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Community Based Interventions In Two Parts: Systems Of Care And Approaches To Recovery From Psychological Trauma. Lenore B. Behar, PhD, Director Child & Family Program Strategies Durham, North Carolina.
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Community Based Interventions In Two Parts: Systems Of Care AndApproaches To Recovery From Psychological Trauma Lenore B. Behar, PhD, Director Child & Family Program Strategies Durham, North Carolina
Presentation forMississippi Institute on School Health,Wellness and SafetyThe Super Conference September 27-29, 2006 Philadelphia, Mississippi
For Bibliography & Slides Go to: www.lenorebehar.com See: Presentations Community Based Interventions In Two Parts: Systems Of Care And Approaches To Recovery From Psychological Trauma Mississippi Super Conference,September 2006
Definitions Children: The term “children” includes all people eligible for System of Care services, as defined by the State.
Two Paths for Children Exposed to Trauma • System of Care as a Mode of Service Delivery for Children with Serious Emotional Problems • Trauma Focused Interventions, • usually Individual or Family Therapies
Converging Paths for Children Exposed to Trauma • Since 1985, System of Care has been federal policy for children with serious emotional disturbances, and their families • Since 1993, System of Care has been state policy in Mississippi
The Focus of System of Carein Mississippi To provide community based care and decrease the use of inappropriate out-of-home placements by using pooled resources from mental health, education, child welfare, and Medicaid for children with SED
How Mississippi SOC Evolved • legislatively mandated services—one of the first in the country • mechanisms to review service quality • policy guidance from the State • state and community level interagency teams for children who are difficult to serve—multi-agency assessment and planning teams (MAP) • teams include agencies and parents
Support from the Family Organization • Mississippi Families as Allies for Children's Mental Health (MSFAA) established in 1990 • one of the first family-run, family focused organizations in the country • provided ongoing support to System of Care development
System of Care Principles • Child centered, individualized • Family focused • Community based • Comprehensive • Culturally competent • Accountable/evidence based • Coordinated across agencies • Requires care management
Why Do We Need SOC? • Need collective expertise • Need unified approach to child and family • Need to use all the resources available to child and family
What is the Population for the System of Care? The definition is clear: • Children with serious/severe emotional disturbances and their families • Children and families who need the services of multiple agencies, or who need multiple services
What is SED? An emotional/behavioral disorder diagnosed by a qualified professional that: • Requires services of several agencies • Significantly impairs functioning • Is anticipated to continue for a significant amount of time
Role of Agencies • Identify children needing services • Identify services needed by the child and family • Coordinate services within agency • Coordinate services across agencies • Use a case manager, if needed
How to Access SOC/MAP • Refer through your agency representative to the MAP Team • Refer directly to the MAP Team leader • Refer through community mental health center
Demonstration Sites • 1999-2006, Children of Mississippi and their Parents Accessing Strength Based Services (COMPASS)in Hinds County • 2006-2012, the Pinebelt System of Care in Forrest, Lamar and Marion Counties
Acceptance of System of Care • Surgeon General’s Report, 2000 • Report of the President’s New Freedom Commission, 2003 • Over $100 million annual funding by Congress through the Center for Mental Health Services, SAMHSA • Lawsuit settlements in several states • State statutes and policies
Relevance to Children Exposed to Trauma • 20 years of study of system of care issues has clarified the value of context of services • Studies of clinical effectiveness of services for children exposed to trauma have evolved separately • These two paths are merging for improved services to children and families
Definitions Trauma • Physical Abuse and Neglect • Sexual Abuse • Traumatic Grief • Domestic Violence • Community and School Violence National Child Traumatic Stress Network, 2006
Definitions Trauma • Complex Trauma(multiple trauma) • Medical Trauma • Refugee and War Zone Trauma • Natural Disasters • Terrorism
Two Groups of Children • Group 1: Children exposed to trauma who exhibit symptoms requiring treatment; show the potential for PTSD (about 20%) • Group 2: Children exposed to trauma who will recover without treatment (about 80%)
Description of the Groups Both may show the same symptoms initially • Group 1: Symptoms increase; children do not recover with initial intervention • Group 2: Shows resilience, recovery
System of Care for Group 1 They meet the definition of serious or severe disturbance: • The disorder interferes with daily functioning (sleep, school, interactions, thinking) • It is projected to be long term, without treatment • Long-term effects without treatment can be damaging
SOC Principles Should Apply • Child centered, individualized • Strengths based • Family focused • Community based • Comprehensive; formal and informal • Culturally competent • Accountable/evidence based • Coordinated across agencies • Requires care management
Evidence Based Services for Group 1 • Include: • Cognitive Behavioral Therapy • Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR) • Trauma Focused Individual, Family and Group Treatment
Online Course in Trauma Focused CBT www.musc.edu/tfcbt
Importance of Trauma Practices in Systems of Care Children exposed to trauma • Had higher service costs • Used more high-end services, including: psychiatric hospitalization, residential treatment,and crisis intervention services at higher cost Yoe, Burns et al, 2004
Importance of Trauma Practices in Systems of Care • Used more Case Management services at higher cost; and • Used more outpatient-clinical and medication management services at higher cost
Importance of Trauma Practices in Systems of Care Groups were the same in service use and costs in • Substance Abuse Tx • Home-Based Family Services • Day Treatment • Community Support Services • Behavioral Health Pharmacy • In-Home Services
Group 2, Why Intervene? • To alleviate traumatic stress reactions • To provide comfort • To (possibly) prevent longer-term, more serious reactions • To identify those who need more intensive interventions
SOC Principles for Group 2 • Not child centered, not individualized • Strengths based • Family involved • Community based • Comprehensive, only informal services • Culturally competent • Accountable/evidence based • Coordinated across agencies • Does not require care management
Community Based • Interventions delivered in the child’s “community” • With peers • In school or other group setting • Involves child’s helpers-parents, teachers, shelter aides • Uses indigenous assistants
Strengths Based • Focuses on stabilization • Corrects misperceptions • Emphasizes maintaining psychological control--coping • Emphasizes support systems • Focuses on health and self-care
Family Focused • Parents involved in planning • Parents involved in learning how to cope • Parents involved in ongoing support of children
Impact of Trauma on Schools Events of past 16 years: • Desert Storm—the first war fought on television • Oklahoma City bombing—news coverage • School shootings • September 11, 2001 • Hurricane Katrina Marlene Wong, 2006
Crisis & Emergency Planfor SchoolsMental Health Component www.ed.gov/emergencyplan
Mitigation and Prevention • Identify possible disasters • Identify potential hazards/ barriers to a good response transportation routes factories/other highly populated areas
Preparation Develop an emergency response plan; consider emotional responses • Establish relationships with mental health professionals • Develop protocols for response • Train staff in psychological first aid • Establish back-up systems • Practice, practice, practice
Response • Assess level of exposure • Identify those most at risk • Provide support/first aid • Provide timely information/media messages • Identify those who need longer-term intervention and arrange it
Recovery • Address long-term needs through interventions using coping strategies • Address long-term needs through referral to community or in-school specialists • Plan for anniversaries
Actions for Schools • Recognize children are vulnerable to many kinds of trauma through direct or indirect exposure • Central point for community—50% of people involved with school
Ensure Internal Coordination • Establish who is in charge • Establish roles for each entity school safety personnel resource officers school counselors/psych./sw school health teachers
Group 2: Evidence Based Services/Promising Practices • Psychological First-Aid • Post Trauma Stress Management • Classroom-Based Interventions or Group Interventions National Center for PTSD, 2005, Macy, Behar, et al 2005, Macy, 2006
Trauma Response Teams Examples of Effective Programs • Center for Trauma Psychology • Community • Classroom • Community Policing Project (Yale) • Community Stress Prevention Centre (Israel)
Center for Trauma Psychology-Community • Intensively trained volunteers • Follow a clear protocol • Establish contacts in communities • Provide Psychological First Aid/Post Traumatic Stress Management Informal evidence of effectiveness
Center for Trauma Psychology--Classroom • Uses classroom based coping groups • Trains teachers • Involves parents • Used also by Save the Children Most evidence of effectiveness
Community Policing Project • Highly trained staff • Train police to handle child cases • Ride along with police • Provide team interventions—psychologists & police together Informal evidence of effectiveness
Community Stress Prevention Centre (Israel) • Trains child caregivers, parents, teachers, first responders • Provides back-up • Experienced in international relief Informal evidence of effectiveness—theory based
Resources at www.nctsnet.org For • Educators • General Public • Juvenile Justice Professionals • Media • Mental Health/Medical Professionals • Parents and Caregivers • Policy Makers