Brandon L. Crawford, PhD

Assistant Professor of Applied Health Science


Curriculum vitae



Department of Applied Health Science

School of Public Health, Indiana University, Bloomington



Factors Influencing Risk of Homelessness among Youth in Transition from Foster Care in Oklahoma: Implications for Reforming Independent Living Services and Opportunities.


Journal article


Brandon L. Crawford, Jacqueline McDaniel, D. Moxley, Zohre Salehezadeh, Alisa West Cahill
Child welfare, 2015

Semantic Scholar PubMed
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APA   Click to copy
Crawford, B. L., McDaniel, J., Moxley, D., Salehezadeh, Z., & Cahill, A. W. (2015). Factors Influencing Risk of Homelessness among Youth in Transition from Foster Care in Oklahoma: Implications for Reforming Independent Living Services and Opportunities. Child Welfare.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Crawford, Brandon L., Jacqueline McDaniel, D. Moxley, Zohre Salehezadeh, and Alisa West Cahill. “Factors Influencing Risk of Homelessness among Youth in Transition from Foster Care in Oklahoma: Implications for Reforming Independent Living Services and Opportunities.” Child welfare (2015).


MLA   Click to copy
Crawford, Brandon L., et al. “Factors Influencing Risk of Homelessness among Youth in Transition from Foster Care in Oklahoma: Implications for Reforming Independent Living Services and Opportunities.” Child Welfare, 2015.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{brandon2015a,
  title = {Factors Influencing Risk of Homelessness among Youth in Transition from Foster Care in Oklahoma: Implications for Reforming Independent Living Services and Opportunities.},
  year = {2015},
  journal = {Child welfare},
  author = {Crawford, Brandon L. and McDaniel, Jacqueline and Moxley, D. and Salehezadeh, Zohre and Cahill, Alisa West}
}

Abstract

Research suggests that youth aging out of foster care may be at higher risk of experiencing homelessness than other youth. Among this already at-risk population there may be certain characteristics that further exacerbate the risk. This paper uses data collected from various local and state agencies to further examine significant predictors of homelessness among youth who have aged out of foster care.


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