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  • What happened when the Social Research Unit, publishers of Prevention Action, took a group of UK policymakers from local and national government and charities to investigate prevention and early intervention initiatives in Washington State.

Studious tourists learn from Seattle

Losing sleep over the "do-loop" in Seattle.

13 May 2009
What’s the connection between a Ferrari, a Toyota Camry and a hardening of the arteries? They all spring to mind when US family therapies go under the metaphorical microscope.

How Washington put therapy on the menu

14 May 2009
Enlightened legislation that provided the Washington State juvenile court with the funding to introduce evidence-based programs to the judicial process has put a comprehensive “menu” of intervention options within reach of young people in trouble.

Should the poor clinician get more blame?

15 May 2009
Study tourists encounter the unsettling “Dr No-ski,” whose work in Washington suggests that less than competent clinicians are all too likely to make the lives of some children worse, no matter how robust the program.

Washington learns how to keep the faith

19 May 2009
Once the streetcorner trade of the hard-boiled detective, “fidelity monitoring” of a nobler kind looks like becoming an essential aspect of wise program implementation.

What happens to science when program meets product?

20 May 2009
“Publishers know how to market products, and they can market products to systems people – but they can't market systems to systems people…” Study tourists nose under the wrapper of the prevention program industry.

A taste of the confusion of prevention in the raw

21 May 2009
In a Methadone clinic, a middle-class Seattle suburb and out in the country where academics fear to tread, study tourists see prevention in action – and out of the box.