REFERENCES
- American Correctional Association. (1991). Standards for juvenile training schools (3rd ed.). Laurel, MD: Author.
- American Psychiatric Association. (1994). Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders (4th ed.). Washington, DC: Author.
- Breda, C. (1995). Delinquency and mental illness: The intersection of problems and systems. Proceedings of the Eighth Annual Florida Mental Health Conference. Tampa, FL: lTniversity of Florida, 207–212
- Catalino, R., & Hawkins, D. (1995). Riskfocused prevention. Using the social development strategy. Seattle, WA: Developmental Research and Programs.
- Center for Mental Health Services. (1996). Mental health, United States, 1996, R. Mandescheid & M. Sonnenschein. (Eds.). DHHS Pub. No. SMA-96-3000. Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office.
- Cocozza, J. (1991). Responding to the mental health needs of youth in the juvenile justice systenl. Seattle, WA: National Coalition for the Mentally III in the Juvenile Justice System.
- Dvoskin, 1. (1994). The structure of correctional mental health services. In R. Rosner (Ed.), Principles and practice off orensic psychiatry. New York: Chapman & Hall.
- Fewell, C. (1988). Integrating healthcare and security functions. Corrections Today, (February), 2–3.
- Flatherty, L., & Harowitz, H. (1997). Developmental and clinical studies. Portland, OR: Analytic Press.
- Forst, J., Fagan, J., & Scott, B. (1989). Youth in prison and training schools: Perceptions and consequences of the treatment-custody dichotomy. Juvenile and Family Court Journal, 40, 1–4.
- Fox, J. (1996). Trends in juvenile violence: A report to the US Attorney General on current and future rates of juvenile offending. Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Statistics.
- Gulotta, K. (1987). Factors affecting nursing practice in a correctional health care setting. Journal of Prison and Health Care, 6(1),3.
- Henggeler, S., Borduin, C., & Schoewald, S. (1998). Multisystemic treatment of antisocial behavior in children and adolescents: Treatment manual for practitioners. New York: Guilford.
- Hornberg, R. (1985). Harsh crime nleasures could be trouble for offenders with mental illness. NAMI Advocate, 16(5), 3. 180 C. Holt
- Harner, S. (1996). Afghan prison holds boys as young as eight. The Keepers Voice. (17), 3,1,11.
- National Coalition of State Juvenile Justice Advisory Groups. (1993). Myths and realities: Meeting the challenge of serious, violent, and chronicjuvenile offenders (Annual Report 1992). Washington, DC: Author.
- National Commission on Correctional Healthcare. (1998). Health services to adolescents in adult correctional facilities: Position statement. Journal of Correctional Health Care, 5(Spring), 113–117.
- National Commission on Correctional Healthcare. (1999). Standards for health care services in juvenile detention and confined facilities. Chicago, IL: Author.
- National Institute of Corrections. (1998). Training and technical assistance protocols: A primerfor the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention. Washington, DC: Acaden1Y Division.
- Peterjl-Taykor, C. (1999). Care of individuals in correctional facilities. In C. Glod (Ed.), Contemporary psychiatric-mental health nursing: The brain-behavior connection (pp. 620–633). Philadelphia: FA Davis.
- Peterson-Badali, M. (1988). Children’s understanding of juvenile justice systems: A cognitive developn1ent model. Canadian Journal of Criminology, 80, 381-383.
- Shelton, D. (1999). Estimates of emotional disorder in detained and committed youth. (Final Report). Baltimore, MD: Maryland Department of Juvenile Justice.
- Shelton, D. (2000, March). Costs and treatment patterns for youthful offenders with mental disorders. Paper presented at the Sixth Annual Research Day, Howard University, Washington, DC.
- Smale, S. (1983). Nursing behind bars: A decade of change. The Canadian Nurse, 78(7), 31–33.
- Snyder, H., & Sickmund, M. (1995). Juvenile offenders and victims: A national report. Washington, DC: Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention.
- Tonry, M. (1999). Why are US incarceration rates so high? Crime and Delinquency, 45(4),419–437.
- U.S. Department of Justice. (1996). Programs in correctional settings: Innovative state and local programs. Washington, DC: Bureau of Justice Assistance, Office of Justice Programs.
- U.S. Department of Justice. (1999). State prison expenditures–1996 (NCJ 172211). Washington, DC: Bureau of Justice Statistics.