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Individuals and families affected by mental
illness face difficult decisions everyday. We must each do
our part to provide resources and promote recovery.
The Children’s Services Initiative
Coalition began meeting out of concern for children’s
mental health and substance abuse services. Bringing attention
to both disparities in the system as well as pain and suffering
families endure in the fight for recovery, Children’s
Services Initiative assists in letting the voices of those
individuals most affected by mental illness be heard.
Addressing issues such as a lack of appropriate
levels of care for youth involved in the behavioral health
system, long waiting periods prior to accessing needed services,
families facing relinquishment of their children in order
to obtain services, and funding restraints, the Coalition
set out to both identify and address such tough issues.
Focus group participants were asked the
following three questions:
1. Describe your experiences in getting
mental health help for your child.
2. What has worked in getting mental health help for your
child?
3. What do you need for your family?
From the responses, 244 codes were identified,
11 categories were created, and 812 quotations were recorded.
The following recommendations were then made:
- Have an approved “family
friendly” resource list in each region for families
to address problems when they arise.
- Provide a service coordinator
to families that can coordinate and link the various services
and providers.
- Implement prevention, intervention,
and treatment services to address substance abuse.
- Address the gaps in children’s
behavioral health services by increasing training for providers
specific to children and adolescent specialties to include
mental health clinicians, respite care providers, day care
providers, and foster care providers.
- Provide financial incentives for
students in the mental health field to specialize in the
children’s services field (currently a bill in congress
that is addressing the shortage of children’s mental
health care workers).
- Provide a service array that includes
early identification and intervention for children’s
behavioral health screenings provided by pediatricians and
medical personnel beginning at birth and throughout adolescence
including transition services to adulthood.
- Address policies that restrict
access to children’s behavioral health services.
- Do away with custody relinquishment
merely to access services and to ease the burden from the
courts, and use saved funds for support and direct services
to families such as transportation, and respite care.
- Revise the reunification process
for children removed due to behavioral health issues, to
accelerate the investigation process and work with parents
to provide the most appropriate services for behavioral
health diagnosis.
- Initiate flexible funding strategies.
- Initiate a public awareness campaign
(brochures, CD’s, flyers, video’s) on children’s
behavioral health issues including substance abuse, on signs
and symptoms, known treatments, and available services.
- Widely distribute awareness materials
through a variety of settings using Nebraska Federation
of Families for Children’s mental Health, NAMI, other
Nebraska family support and advocacy groups to disseminate
awareness materials to parents, physicians, behavioral health
professionals, the public, schools, churches, day care/respite
providers, businesses, etc.
- Support the dissemination of information
regarding school services to parents in an uncomplicated
format that makes available qualification requirements to
receive accommodations for children with behavioral health
disorders.
- Address the need for community
based and in-home based services for behavioral health disorders.
- Stabilize the service system to
keep essential services in place such as school based wraparound
services.
- Increase training for service
professionals, school professionals, and paraprofessionals
in family centered care practices, moving toward sanctuary
models and seclusion free facilities.
- Enhance family advocacy services
to assist parents to work more effectively with the service
system, so that parents’ voices are heard in addressing
their children’s specific needs.
- Initiate a method of follow-up
from professional services for families to monitor progress
following services.
- Augment access to services by
reducing barriers to affordable services and medications
for children with behavioral health disorders.
- Formalize a comprehensive family
support system by creating a single source for collaboration
and coordination of family supports across Nebraska. Currently
there are many family support organizations that work independently
of one another, thus creating fragmentation in our family
supports. An organized family support network would ensure
smooth flow of services across geographical and provider
boundaries, eliminating travel restrictions for families.
- Compensate families for participation
in advisory committees to reduce the financial difficulties
for taking time off work, for childcare, and travel costs.
- Devise a method to assist families
to make application for SSI less complicated and not restricted
due to parent income.
- Utilize service coordinators as
family advocates to support and collaborate with the schools.
- Train school personnel on behavioral
health disorders and effective classroom interventions.
- Increase the availability of Wraparound
services across the state.
- Organize support groups for parents,
and siblings living with mental/behavioral disorders.
- Enhance professional partners
to include service coordinator roles and functions and coordination
with schools to standardize behavioral interventions.
- Train law enforcement officers
on crisis intervention training. NAMI has a 1-week model
used to assist officers to recognize and deescalate psychiatric
crisis.
- Continue with the implementation
of Family Centered Care practices for Protection & Safety
and HHSS Caseworkers.
- Records for children and youth
need to follow them to services.
- Provide Integrated Coordination
Care Units in each Behavioral Health Region.
- Because every encounter is cross-cultural
develop partnerships with our families maintaining cultural
humility to better understand the historical, familial,
community, occupational, and environmental contexts.
- Initiate training on cultural
beliefs and practices for professionals serving families
to increase minority-friendly services that enhance inclusion
and culturally based interventions.
- Ensure culturally sensitive and
competent practices for interventions that can be individualized
and applied in a family-centered fashion.
- Include the importance of confidentiality
in awareness training for professionals, para-professionals,
education personnel, therapists, and treatment providers.
- Address issues of bullying in
school settings.
- Continue to support youth groups
such as the YES Group.
- Provide education to youth on medications
used in treating mental health symptoms.
- Provide training for educators
regarding mental health symptoms including medication for
symptoms, and positive methods to interact with youth experiencing
difficulty.
- Update treatment materials for
youth hospitalized for behavioral health disorders.
- Initiate support groups for parents
and siblings of youth with behavioral health disorders.
The Coalition is moving from recommendations
to action. The findings will be presented to individuals,
families, and professionals throughout the state for assistance
in determining future goals.
For additional information on the
Children’s Services Initiative Coalition or to find
out how you can become involved please contact Kate Speck
at (402) 466-4774 ext. 335 or kate.speck@doane.edu.
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