Beyond common sense
Work detail
The authors make their case that well-being is not on the list of current outcomes established to manage the child welfare system, but that evidence-based practice proves that well-being is fundamental to clinical success and should guide reform efforts. The first chapter indicates that evidence-based practice relies on both understanding incidence in public health tradition and speaking to the question of what works clinically, and the remaining chapters use these two tactics to demonstrate evidence.
Overview
Shared work-level identity and catalog context.
Contributors
People credited with this work in the active catalog.
- Open Author
Fred Wulczyn
- Open Author
Ying-Ying Yuan
- Open Author
John Landsverk
- Open Author
Ying-Ying T. Yuan
- Open Author
Brenda Jones Harden
- Open Author
Richard P. Barth
Editions
Publication-specific versions linked to this work only.
- Image source: Open LibraryBC
Beyond Common Sense
- Image source: Open LibraryBC
Beyond common sense
- BCBeyond Common SenseFred Wulczyn, Richard P. Barth, Ying-Ying T. Yuan, Brenda Jones Harden, John Landsverk
Beyond Common Sense
- BCBeyond Common SenseFred Wulczyn, Richard P. Barth, Ying-Ying T. Yuan, Brenda Jones Harden, John Landsverk
Beyond Common Sense
- BCBeyond Common SenseFred Wulczyn, Richard P. Barth, Ying-Ying T. Yuan, Brenda Jones Harden, John Landsverk
Beyond Common Sense
- BCBeyond Common SenseFred Wulczyn, Richard P. Barth, Ying-Ying T. Yuan, Brenda Jones Harden, John Landsverk
Beyond Common Sense
- BCBeyond common sense
Beyond common sense