From field experiments to program implementation: Assessing the potential outcomes of an experimental intervention program for unemployed persons |
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Authors: | Amiram D. Vinokur Richard H. Price Robert D. Caplan |
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Affiliation: | (1) Michigan Prevention Research Center, Institute for Social Research, The University of Michigan, 426 Thompson Street, 48106-1248 Ann Arbor, Michigan;(2) Present address: Department of Psychology, George Washington University, Washington, USA |
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Abstract: | Demonstrated a procedure suggested by Bloom (1984) to provide estimates for the effects of an intervention on its actual participants compared to global effects on study participants in the intervention group, whether or not they showed up. Analyses were based on data collected in a field experiment that tested a preventive intervention for unemployed persons (Caplan, Vinokur, Price & van Ryn, 1989). Effect size estimates were two to three times larger for the actual participant group than for the entire experimental group on employment outcomes (e.g., earnings) and mental health (anxiety and depression). Further analyses produced results showing that compared to participants, the nonparticipants achieved significantly higher levels of reemployment at posttests and did not differ significantly from participants on all other outcomes. The results suggest that persons who most needed the intervention and benefited from it were drawn into it through self-selection processes. |
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