1 / 27

ON CARE FULL STAKEHOLDER MEETING April 2, 2012

ON CARE FULL STAKEHOLDER MEETING April 2, 2012. BLOOM Massachusetts Mental Health Center. www.1856.org/bloom/setting.html. Therapy Room. Patients’ Waiting Room. Child Psychiatry Unit. UPDATES. National LGBT Health Awareness Week Updates on new programs

Download Presentation

ON CARE FULL STAKEHOLDER MEETING April 2, 2012

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. ON CARE FULL STAKEHOLDER MEETING April 2, 2012

  2. BLOOM Massachusetts Mental Health Center www.1856.org/bloom/setting.html Therapy Room

  3. Patients’ Waiting Room

  4. Child Psychiatry Unit

  5. UPDATES • National LGBT Health Awareness Week • Updates on new programs 3. Monroe County presentation to Educational Success Work Group 4. Summer Opportunities • Lourdes Camp • Learning Disabilities Association: SAIL (Summer Adventure in Learning) • Say Yes Summer Enrichment Program 5. World Autism Awareness Day

  6. World Autism Awareness Day 2012

  7. CENTERS FOR DISEASE CONTROL AND PREVENTION (CDC) NEW UPDATE OF AUTISM PREVALENCE • 1 in 88 children • 1 in 54 boys • 1 in 252 girls More children than are affected by diabetes, AIDS, cancer, cerebral palsy, cystic fibrosis, muscular dystrophy or Down syndrome – combined.

  8. UPCOMING EVENTS CHILDREN WITH SOCIAL, EMOTIONAL AND BEHAVIORAL CHALLENGES, INCLUDING AUTISM SPECTRUM DISORDERS: THE COLLABORATIVE PROBLEM SOLVING APPROACH (Conference) • April 26, 9:30 am - 5:00 pm • Location: Sheraton Syracuse University Hotel and Conference Center Address: 801 University Avenue, Syracuse, NY 13210 • More information at autismsyracuse.com WALK NOW FOR AUTISM SPEAKS • May 20 • Long Branch Park Liverpool, NY • Register at www.walknowforautismspeaks.org

  9. Project to Reduce Disproportionate Minority Contact (DMC) Summary of Findings and Recommendations Presented by Emily Napier, CCA Andrew Sicherman, Probation Department

  10. Reduction in Admissions to Secure Detention, Onondaga County, 2004-2010

  11. AFRICAN AMERICAN YOUTH AS A PERCENTAGE OF POPULATION GROUPS IN ONONDAGA COUNTY AND SYRACUSE, NY

  12. SECURE DETENTION ADMISSIONS, BY OFFENSE AND RACE, 2010 (N=103)

  13. TOP 5 CRIMINAL OFFENSES FOR SECURE DETENTION ADMISSIONS, BY RACE, 2010 (N=88)

  14. DMC FOCUS GROUP RESULTS • Parent and youth feel they are not “heard” by the system • Lack of transparency in the juvenile justice system • Confusion about the titles and roles of various system stakeholders • Concerns that youth in the City of Syracuse, esp youth of color, are being over-policed, compared to youth in suburbs • Lack of activities and opportunities for youth in the City of Syracuse • Feel the juvenile justice system is designed to punish youth, not redirect youth

  15. RECOMMENDATIONS • Continue to monitor DMC through the collection and analysis of quantitative data. • Fully implement the new Risk Assessment Instrument (RAI) with integrity. • Continue to build system and community partnerships. • Ensure that DMC reduction is integral to juvenile justice reform.

  16. ACCESS TEAM CQI • Started taking calls in March 2011 • Began taking PINS calls in August 2011 • 203 calls in February (previous high was 176) • 73 new intakes (previous high was 44) • Consistent “thirds” (one third intake, one third PINS, one third Information and Referral)

  17. ACCESS SURVEY • Phone survey with 31 families in November/ December (full results are in packet) • Overall, feedback was positive Areas for continued improvement: • Timely follow-up with families • Length of time to receive right services • Follow-up on family’s satisfaction with service they were referred to

  18. RESIDENTIAL TREATMENT • Next to psychiatric hospitalization, it is the most restrictive and most costly intervention • More effective with PTSD and emotional disorders than ADHD and behavioral disorders • Intensive exposure to other struggling peers may result in increased antisocial behavior • Most gains are made in the first 6 months • Gains are often not sustained or generalized post-discharge Perspectives on Residential and Community-Based Treatment for Youth and Families available on the Building Bridges website

  19. BEST PRACTICES IN RESIDENTIAL TREATMENT • Meaningful family involvement • Focus on issues that led to admission (not on curing all symptoms) • Continual focus on discharge from Day 1: what does youth need to be successful post-discharge? • Community services and community involvement and while youth is in treatment

  20. RESIDENTIAL REDESIGN • System of Care grant gives us a unique opportunity to reshape how we use residential to improve long-term outcomes • The entire continuum of services will need to adapt, not just the residential providers • Shift treatment/outcome focus from “success during placement” to success in home, school and community post-discharge • Use residential as a strategic, time-limited intervention to achieve specific goals

  21. NATIONAL BUILDING BRIDGES INITIATIVE • Strengthen integration of residential and community-based services • Agreed upon set of Core Values • Shared responsibility for long-term outcomes of children • Provides a framework and tools to redesign our system re: use of residential

  22. SMALL GROUP DISCUSSION QUESTIONS • What drives the decision to use residential services? • What do we want/expect from residential (services and outcomes) that we can’t currently achieve using home/community-based services? Please select a note taker for each group.

  23. GOT ART? 2012 • In recognition of National Children’s Mental Health Awareness Day • Art by children, youth and young adults (ages 5-21). All types of art are welcome—visual, audio, 3-D, performance. • Exhibit and Celebration Event: Tuesday, May 15 from 4-6 p.m. at the MOST

  24. GOT ART? 2012Theme: Heroes of Hope • Who helps you get through tough times? • Who helps you reach for your dreams? Information and applications are available at www.oncaresoc.org

  25. NEW THIS YEARWorkshops with Local Artists • 7 workshops in March and April • Give children and youth an opportunity to experiment with new art forms and prepare art for the exhibit • Participate in any or all RSVP to Bruce Brumfield at 422-5638 x 257 or bbrumfield@communityalternatives.org

  26. GOT ART? WORKSHOPS • Poetry • Drawing and Sketching (two sessions) • Collage Making • Hip Hop Dance • Beading/Jewelry Making • Paint It, Tear It, Create It

  27. WRAP UP • Family Tapestry Heroes of Hope Walk: May 5 at the Inner Harbor • Families Together in NYS: Annual Conference, May 6-7 (New Strategies for Navigating a Changing System) • No May Stakeholders meeting—come to Got Art? on May 15 from 4-6—bring your family and friends! THANK YOU FOR COMING!

More Related