Services
> Children > Community
Based Services
Partnership
with Families
What is Partnership with Families?
The Partnership with Families programs were designed
to create a comprehensive system of care for children ages 7 to
17 who are diagnosed with a Serious Emotional Disturbance, where
those organizations and agencies who are working with a child or
youth develop a coordinated effort to meet all of the family’s
needs. In the past, families have complained of getting the “runaround”,
of having to fill out multiple applications, and going through multiple
assessments, and of getting conflicting advice from different providers.
The Partnership uses a “wraparound” approach that invites
the family and all service providers to the table initially to identify
strengths and priorities of the family, and to determine how to
meet the families goals, including the mobilization of needed services.
What types of services are available to
families?
Services include:
- Initial Diagnostic Screening and Assessment
- Care Coordination
- Parent Partner Services
- Crisis response and Stabilization Services
- Individual, group and family counseling
- Psychiatric and medication services
- Vocational training
- Respite care
- Transportation Services
- 24-hour crisis intervention
- Skill-building courses
- Family Assistant Services
- Child and Adolescent Day Treatment
- Family Empowerment Groups
Each family is assigned a Care Coordinator and
a Parent Partner. The Care Coordinator is responsible for identifying
needs and serves as a liaison for linking, monitoring and coordinating
needed services. The Parent Partner provides valuable insight and
support as each Parent Partner has personal experience in raising
a child with a serious emotional disorder.
The level of care coordination delivered to the
child and family is dependent upon their level of need based on
the following:
Intensive Level Care Coordination
Intensive Community Psychiatric Rehabilitation
(CPR) is a level of support designed to help children who are experiencing
an acute psychiatric condition, alleviating or eliminating the need
to admit them into a psychiatric inpatient or residential setting.
It is a comprehensive, time-limited, community based service delivered
to children who are exhibiting symptoms that interfere with individual's
lives in a highly disabling manner.
This level of care is intended for children with
serious mental illness and severe emotional disorders who meet program
eligibility and:
- Would be hospitalized without the provision of intensive community-based
intervention; or
- Have extended or repeated psychiatric hospitalizations, or
- Crisis episodes; or
- Are at risk of being removed from their home or school to a
more restrictive environment; or
- Who require assistance in transitioning from a highly restrictive
setting to a community-based alternative, including specifically
persons being discharged from inpatient psychiatric settings who
require assertive outreach and engagement.
Rehabilitation Level Care Coordination
The Rehabilitation level of care is designed for
those individuals who require a significant level of support, treatment,
and rehabilitation services to live successfully with their families
and with their community. The treatment plan is focused toward age-appropriate
rehabilitation. Emphasis may be on stabilization in the community.
Care Coordinator services including mobilization and coordination
of services, monitoring, and skill-building interventions are critical
components in this level of care.
Maintenance Level Care Coordination
The Maintenance level of care is designed for those
individuals who have achieved significant recovery from psychiatric
illness and who generally are no longer in need of multiple services
or frequent contact with a service provider and who are living either
wholly independently or with only minimal support in the community.
This level of care may also be appropriate for individuals who choose
not to receive Care Coordination services. Ongoing maintenance,
retention of previous gains, and prevention of relapse, with an
emphasis on self-sufficiency and self-determination are the primary
goals. Services at this level typically will include medication
services, care coordination (if required) and crisis services as
needed.
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