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This presentation outlines the strategies and service delivery model of mental health services in Los Angeles, with a focus on Pacific Clinics and the Asian Pacific Family Centre. The services provided target individuals with a broad range of mental health concerns and are supported by various funding sources.
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Strategies & Service Delivery Model of Mental Health Service in Los Angeles Li Wan Sum, Monica Wong Chi Hung
Presentation Outline • Brief introduction of agency visits in LA • Pacific Clinic - Project Highlights : Intensive School-based program : Intensive Day Treatment Program • Asian Pacific Family Centre • Maryvale
Pacific Clinics (1) • Founded in 1926 as Pasadena Child Guidance Clinic • One of the largest community-based non-profit agency behavioral mental health agencies • with over 1,000 staff worked in more than 80 multiple locations in Southern California, especially LA county • Services are targeted to treat persons with a board range of mental health concerns
Pacific Clinics (2) • Provide a full range of services includes outpatient services, (psychiatric services, group counseling and day treatment) outreach crisis intervention and consultation services to seriously emotionally disturbed individuals and families who cannot pay for services • Supported by county contracts, United Way funds, federal and state grants, private donations
Pacific Clinics (3) • Recruit multilingual staff from all cultural background to provide culturally and linguistically sensitive services • Multidisciplinary team includes psychologists, psychiatrists, clinical social workers, art therapists, marriage and family therapists, substance abuse counselors, nurses, case manager and occupational therapists • Web site: www.pacificclinics.org
Continuum of Care Intensive Day Treatment Intensive School-based Program Intensive Outpatient Treatment Outpatient Treatment
Continuum of Care • Outpatient Treatment - meeting the individuals and their families 1 to 2 hours a week in the clinics
Continuum of Care • Intensive Outpatient Treatment - meeting the consumers and their families 2 to 3 times a week - other than providing services in the clinics, therapists may go to the schools and homes of the consumers to offer intensive outpatient treatment for them
Continuum of Care • Intensive Outpatient School-based Program - special education in special school - therapists (LCSW, LMFT, LP, psychiatrist & LPT) station in the school - after about 6 months treatment, may return to normal school - the ratio: 3 : 8 or 3 : 12 (consumer : therapists)
Intensive Day Treatment Program (1) • Serving consumers with age from 4 to 18 • Rehabilitate individuals with severe emotional and behavioral impairments rendering them unable to function at home, school, community • 4 hours highly structured therapeutic daily treatment aimed at learning skills relevant to their functional impairment • 90 days of duration followed by review of DMH ( Department of Mental Health)
Intensive Day Treatment Program (2) • Daily treatment program for individuals with one or some of the following mental health issues: - diagnosis with a major mental illness - behavioral problems like, aggressive or destructive and engaged in “risky” behaviors - emotional problems like, being depressed and withdrawn
Intensive Day Treatment Program (3) • The treatment program offer Monday through Friday afternoons from 1pm-5pm (after-school) with structured milieu • The scope of services include: - individual, group and family therapy - diagnostic assessment - activities such as arts and recreation - crisis intervention
Intensive Day Treatment Program (4) • Treatment plans implemented with multi-level behavioral modification technique are made with these children and they work on their goals daily, support from the counselors and meet with their primary therapist once a week. • The program provide support at school by working closely with school teachers and school officials offering recommendations in classroom management conducive to the children
Intensive Day Treatment Program (5) • Familiesare involved to participate in family therapy to learn appropriate parenting skills to ensure that structure is place at home :”SOC” – Systems of Care - home-based program with case manager, therapists and “family advocates” (former consumer, hired staff) providing clinical assessment and individual sessions to family members of the consumers - engaged family in treatment and stress on skill building aiming at stabilize the children, families in the community
Intensive Day Treatment Program (6) • To conclude, the program offer a comprehensive approach to treatment by providing multi-level (individual, family and group level) treatment within one treatment setting.
Asian Pacific Family Centre (1) • A division of Pacific Clinics established ten years ago with 2 service locations in Rosemead and City of Industry • Emphasizing education and prevention rather than cure • Provide professional and culturally competent behavioral health services to meet the psychological needs of the growing Asian Pacific populations in the greater San Gabriel Valley area of Los Angeles Country
Asian Pacific Family Centre (2) • APFC provide multidisciplinary, multilingual and multicultural behavioral health care services include prevention, counseling and treatment services in English and a total of nine Asian languages and dialects • Ultimate goal is to facilitate the Asian immigrant families to adjust successfully to their new communities
APFC – Service Programs (1) • S.C.A.L.E. (School, Community, and Law Enforcement) - Serving Asian children and youth who are at high risk for delinquent and criminal behaviors through early case identification, family case management, and consultation liaison with school authorities and law enforcement personnel - Providing individual counseling and tools for critical thinking and decision-making that help the youth to deal with life’s stress and challenges within a more effective and pro-social, productive manner
APFC – Service Programs (2) • I.D. (Important Decisions) for Success - A youth development program aimed at early intervention, which serve elementary school children in the East San Gabriel Valley through age-appropriate gang and violence prevention education - Issues include making good decisions, dealing with peer influences and pressures, and handling bullies- all with the aim of heading off pre-teen gang involvement, are discussed with the participants (mentorship scheme)
APFC – Service Programs (3) • A.A.F.E.N. (Asian American Family Enrichment Network) - Serving Asian American families including: Chinese, Korean, Vietnamese through bilingual family needs assessment, parent education class, parent support groups, family club activities, information and referral services - A corps of dedicated parent volunteers has helped the Network to grow to almost 1,200 families trained in the last four years. These parents help to lead programs and raise funds for the centre
Maryvale (8) • History: - founded in 1856 by the Daughters of Charity of St. Vincent de Paul (non-profit Catholic agency) as the LA Orphan Asylum - private donors helped to reconstructed the girls home in present location in 1953 with the new name of “Maryvale” - planning to construct a new Day Care Center and Family Resource Center in the near future - Web Site: www.maryvale-ca.org
Maryvale (9) • Program & Services - provides long-term therapeutic care and a safe, healing environment to girls between the ages of 6 to 18 in a 24-hour residential treatment program - other services includes: day care, foster family program and aftercare services - collaboration with the DMH to provide mental health services
Maryvale (10) • Service Target: - serving about 90 children with a history of abuse, neglect and inadequate parenting who come from broken homes, regardless of their race or color - referred by various placement agencies of the Department of Children & Family Service, the Probation Department and the Juvenile Court
Maryvale – Residential Treatment Program • Staffing: psychiatrists, psychologists, social workers, special education teachers, recreational therapist and group workers • Program content: - structured residential group living - special education classes - year-round planned after school activities (Family Living Skills Program, Vocational Training Program, Volunteer Program and Campus Ministry Program)