parfois à des mandats contradictoires. Bien que l'on remarque à travers le réseau québécois une certaine volonté de s'interconnecter, la multiplicité des réseaux (étatique, communautaire, caritatif, privé ; services d'hébergement, centres de dépannage, hôpitaux, centres de jour, etc.…”
Section: L'intervention Dans Les Centres De Jour: Une Contribution à unclassified