%0 Journal Article %T Change in mental health symptoms in families with nonresponding children referred to inpatient family units %A Tormod Rimehaug %J Clinical Child Psychology and Psychiatry %@ 1461-7021 %D 2019 %R 10.1177/1359104518794239 %X To examine changes in child mental health symptoms following inpatient family unit treatment after long-term unsuccessful treatment in community and child psychiatry outpatient services. Follow-up from referral and admission to 3 and 12£¿months. Standardized questionnaires measuring the child mental health symptoms and parental anxiety and depression converted to standardized scores and compared to each child¡¯s clinical diagnosis. Significant group mean improvement on almost all problem scales at the 3-month follow-up (T2) remaining through 12-month follow-up (T3) relative to admission (T1). Aggression showed the highest levels and largest improvements. Statistically significant improvements were widespread, whereas clinically significant improvements were found for some diagnostic groups on diagnosis-related problems and secondary problems. Improvement in child symptoms were partly correlated with improvement in parental anxiety symptoms. Even previously nonresponding children may benefit from broad tailored interventions including parents and the wider system. Development of systematic component approaches is needed %K CBCL %K symptom change %K ICD-10 diagnosis %K treatment-as-usual %K internalized %K externalized %U https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/1359104518794239