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Building Systems of Care for Juvenile Justice Youth and Families

Building Systems of Care for Juvenile Justice Youth and Families. Idaho Children’s Mental Health Conference Dave Gaspar May 3-4, 2004 Boise, Idaho. Learning Objectives. Identify implementation of Systems of Care principles in serving Arizona’s youth and families.

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Building Systems of Care for Juvenile Justice Youth and Families

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  1. Building Systems of Care for Juvenile Justice Youth and Families Idaho Children’s Mental Health Conference Dave Gaspar May 3-4, 2004 Boise, Idaho

  2. Learning Objectives Identify implementation of Systems of Care principles in serving Arizona’s youth and families. Describe lessons Arizonans are learning from their experience in implementing Systems of Care principles. Describe collaboration strategies necessary for successful implementation of Systems of Care principles with juvenile justice youth and families. Identify obstacles to serving juvenile justice youth and their families in implementing the Systems of Care principles. Identify opportunities and barriers in the Idaho system dealing with juvenile justice youth and families.

  3. Systems of Care The concept and philosophy of “Systems of Care” has provided a guide and ongoing framework for system reform in children’s mental health. • Source Document for this information: • Systems of Care Issue Brief • Prepared by Beth A. Stroul, M.Ed. • Published by National Technical Assistance Center for Children’s Mental Health, Georgetown University Child Development Center in partnership with • CMHS - Child, Adolescent and Family Branch Center for Mental Health Services • SAMHSA - Substance Abuse and Mental Health Administration, U.S. Dept. of Health & Human Services

  4. Major Themes of Advocates Driving System Change 1. Most children in need simply are not getting mental health services. 2. Those served are often in an excessively restrictive setting. 3. Services are limited to outpatient, inpatient, and residential treatment. Few, if any, intermediate or community-based options are available. 4. Various child-serving systems sharing responsibility for children with mental health problems rarely work together. 5. Families typically are blamed and are not involved as partners in their child’s care. 6. Agencies and systems rarely consider or address cultural differences in population they serve.

  5. Myths about Systems of Care A. They are primarily designed to improve services coordination and integration. B. They do not focus on clinical interventions but mostly focus on system infrastructure. C. The philosophy is primarily focused on family involvement and cultural competence. D. They are different from and/or do not involve evidence-based interventions. E. No “traditional” services are included in them. F. They primarily involve providing “wraparound” services. G. They place greater value on non-professional services providers and natural supports than on other clinicians, providers, and treatment modalities.

  6. Defining Systems of Care A comprehensive spectrum of mental health and other necessary services which are organized into a coordinated network to meet the multiple and changing needs of children and their families. Stroul and Friedman, 1986.

  7. Systems of Care Core Values Services should be community-based. Services should be child-centered and family focused. Services should be culturally competent. Stroul & Friedman, 1986 and 1996.

  8. Systems of Care: Guiding Principles • Comprehensive array of services • Individualized services • Least restrictive and most normative clinically appropriate environment • Families participate in planning and delivery of services • Services are integrated – linkages between agencies

  9. Systems of Care: Principles • Families as partners • Cultural competence • Interagency collaboration • Home, community, and school-based • Individualized strength-based care • Accountability

  10. Child Welfare Juvenile Justice Education Mental Health Substance Abuse Primary Care Families Community Systems of Care: InfrastructurePartners

  11. Examples of Evidence-Based and Promising Treatment Models Used in Systems of Care Approaches • Multi-Systemic Therapy • Functional Family Therapy • Multi-Dimensional Treatment Foster Care • Effective Wrap Around (Wrap Around Milwaukee)

  12. So - Why has it been so difficult to implement and sustain a Systems of Care approach? • Do people simply not know about the Systems of Care Approach? • Are the incentives inadequate? • Is there insufficient funding? • Are managed care reforms and cost containment efforts getting the attention and support? • Is system development impeded by the lack of a pool of qualified, committed staff? • Is our world just too complicated? • Are resources unavailable to support the effort?

  13. The Arizona Experience - Background • 1982 - State of Arizona requested a waiver to establish the Arizona Health Care Cost Containment System (AHCCCS) as the State entity that is responsible for Medicaid services in Arizona. • 1993 - Behavioral health services were added as a covered service within AHCCCS. • 2000 - Proposition 204 (citizen initiative) expanded Medicaid eligibility to the working poor. • 2001 - Jason K. v. AHCCCS and ADHS settled after 10 years of litigation.

  14. Major Themes of Advocates Driving System Change - Again 1. Most children in need simply are not getting mental health services. 2. Those served are often in an excessively restrictive setting. 3. Services are limited to outpatient, inpatient, and residential treatment. Few, if any, intermediate or community-based options are available. 4. Various child-serving systems sharing responsibility for children with mental health problems rarely work together. 5. Families typically are blamed and are not involved as partners in their child’s care. 6. Agencies and systems rarely consider or address cultural differences in population they serve.

  15. Arizona System Reform Leadership • Governor established Children’s Cabinet. • Legislators formed Children’s Caucus. • Governor/ADHS/AHCCCS reach Jason K lawsuit settlement. • Agency leaders signed MOU. • MOU stipulated Executive Committee. • Regional Behavioral Health Authorities (RBHA) accepted the charge. • Community-based providers welcomed the challenge.

  16. Jason K. Settlement Agreement Defendants: AZ Health Care Cost Containment System and AZ Dept. of Health Services - Division of Behavioral Health Services 1. Parties intend to substantially improve the system for delivery of behavioral health services to the eligible children of Arizona. 2. Improvements contemplated emphasize partnering with families and children, interagency collaboration, and individualized services aimed at achieving meaningful outcomes.

  17. Jason K. Settlement Agreement • 3. Implementation will require initiatives to: • Improve front-line practices • Enhance capacity of private agencies • Promote collaboration among public agencies • Develop a quality management and improvement system • 4. Defendants will enter into additional agreements with: • AZ Department of Economic Security • AZ Department of Juvenile Corrections • AZ Department of Education • Administrative Office of the Courts

  18. Jason K. Settlement Agreement 5. Defendants agree to foster development of a Title 19 behavioral health system that delivers services according to the vision and principles set forth.

  19. The Arizona Vision “In collaboration with the child and family and others, Arizona will provide accessible behavioral health services designed to aid children to achieve success in school, live with their families, avoid delinquency and become stable and productive adults. Services will be tailored to the child and family and provided in the most appropriate setting, in a timely fashion, and in accordance with best practices, while respecting the child’s and family’s cultural heritage.”

  20. 12 Arizona Principles 1. Collaboration with Child and Family 2. Functional Outcomes: success in school, live with family, avoid delinquency, and prepare to live as productive adult 3. Collaboration with Others 4. Accessible, Comprehensive Service Array 5. Best Practices 6. Most Appropriate Setting

  21. 12 Arizona Principles 7. Timeliness 8. Services Tailored to Child and Family 9. Stability 10. Respect for Child and Family’s Unique Cultural Heritage 11. Independence 12. Connection to Natural Supports

  22. Reform Strategy to Take Multi-level Approach • State level • Arizona Vision/12 Principles/Q&A system • Covered services • Flex funds • Staff training/orientation • Local level • New services integration • Standing committees • Training • New positions • Service delivery level • Child and family teams • New partners • 24/7 family-centered access

  23. Develop and implement a statewide training program Add respite to the list of covered services Devise and implement a means to contract with certified Masters-level behavioral health professionals Expand Title 19 services Create Flex Funds Develop practice guidelines for monitoring medications Initiate a “300 Kids Project” as a demonstration project Develop annual action plans Enhance the quality management and improvement system Defendants will take the following actions:

  24. Project Match - Pima County CMHS grant 300 Kids Project - Maricopa County and Northern Arizona demonstration project System Development Catalysts

  25. A 6-pronged strategy will be pursued with attention focused on implementation needs. a) state level b) local level c) service-delivery level 1. Create sustainable and trusting partnerships with families and other child-serving systems. 2. Develop, train, and implement effective practice improvement protocols. ADHS/AHCCCS Annual Action PlanNov. 1, 2003 - Oct. 31, 2004

  26. 3. Continue to train and coach system staff, partners, and families. 4. Develop effective venues for barrier identification, resolution and feedback. 5. Improve the quality management system. 6. Internalize the understanding of system reform. ADHS/AHCCCS Annual Action PlanNov. 1, 2003 - Oct. 31, 2004

  27. Jason K Reform Challenges • Collaboration among formerly independent partners • Professional staff confusion of authority/role responsibility • Integration of non-professional status on child and family teams - families and friends • Implementation as much art as science • So much so fast • Replacement of professionally directed system with a family- directed system • Flexible funds require flexible thinking • Evolution away from medical model • Devolution of old-system power • Ambiguity of relationship between child and family teams and legal authority

  28. Lessons Arizonans Are Learning • Think big. • Patience, patience, patience. • Keep a face on it. • Don’t underestimate the family. • Think out of the box. • Remember - it’s as much art as science. • Keep the endgame in mind.

  29. Organization of Arizona’s Juvenile Justice System Judicial branch: County juvenile court/probation department (15) State Administrative Office of the Courts - resources Executive branch: State Department of Juvenile Corrections

  30. Arizona Juvenile Court Activity FY03 • Referrals - 75,027 (49,588 youth) • Petitions filed - 29,537 (17,903 youth) • Standard probation referrals - 14,454 (10,244 youth) • JIPS referrals - 4,492 (2,432 youth) • ADJC referrals - 1,368 (926 youth) • Transfer to Adult Court referrals - 115 (97 youth) • Direct files in Adult Court referrals - 526 (470 youth)

  31. County Juveniles Referred FY03

  32. Created and validated new risk/needs assessment tool Added new mental health screening tool - MASI 2 Renewed partnership agreements with state agencies and local community-based mental health organizations Agreed to host system partner liaisons at court facilities Facilitated access of client data shared by all partners Created new policies and practices specific to mental health youth Added state and local stakeholders to weekly staffing decisions considered by juvenile court judges Juvenile Court Reform Actions

  33. Signed agreement to embrace Arizona Vision and 12 Principles Served on Executive Committee leading reform efforts Agreed to adopt child - family team approach Assisted in development of practice improvement protocols Joined multi-level standing committees Added child-family team functions to staff responsibilities Arranged for training and staff development as needed Juvenile Court Actions - Jason K Settlement

  34. 5 agency-wide initiatives 1) comprehensive classification system 2) diversity 3) quality assurance 4) re-entry 5) work experience Comprehensive Classification System RAC program CAPFA (Criminogenic and Protective Factors Assessment) Continuous case plan In-home evaluation ADJC Reform Actions

  35. Intensive specialized mental health program Clinical/medical personnel director of medical services chief of psychiatry housing unit psych staff Community resource centers family specialists education transition coordinators re-entry specialists voc-rehab specialists ADJC Reform Actions

  36. Parole violator assessment center Evidence-based programs (FFT, MST, mentoring, therapeutic foster care) Annual recidivism report Youth Base (MIS system) ADJC Reform Actions

  37. Signed agreement to embrace Arizona Vision and 12 Principles Served on Executive Committee leading reform efforts Agreed to adopt child - family team approach Assisted in development of practice improvement protocols Joined multi-level standing committees Added child-family team functions to staff responsibilities Arranged for training and staff development as needed ADJC Actions - Jason K Settlement

  38. Perceptions Legal vs. child and family team authority Deficit-based approach vs. strength-based approach System timeframes Non-traditional services Probation/parole officer case loads Collaboration expectations Continuity of care principles and practices Eligibility Juvenile Justice Reform Challenges with Jason K

  39. Interface of data systems Integration of treatment plan strategies Pooling of dollars Agreed-upon functional outcomes Family-directed emphasis Degree of family dysfunction Degree of youth dysfunction and need Public priorities Juvenile Justice Reform Challenges with Jason K

  40. Building Systems of Care for Juvenile Justice Youth & Families Implementation of Systems of Care principles in serving Arizona’s youth and families Core Values/AZ Vision Guiding Principles/12 Principles Necessary collaboration strategies State level Local level System delivery level Identifying implementation obstacles Collaboration Family focus

  41. Building Systems of Care for Juvenile Justice Youth & Families Lessons Arizonans are learning from their experience in implementing Systems of Care principles. Think big. Patience, patience, patience. Keep a face on it. Don’t underestimate the family. Think out of the box. Remember - it’s as much art as science. Keep the endgame in mind. Identification of opportunities and barriers in Idaho

  42. Arizona Contacts AZ Department of Health Services - Behavioral Health Division Leslie Schwalbe - lschwal@hs.state.az.us Frank Rider - frider@hs.state.az.us ValueOptions Michael Terkeltaub - michaelterkeltaub@valueoptions.com Community Partnership of Southern Arizona Ron Copeland - ron.copeland@cpsa-rbha.org Jane Hedgpeth - jane.hedgpeth@cpsa-rbha.org Susan Olson - susan.olson@cpsa-rbha.org Maricopa County Probation Department Cheri Townsend - CHETOW@juvenile.maricopa.gov

  43. Arizona Contacts AZ Supreme Court - Administrative Office of the Court - Juvenile Services Division Donna Noriega - dnoriega@supreme.sp.state.az.us AZ Department of Juvenile Corrections Suzanne Larue - slarue@dj.state.az.us Emily Witter - ewitter@dj.state.az.us Alan Schwartz - aschwartz@dj.state.az.us AZ Prevention Resource Center Dave Gaspar - David.Gaspar@asu.edu

  44. Parting Thoughts Don’t underestimate the value and ability of the family. Remember - Do no harm.

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