1 / 20

Gateway Assessments

Gateway Assessments. Gateway Assessments - Overview. Gateway Assessments are an interagency project between Child, Youth and Family, Health and Education. For children and young people known to Child, Youth and Family, their aim is to:. identify health and education needs early

isleen
Download Presentation

Gateway Assessments

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Gateway Assessments

  2. Gateway Assessments - Overview Gateway Assessments are an interagency project between Child, Youth and Family, Health and Education. For children and young people known to Child, Youth and Family, their aim is to: • identify health and education needs early • ensure interagency agreement on how best to address needs • facilitate access to appropriate services • ensure children and young people get the support they need at home and at school.

  3. Health and Education Assessments – the pilot project Involved 4 DHB’s and 16 Child, Youth and Family sites between 2008 and 2010. The pilot project was reviewed and a number of recommendations for improvement were suggested. The recommendations were taken on board and the pilot became Gateway Assessments. Budget bid of May 2011 provided funding for the pilot to be implemented throughout New Zealand. There are now 12 DHB’s and 37 Child, Youth and Family sites that have an operational Gateway Assessment clinic. Implementation will be complete by the end of 2012

  4. Services for Children in Care Gateway Assessments (health assessments and education profiles) mental health services for children and young people in care funding for early childhood education for children in care, aged 18 months to three years. Budget 2011 provided government funding for services to address the needs of children and young people in state care. The package includes:

  5. Who are they for? Gateway Assessments are available to any child or young person who: is entering Child, Youth and Family care is already in Child, Youth and Family care is having a care and protection family group conference (FGC)

  6. Gateway Assessments flow chart Child Identified as likely to benefit from a Gateway Assessment • Social Worker • Engages with family and gains consents • Refers for health assessment & education profile • Provides information regarding child or young person’s history Urgent health appointment if required • Teacher/Principal/ RTLB • (School or Early Childhood Centre) • Completes education profile • Identifies issues affecting education Social Worker • Gateway Assessment Coordinator • Collates information from CYF, Health & Education • Collects existing health information • Collects family health history • Determines appropriate assessment Family Health (NHI) Well Child Provider ACC • Health Assessor • Reviews history • Undertakes comprehensive health assessment • Writes health report and recommendations • Health Referrals • Immunisations • Primary Care engagement Health • Gateway Assessment Coordinator • Drafts Interagency Services Agreement recommendations • Coordinates Multi-disciplinary Clinical Meeting • Follows-up on implementation of recommendations at 3 months Education CAMHS Social Worker Primary Child MH Services • Social Worker • Prepares information for use at care and protection FGC • Completes child or young person’s plan • Monitors agreed recommendations Paediatric Services Adult AoD and MH Services

  7. Gateway Assessments - roles and responsibilities

  8. The Child, Youth and Family social worker The social worker is responsible for: • engaging with child, young person and their family and obtaining consents • requesting the education profile and making the referral to the Gateway Assessment Coordinator • ensuring the child or young person can attend the appointment and has the right support with them • assisting with the development of the Interagency Services Agreement and participating in the multi-disciplinary clinical meeting • discussing the completed report with the child or young person and family/ caregivers and developing the plan with the family • ongoing monitoring and reviewing of the child or young person’s progress.

  9. The teacher/RTLB The teacher is responsible for: • completing the education profile and attaching any specialist education reports to the profile - this should be completed by someone who knows the child well • where the child is entering care, liaising with the RTLB cluster manager* • returning the completed Education Profile within seven days • ensuring someone from the education sector attends the multi-disciplinary clinical meeting, as required • reviewing and approving the education services suggested in the Interagency Services Agreement *As directed by the Ministry of Education, RTLB only work with children entering care between the ages of 5-14

  10. Gateway Assessment Coordinator • The Gateway Assessment Coordinator is responsible for: • collecting existing health information about the child or young person from other agencies (e.g. ACC, Plunket) • collecting the mental health and drug and alcohol history of the parents (if consent from the parent has been obtained) • ensuring the education profile information is provided to the assessor • drafting a health report after the health assessment has taken place for dissemination to the child/young person, their family, the caregiver and all of the involved professionals • drafting the Interagency Services Agreement, in consultation with the social worker and teacher • arranging multi-disciplinary clinical meetings • a 3 month review of the services provided

  11. Assessing health practitioner The health assessor is responsible for: identifying the health needs of the child or young person, including mental health screening and writing a health report completing follow-up referrals for the follow, as required ensuring the child or young person has a primary care provider reviewing and endorsing the Interagency Services Agreement once drafted by the Gateway Assessment Coordinator attending a multi-disciplinary clinical meeting if there are concerns about the ISA that need clarification or resolving.

  12. Timeframes Health and education information needs to be available in child focused time frames, so their needs can be addressed in a timely manner. The Gateway Assessment process therefore needs to be undertaken within the following timeframes:

  13. Examples of outcomes

  14. Primary mental health services - interventions

  15. New CYF Funded Mental Health Services We have new funding for mental health services to meet the needs of children and young people identified through Gateway Assessment. Extension of Intensive Clinical Support Services • Complex mental health and behaviour • 175 young people per year • Average cost of $14,300 • Evidence-based, family focused services New primary services • Mild to Moderate mental health = emotional and behavioural needs • 1,600 children per year • Average $1,550 per child • Evidence-based family focused services • Starting very soon Acute ICSS CAMHS Primary Child Mental Health Service Universal services

  16. Primary services – CYF will fund evidence based interventions Group Names of evidence based interventions • Watch, Wait and Wonder™ • Infants (aged 0-4) Primary Mental Health Services 0-17 year olds • Parent Child Interaction Therapy • Trauma and Abuse focused Cognitive Behavioural Therapy • Primary care or level 4 and 5 Triple P • Incredible Years • Children & young people • (aged 3 or older) • Young People Intensive Mental Health Services 10-17 year olds • Functional Family Therapy • Multi-systemic Therapy These rely on good social worker engagement & case management

  17. What the interventions do • ≈8 sessions for caregiver & infant with therapist • 2 parts to sessions, 1st half infant led, 2nd half focuses on the parent’s observations • Infant: improvement in attachment; cognitive development, and emotional regulation • Parent: improvement in parenting confidence, depression, & reduced parenting stress. • aimed at reducing challenging behaviours and promoting social competence at home and school • caregivers attend about 14 weekly group sessions • view & discuss videos showing caregivers interacting in appropriate & inappropriate ways • reinforced with role playing, rehearsal, phone calls and home work. Watch, Wait and Wonder ™ Incredible Years

  18. What the interventions do • combines information with skills training and support • teaches caregivers to apply parenting skills • targets behaviours at home and in community • several different delivery formats available. Triple P (Primary level and Levels 4 & 5) • understanding the negative effects of abuse • daily positive interactions (child directed interaction- parents/caregivers learn non directive play skills) and promoting child compliance (parents/caregivers learn to direct the child’s play) • live coaching either, in the room, one-way mirror, or the “bug in the ear” system. Parent-Child Interaction Therapy

  19. What the interventions do • goal-orientated systematic procedure to address challenging emotions, behaviour’s and cognitions • 8-12 sessions which can be face to face or computer based. Cognitive Behaviour Therapy (CBT) • for child and non-abusive caregiver • teaches techniques to manage the emotional response to trauma • training on parenting, personal safety and relationship skills. Trauma Focused CBT (sexual abuse) • targets perpetrator and child's behavioural/emotional adjustment • psychological education, coping skills, discussion, developing social support plans and developing communication skills. Abuse Focused CBT (physical abuse)

  20. More information • You will find more information about these initiatives on the Child, Youth and Family website www.cyf.govt.nz • You can also contact your local Child, Youth and Family site if you have specific enquiries about how this might affect you.

More Related