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    <Citation xmlns="ddi:reusable:3_1">
        <Title>Metadata record for Evaluation of the Children at Risk Program in Austin, Texas, Bridgeport, Connecticut, Memphis, Tennessee, Savannah, Georgia, and Seattle, Washington, 1993-1997</Title>
        <Creator>ICPSR</Creator>
        <Copyright>
        ICPSR metadata records are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 
        3.0 United States License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/us/).
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    <StudyUnit xmlns="ddi:studyunit:3_1" id="StudyUnit02686" versionDate="2006-03-30">
        <Citation xmlns="ddi:reusable:3_1">
            <Title>Evaluation of the Children at Risk Program in Austin, Texas, Bridgeport, Connecticut, Memphis, Tennessee, Savannah, Georgia, and Seattle, Washington, 1993-1997</Title>
 				
	    	
				<Creator xmlns="ddi:reusable:3_1" affiliation="Urban Institute">Harrell, Adele V.</Creator>
	    	
				<Creator xmlns="ddi:reusable:3_1" affiliation="Urban Institute">Cavanagh, Shannon</Creator>
	    	
				<Creator xmlns="ddi:reusable:3_1" affiliation="Urban Institute">Sridharan, Sanjeev</Creator>
	    	
	    	<Publisher>Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research</Publisher>
  			<Contributor role="distributor">ICPSR</Contributor>
   			<PublicationDate>
    			<SimpleDate>2006-03-30</SimpleDate>
   			</PublicationDate>
   			<InternationalIdentifier xmlns="ddi:reusable:3_1" type="ICPSR Number">2686</InternationalIdentifier>
   			<InternationalIdentifier xmlns="ddi:reusable:3_1" type="DOI">doi://10.3886/ICPSR02686.v1</InternationalIdentifier>
        </Citation>

        <Abstract isIdentifiable="true" id="Abstract02686">
            <Content xmlns="ddi:reusable:3_1">
            <div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" id="Summary02686">The Children at Risk (CAR) Program was a comprehensive,
neighborhood-based strategy for preventing drug use, delinquency, and
other problem behaviors among high-risk youth living in severely
distressed neighborhoods. The goal of this research project was to
evaluate the long-term impact of the CAR program using experimental
and quasi-experimental group comparisons. Experimental comparisons of
the treatment and control groups selected within target neighborhoods
examined the impact of CAR services on individual youths and their
families. These services included intensive case management, family
services, mentoring, and incentives. Quasi-experimental comparisons
were needed in each city because control group youths in the CAR sites
were exposed to the effects of neighborhood interventions, such as
enhanced community policing and enforcement activities and some
expanded court services, and may have taken part in some of the
recreational activities after school. CAR programs in five cities --
Austin, TX, Bridgeport, CT, Memphis, TN, Seattle, WA, and Savannah, GA
-- took part in this evaluation. In the CAR target areas, juveniles
were identified by case managers who contacted schools and the courts
to identify youths known to be at risk. Random assignment to the
treatment or control group was made at the level of the family so that
siblings would be assigned to the same group. A quasi-experimental
group of juveniles who met the CAR eligibility risk requirements, but
lived in other severely distressed neighborhoods, was selected during
the second year of the evaluation in cities that continued intake of
new CAR participants into the second year. In these comparison
neighborhoods, youths eligible for the quasi-experimental sample were
identified either by CAR staff, cooperating agencies, or the staff of
the middle schools they attended. Baseline interviews with youths and
caretakers were conducted between January 1993 and May 1994, during
the month following recruitment. The end-of-program interviews were
conducted approximately two years later, between December 1994 and May
1996. The follow-up interviews with youths were conducted one year
after the program period ended, between December 1995 and May
1997. Once each year, records were collected from the police, courts,
and schools. Part 1 provides demographic data on each youth, including
age at intake, gender, ethnicity, relationship of caretaker to youth,
and youth's risk factors for poor school performance, poor school
behavior, family problems, or personal problems. Additional variables
provide information on household size, including number and type of
children in the household, and number and type of adults in the
household. Part 2 provides data from all three youth interviews
(baseline, end-of-program, and follow-up). Questions were asked about
the youth's attitudes toward school and amount of homework,
participation in various activities (school activities, team sports,
clubs or groups, other organized activities, religious services, odd
jobs or household chores), curfews and bedtimes, who assisted the
youth with various tasks, attitudes about the future, seriousness of
various problems the youth might have had over the past year and who
he or she turned to for help, number of times the youth's household
had moved, how long the youth had lived with the caretaker, various
criminal activities in the neighborhood and the youth's concerns about
victimization, opinions on various statements about the police,
occasions of skipping school and why, if the youth thought he or she
would be promoted to the next grade, would graduate from high school,
or would go to college, knowledge of children engaging in various
problem activities and if the youth was pressured to join them, and
experiences with and attitudes toward consumption of cigarettes,
alcohol, and various drugs. Three sections of the questionnaire were
completed by the youths. Section A asked questions about the youth's
attitudes toward various statements about self, life, the home
environment, rules, and norms. Section B asked questions about the
number of times that various crimes had been committed against the
youth, his or her sexual activity, number of times the youth ran away
from home, number of times he or she had committed various criminal
acts, and what weapons he or she had carried. Items in Section C
covered the youth's alcohol and drug use, and participation in drug
sales. Part 3 provides data from both caretaker interviews (baseline
and end-of-program). Questions elicited the caretaker's assessments of
the presence of various positive and negative neighborhood
characteristics, safety of the child in the neighborhood, attitudes
toward and interactions with the police, if the caretaker had been
arrested, had been on probation, or in jail, whether various crimes
had been committed against the caretaker or others in the household in
the past year, activities that the youth currently participated in,
curfews set by the caretaker, if the caretaker had visited the school
for various reasons, school performance or problems by the youth and
the youth's siblings, amount of the caretaker's involvement with
activities, clubs, and groups, the caretaker's financial, medical, and
personal problems and assistance received in the past year, if he or
she was not able to obtain help, why not, and information on the
caretaker's education, employment, income level, income sources, and
where he or she sought medical treatment for themselves or for the
youth. Two sections of the data collection instruments were completed
by the caretaker. Section A dealt with the youth's personal problems
or problems with others, and the youth's friends. Additional questions
focused on the family's interactions, rules, and norms. Section B
items asked about the caretaker's alcohol and drug use, and any
alcohol and drug use or criminal justice involvement by others in the
household older than the youth. Part 4 consists of data from schools,
police, and courts. School data include the youth's grades,
grade-point average (GPA), absentee rate, reasons for absences, and
whether the youth was promoted each school year. Data from police
records include police contacts, detentions, violent offenses,
drug-related offenses, and arrests prior to recruitment in the CAR
program and in Years 1-4 after recruitment, court contacts and charges
prior to recruitment and in Years 1-4 after recruitment, and how the
charges were disposed.</div>
             </Content>
        </Abstract>
        
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 				<FundingInformation xmlns="ddi:reusable:3_1">
    				
  						<AgencyOrganizationReference>
							 <ID>Organization02686_1</ID>
   						</AgencyOrganizationReference>
  						
   							<GrantNumber>92-DD-CX-0031</GrantNumber>
   						
    				
  						<AgencyOrganizationReference>
							 <ID>Organization02686_2</ID>
   						</AgencyOrganizationReference>
  						
    				
  						<AgencyOrganizationReference>
							 <ID>Organization02686_3</ID>
   						</AgencyOrganizationReference>
  						
   							<GrantNumber>#R01-DA-08583-01-A2</GrantNumber>
   						
    				
    				</FundingInformation>
				
        <Purpose id="Purpose02686">
            <Content xmlns="ddi:reusable:3_1">
            
           	<div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" id="StudyPurpose02686">The Children at Risk (CAR) Program was a
 comprehensive, neighborhood-based strategy for preventing drug use,
 delinquency, and other problem behaviors among high-risk youths living
 in severely distressed neighborhoods. In CAR, community agencies and
 partnerships participated in integrated delivery of services to meet
 the needs of youths and families with multiple problems. Because the
 programs were explicitly designed to meet local needs, there was some
 diversity across sites in service provision, but all CAR programs
 were: (a) highly targeted on high-risk youths who lived in
 narrowly-defined, relatively small geographic neighborhoods, (b)
 comprehensive, with eight required service components designed to
 address neighborhood, peer group, family, and individual risk factors,
 (c) equipped with integrated service delivery in which justice
 agencies collaborated closely with case managers and school staff to
 meet the needs of the neighborhood, participating families, and the
 youths, and (d) locally planned and directed, to fit the values and
 cultural backgrounds of the neighborhoods. The goal of this research
 project was to evaluate the long-term impact of the CAR program. The
 principal research questions guiding the impact evaluation included:
 (1) Did participation in CAR reduce the likelihood of problem
 behaviors, especially drug use and delinquency, among high-risk
 youths? (2) Did participation in CAR reduce the neighborhood, family,
 peer group, and individual risk factors that predict the likelihood of
 problem behaviors? (3) Did participation in CAR contribute to the
 development of protective factors that help high-risk youths avoid
 problem behaviors, despite the risks they face? and (4) Did the impact
 of CAR vary for youths with different demographic, risk factor, or
 other characteristics? Overall, the impact evaluation was designed to
 test the general research hypotheses that: (a) youths receiving CAR
 services would have lower rates of problems than high-risk youths who
 did not receive CAR services, (b) neighborhoods, families, and youths
 in CAR neighborhoods would have greater reductions in risk factors
 than comparable neighborhoods, families, and youths not offered CAR
 services, and (c) CAR youths and families would have higher levels of
 service utilization and participation in pro-social activities than
 non-CAR families and youths with comparable risk factors. In addition,
 the evaluation tested the hypothesis that CAR youths would be more
 likely to develop protective factors that would give them the skills,
attitudes, and values to avoid problem behaviors.</div>
           
           </Content>
        </Purpose>
        
        
        
          <Coverage xmlns="ddi:reusable:3_1">

   <TopicalCoverage xmlns="ddi:reusable:3_1" id="TopicalCoverage02686">
		
      		<Subject codeListAgency="ICPSR">ICPSR.XVII.E</Subject>
      	
      		<Subject codeListAgency="NAHDAP">NAHDAP.I</Subject>
      	
      		<Subject codeListAgency="NACJD">NACJD.II</Subject>
      	
		
      		<Keyword>case management</Keyword>
      	
      		<Keyword>children</Keyword>
      	
      		<Keyword>cities</Keyword>
      	
      		<Keyword>crime prevention</Keyword>
      	
      		<Keyword>delinquent behavior</Keyword>
      	
      		<Keyword>drug use</Keyword>
      	
      		<Keyword>family services</Keyword>
      	
      		<Keyword>intervention</Keyword>
      	
      		<Keyword>intervention strategies</Keyword>
      	
      		<Keyword>juvenile offenders</Keyword>
      	
      		<Keyword>neighborhoods</Keyword>
      	
      		<Keyword>program evaluation</Keyword>
      	
      		<Keyword>student attitudes</Keyword>
      	
      		<Keyword>student behavior</Keyword>
      	
      		<Keyword>treatment programs</Keyword>
      	
      		<Keyword>youths at risk</Keyword>
      	
   </TopicalCoverage>
 

	
   <SpatialCoverage id="SpatialCoverage02686">
		<Description>
			
				Austin, 
			
				Bridgeport, 
			
				Connecticut, 
			
				Georgia, 
			
				Memphis, 
			
				Savannah, 
			
				Seattle, 
			
				Tennessee, 
			
				Texas, 
			
				United States, 
			
				Washington
			
		</Description>
    <TopLevelReference>
     <LevelName> </LevelName>
    </TopLevelReference>
    <LowestLevelReference>
     <LevelName> </LevelName>
    </LowestLevelReference>
   </SpatialCoverage>
   


	

   <TemporalCoverage id="TemporalCoverage02686">

		
    <ReferenceDate>
		
				
      		<StartDate>1993</StartDate>
      		<EndDate>1997</EndDate>
			
			
      		
    </ReferenceDate>
    
     
   </TemporalCoverage>
 
 
 
         </Coverage>
 

   		
   			<AnalysisUnitsCovered>Individuals.</AnalysisUnitsCovered>
    	


	    	
	    		<KindOfData>administrative records data</KindOfData>
	    	
	    		<KindOfData>survey data</KindOfData>
	    	


        
   <ConceptualComponent xmlns="ddi:conceptualcomponent:3_1" id="ConceptualComponent02686">
   <UniverseScheme id="UniverseScheme02686">
	    	
    <Universe id="Universe02686_1">
     <HumanReadable>All CAR participants in the selected cities in the school
years 1992-1993 and 1993-1994.</HumanReadable>
    </Universe>
    
    
   </UniverseScheme>
   
   
   
   
  </ConceptualComponent>
        
  <DataCollection xmlns="ddi:datacollection:3_1" id="DataCollection02686">
  			
<Description xmlns="ddi:reusable:3_1">
           <div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" id="StudyDesign02686">Tests of these hypotheses were based on
 experimental and quasi-experimental group comparisons. Experimental
 comparisons of the treatment and control groups selected within target
 neighborhoods examined the impact of CAR services on individual youths
 and their families. These services included intensive case management,
 family services, mentoring, and incentives. Quasi-experimental
 comparisons were needed in each city because control group youths in
 the CAR sites were exposed to the effects of neighborhood
 interventions, such as enhanced community policing and enforcement
 activities and some expanded court services, and may have taken part
 in some of the recreational activities after school. CAR programs in
 five cities -- Austin, TX, Bridgeport, CT, Memphis, TN, Seattle, WA,
 and Savannah, GA -- took part in this evaluation. In the CAR target
 areas, juveniles were identified by case managers who contacted
 schools and the courts to identify youths known to be at risk. Random
 assignment to the treatment or control group was made at the level of
 the family so that siblings would be assigned to the same group. A
 quasi-experimental group of juveniles who met the CAR eligibility risk
 requirements, but lived in other severely distressed neighborhoods,
 was selected during the second year of the evaluation in cities that
 continued intake of new CAR participants into the second year. In
 these comparison neighborhoods, youths eligible for the
 quasi-experimental sample were identified either by CAR staff,
 cooperating agencies, or the staff of the middle schools they
 attended. Interviewers contacted potential sample members by letter or
 in person. Baseline interviews with youths and caretakers were
 conducted between January 1993 and May 1994, during the month
 following recruitment. The end-of-program interviews were conducted
 approximately two years later, between December 1994 and May 1996. The
 follow-up interviews with youths were conducted one year after the end
 of the program period, between December 1995 and May 1997. Both the
 youth and caretaker interviews included self-administered answer
 sheets for asking sensitive questions. Once each year, records were
 collected from the police and courts in each city on officially
 recorded contacts. Because it was not possible to link police contacts
 to court contacts, the analysis examined the pattern of contacts
 separately for each type of agency. Records were collected from the
 schools on grades, promotion, and percentage of scheduled days
attended. School data were collected only from the public schools.</div>
    
</Description>
           



   <Methodology id="Methodology02686">

    <DataCollectionMethodology id="DataCollectionMethodology02686">
     <Content xmlns="ddi:reusable:3_1">Several Likert-type scales were used.</Content>
    </DataCollectionMethodology>


    <SamplingProcedure id="SamplingProcedure02686">
     <Content xmlns="ddi:reusable:3_1">Cities were selected to achieve regional and ethnic
 diversity and to represent cities with strong plans for implementing
 the CAR model. CAR target neighborhoods were those served by the CAR
 program in that city. Quasi-experimental comparison neighborhoods were
 selected based on census tract information and then two adjacent
 highly distressed tracts (but not the two most distressed tracts) were
selected. Youths were selected based on CAR eligibility criteria.</Content>
    </SamplingProcedure>
  
   </Methodology>
   
 
		
   <CollectionEvent id="CollectionEvent02686_1">
    
    <DataSource>
     <SourceDescription>
     
    		Part 1: CAR administrative records, Part 2: interviews
 with youths, Part 3: interviews with caretakers, and Part 4: school,
police, and court records
    	
    </SourceDescription>
    </DataSource>
    
		<DataCollectionDate>
 		
				
      		<StartDate xmlns="ddi:reusable:3_1">1993-01</StartDate>
      		<EndDate xmlns="ddi:reusable:3_1">1997-05</EndDate>
			
			
      		
      		</DataCollectionDate>

    


   </CollectionEvent>
      	
 
 
 
    
   <ProcessingEvent id="ProcessingEvent02686">


    <CleaningOperation>
     <Description xmlns="ddi:reusable:3_1">
 
      <div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" id="CleaningOperation02686">

 <p>ICPSR data undergo a confidentiality review and are altered when necessary to limit the risk of disclosure. 
 ICPSR also routinely creates ready-to-go data files along with setups in the major statistical software 
 formats as well as standard codebooks to accompany the data. In addition to these procedures, ICPSR 
 performed the following processing steps for this data collection:</p>

	<ul>
  
   		
			<li>
		    	
				
				
				
				
				
				Standardized missing values.
			</li>
	   	
			<li>
		    	
				
				
				
				
				
				Checked for undocumented or out-of-range codes.
			</li>
	   	
	</ul>

</div>

     </Description>
    </CleaningOperation>
   
    
   

   

    <DataAppraisalInformation>
    	<ResponseRate>
    	
    		Eighty-nine percent of parents who were
 approached in Year 1 agreed to join the study. The interview response
 rates for youths were 98 percent at baseline, 77 percent at the end of
 the program, and 76 percent at follow-up. Caregiver response rates
were 97 percent at baseline and 78 percent at the end of the program.
    	
    	</ResponseRate>
</DataAppraisalInformation>

    
   </ProcessingEvent>
  </DataCollection>

  			
<LogicalProduct xmlns="ddi:logicalproduct:3_1" id="LogicalProduct02686">
    <Description xmlns="ddi:reusable:3_1">
          <div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" id="VariablesDescription02686">Part 1 provides demographic data on each youth,
 including age at intake, gender, ethnicity, relationship of caretaker
 to youth, and youth's risk factors for poor school performance, poor
 school behavior, family problems, or personal problems. Additional
 variables provide information on household size, number and type of
 children in the household, number and type of adults in the
 household. Part 2 provides data from all three youth interviews
 (baseline, end-of-program, and follow-up). Questions were asked about
 the youth's attitudes toward school and amount of homework,
 participation in various activities (school activities, team sports,
 clubs or groups, other organized activities, religious services, odd
 jobs or household chores), curfews and bedtimes, who assisted the
 youth with various tasks, attitudes about the future, seriousness of
 various problems the youth might have had over the past year and who
 he or she turned to for help, number of times the youth's household
 had moved, how long the youth had lived with the caretaker, various
 criminal activities in the neighborhood and the youth's concern of
 victimization, opinions on various statements about the police,
 occasions of skipping school and why, if the youth thought he or she
 would be promoted to the next grade, would graduate from high school,
 or would go to college, knowledge of children engaging in various
 problem activities and if the youth was pressured to join them, and
 experiences with and attitudes toward consumption of cigarettes,
 alcohol, and various drugs. Three sections of the questionnaires were
 completed by the youths. Section A asked questions about the youth's
 attitudes toward various statements about self, life, the home
 environment, rules, and norms. Section B asked questions about the
 number of times that various crimes had been committed against the
 youth, sexual activity, number of times he or she ran away from home,
 number of times the youth had committed various criminal acts, and
 what weapons he or she had carried. Items in Section C asked about the
 youth's alcohol and drug use, and participation in drug sales. Part 3
 provides data from both caretaker interviews (baseline and
 end-of-program). Questions elicited the caretaker's assessments of the
 presence of various positive and negative neighborhood
 characteristics, safety of the child in the neighborhood, attitudes
 toward and interactions with the police, if the caretaker had been
 arrested, had been on probation, or in jail, whether various crimes
 had been committed against the caretaker or others in the household in
 the past year, activities that their youth currently participated in,
 curfews set by the caretaker, if the caretaker had visited the school
 for various reasons, school performance or problems by the youth and
 the youth's siblings, amount of the caretaker's involvement with
 activities, clubs, and groups, the caretaker's financial, medical, or
 personal problems and assistance received in the past year, if he or
 she was not able to obtain help and why not, and information on the
 caretaker's education, employment, income, income sources, and where
 he or she sought medical treatment for themselves and the youth. Two
 sections of the data collection instruments were completed by the
 caretaker. Section A questions asked about the youth's personal
 problems or problems with others and the youth's friends. Additional
 questions focused on the family's interactions, rules, and
 norms. Section B items asked about the caretaker's alcohol and drug
 use and the alcohol and drug use and criminal justice involvement by
 others in the household older than the youth. Part 4 consists of data
 from schools, police, and courts. School data include the youth's
 grades, grade-point average (GPA), absentee rate, reasons for
 absences, and whether the youth was promoted each school year. Data
 from police records include police contacts, detentions, violent
 offenses, drug-related offenses, and arrests prior to recruitment in
 the car program and in years 1-4 after recruitment, court contacts and
 charges prior to recruitment and in years 1-4 after recruitment, and
 how the charges were disposed. For the police and court records,
 certain kinds of contacts were not included: (a) child abuse, neglect,
 and dependency actions, (b) informal contacts that did not result in a
 written report, and (c) contacts with police and courts in other
jurisdictions.</div>
                
    </Description>
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    <DefaultAccess id="DefaultAccess02686">
     
     <AccessConditions>
     
        
      <div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" id="AccessConditions02686">

 			
                
					AVAILABLE.  This study is freely available to the general public.
                
                  
                

</div>

</AccessConditions>
<AccessConditions>
      <div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" id="AccessConditions02686-disclaimer">
The original collector of the data, ICPSR, and the relevant funding agency bear no 
                responsibility for use of the data or for interpretations or inferences based upon such uses.
                </div>

                </AccessConditions>

			
       



    </DefaultAccess>
   
   
   </ArchiveSpecific>
   
   <OrganizationScheme id="OrganizationScheme02686">
    <Organization id="ICPSR" xmlns="ddi:archive:3_1">
     <OrganizationName xmlns="ddi:archive:3_1">Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Rearch</OrganizationName>
     <Nickname>ICPSR</Nickname>
     <Location id="LocationICPSR">
      <Address>
       <City>Ann Arbor</City>
       <State>MI</State>
      </Address>
     </Location>
     <URL>http://www.icpsr.umich.edu/</URL>
     <Email>netmail@icpsr.umich.edu</Email>
    </Organization>

 				
    				
						<Organization xmlns="ddi:archive:3_1" id="Organization02686_1">
   							<OrganizationName xmlns="ddi:archive:3_1">United States Department of Justice. Office of Justice Programs. National Institute of Justice</OrganizationName>
  						</Organization>
    				
						<Organization xmlns="ddi:archive:3_1" id="Organization02686_2">
   							<OrganizationName xmlns="ddi:archive:3_1">Columbia University. National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse</OrganizationName>
  						</Organization>
    				
						<Organization xmlns="ddi:archive:3_1" id="Organization02686_3">
   							<OrganizationName xmlns="ddi:archive:3_1">United States Department of Health and Human Services. National Institutes of Health. National Institute on Drug Abuse</OrganizationName>
  						</Organization>
    				
				


   </OrganizationScheme>
  
 
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<LifecycleEvent id="LifecyleEvent02686-2006-03-30">
             <Date>
             <SimpleDate>2006-03-30</SimpleDate>
             </Date>
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      <ID>ICPSR</ID>
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             <Description>2006-03-30 File UG2686.ALL.PDF was removed from any previous datasets and flagged as a study-level file, so that it will accompany all downloads.</Description>
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<LifecycleEvent id="LifecyleEvent02686-2006-03-30">
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             <Description>2006-03-30 File QU2686.ALL.PDF was removed from any previous datasets and flagged as a study-level file, so that it will accompany all downloads.</Description>
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             <Description>2005-11-04  On 2005-03-14 new files were added to one
 or  more datasets.  These files included additional setup files as well
 as one or more of the following: SAS  program, SAS transport, SPSS portable, 
 and Stata system files. The  metadata record was revised  2005-11-04 to 
reflect these additions.</Description>
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   <Content>
		<div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
			Per the researchers' agreement with each site, the
data in this collection do not identify the individual sites.
		</div>
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