building child welfare and mental health partnerships to improve well-being

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Katie A. Learning Collaborative For Audio, please call: 1-888-398-2342 Participant code: 708638 Please mute your phone Building Child Welfare and Mental Health Partnerships to Improve Well-Being 1

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Katie A. Learning Collaborative For Audio, please call: 1-888-398-2342 Participant code: 708638 Please mute your phone. Building Child Welfare and Mental Health Partnerships to Improve Well-Being. Objectives for today’s webinar. Overview of the learning collaborative objectives and process - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Building Child Welfare and Mental Health Partnerships to Improve Well-Being

Katie A. Learning CollaborativeFor Audio, please call:1-888-398-2342 Participant code: 708638Please mute your phone

Building Child Welfare and Mental Health Partnerships to Improve Well-Being

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Page 2: Building Child Welfare and Mental Health Partnerships to Improve Well-Being

Objectives for today’s webinar

Overview of the learning collaborative objectives and process

Review the structure and timelines of the learning collaborative

Discuss preparation for the October 28th meeting

Questions and answers

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Page 3: Building Child Welfare and Mental Health Partnerships to Improve Well-Being

Vision and Mission of the Core Practice Model when implemented Improve the safety, stability, well-being, and permanency

of our children, youth, and families Application of the Core Practice Model will create a process

by which communication is strength-based, culturally competent, collaborative, empowering, and goal-focused. This model will result in the use of timely, effective services in the most natural setting possible in order to achieve each child, youth, and family’s individualized goals.

Increase collaboration between the child welfare and mental health systems.

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Page 4: Building Child Welfare and Mental Health Partnerships to Improve Well-Being

Katie A. Settlement Agreement Requires timely access to mental health services in all

California counties for children in the child welfare system.

Calls for a redesign of the interface between child welfare and mental health agencies, and identification of supports that are needed to implement the Core Practice Model -- in a sustainable manner -- across the state.

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Page 5: Building Child Welfare and Mental Health Partnerships to Improve Well-Being

What will we accomplish through the learning collaborative? Articulate state–level priorities for implementation of

the CPM, including Intensive Care Coordination (ICC)and Intensive Home-Based Services (IHBS)

Learn from implementation, including identification of barriers and solutions that can be disseminated to the rest of the state

Share regional perspectives with the state Identify needed resources and supports for training

and implementation across the state

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Conradi, Lisa
Under the second bullet - is it the implementation of training? Or are we talking broader implementation beyond training?
Page 6: Building Child Welfare and Mental Health Partnerships to Improve Well-Being

What will the learning collaborative accomplish, continued? Develop training and implementation tools to assist

with statewide implementation Establish a communication strategy that coordinates

statewide and county-level training & implementation Establish the collection of data to track outcomes

consistent with the vision of the implementation of the CPM

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Page 7: Building Child Welfare and Mental Health Partnerships to Improve Well-Being

The Learning Collaborative will focus on the following areas of the CPM, as well as other county-specified areasFOUNDATIONS OF THE CORE PRACTICE MODEL Cross-system Collaboration Teaming Trauma-Informed Practice

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Page 8: Building Child Welfare and Mental Health Partnerships to Improve Well-Being

The Learning Collaborative will focus on the following areas of the CPM (Cont.)CORE PRACTICE MODEL COMPONENTS Family Engagement and how we can engage families

in the process Screening and Assessment Service Planning and Implementation Monitoring TransitionSERVICE ARRAY/RECONFIGURATION

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Page 9: Building Child Welfare and Mental Health Partnerships to Improve Well-Being

Principles Commitment to collaboration across the child welfare and

mental health systems

Good communication between the state and the counties

Peer to peer sharing across regions and the state

An inclusive process that mirrors collaborative child welfare and mental health practice

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Page 10: Building Child Welfare and Mental Health Partnerships to Improve Well-Being

Who participates and for how long?

Regional cohorts, and the LC, lasts approximately 18 months bringing together representatives from the fields of mental health, child welfare, stakeholders from among parent, youth, community and Tribal partners, and subject matter experts.

Subject Matter Experts Provide technical assistance to help design, implement, and

track innovative solutions. Provide technical assistance in person at learning sessions

and between sessions via conference calls, email, and web interaction.

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Page 11: Building Child Welfare and Mental Health Partnerships to Improve Well-Being

Initial county cohort by region

Bay Central Southern Small County

Contra Costa

Fresno Los Angeles Glenn

San Francisco

San Luis Obispo

Orange Inyo

Santa Cruz Santa Barbara

San Diego Humboldt

Solano Tuolumne Ventura MendocinoShasta

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Page 12: Building Child Welfare and Mental Health Partnerships to Improve Well-Being

Statewide Leadership TeamState & County Leaders in Child Welfare & Mental Health;State-level Stakeholders; Training Partners; Subject Experts Articulate state-level priorities for the LC Plan the LC process Share regional perspectives with the state Identify common barriers to implementation around

the state

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Page 13: Building Child Welfare and Mental Health Partnerships to Improve Well-Being

Statewide Leadership Team

Identify needed resources and supports for training and implementation across the state

Identify training and implementation tools to assist with statewide implementation

Establish a communication plan that coordinates statewide and county-level training implementation

Establish a plan for data collection

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Page 14: Building Child Welfare and Mental Health Partnerships to Improve Well-Being

Roles of the Initial Cohort Counties Form a Leadership Team to guide statewide implementation and

participate in the Statewide Leadership Team Participate in Regional Learning Sessions to guide regional

implementation Form a county-level Implementation Team to guide local implementation

directs and monitors training and implementation efforts comprised of a broad – based membership from the child welfare and

mental health fields, training and facilitation partners, stakeholders (such as parents, youth, and Tribal representatives) subject matter experts, fiscal and legal consultants and specialists in implementation science

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Page 15: Building Child Welfare and Mental Health Partnerships to Improve Well-Being

County Implementation Team

It is recommended that each county identify “core” team members who are responsible and accountable for day– to–day implementation tasks and “extended” team members who provide additional recommendations, consultation, and other forms of support.

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Page 16: Building Child Welfare and Mental Health Partnerships to Improve Well-Being

Sequencing of the LC process 1st Statewide Leadership Team Oct 28th, 2013 Regional Learning sessions occur Dec 2013 – February

2014 Regional Learning sessions occur March 2014 – June

2014 2nd Statewide Leadership Team July, 2014 Regional Learning sessions occur Oct 2014 – Feb 2015 3rd Statewide Leadership Team between Feb –

April 2015

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Page 17: Building Child Welfare and Mental Health Partnerships to Improve Well-Being

Preparation for the first Statewide Leadership Team Who Should Attend from Each County? Space is limited; counties will have an opportunity for

broader involvement of their staff in the regional learning collaborative process. Participation in this event should therefore be limited to child welfare and mental health leadership who are most familiar with your county’s plans to meet the requirements of the Katie A. Settlement Agreement.

A maximum of four (4) attendees for each of the 17 counties may attend.

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Page 18: Building Child Welfare and Mental Health Partnerships to Improve Well-Being

Objectives of the first Statewide Leadership Team Learn about common themes that counties identified

as part of their Katie A. Readiness Assessments and Service Delivery Plans;

Review and provide feedback on tools that will assist you in your county implementation, and identify what additional tools would be helpful;

Engage in, and assist in, planning for the upcoming regional and statewide learning collaborative process.

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Page 19: Building Child Welfare and Mental Health Partnerships to Improve Well-Being

Draft AGENDA For October 28th, 2013 LC Welcome – CDSS, DHCS, CalSWEC and CFPIC Keynote speaker – Dr. John Stirling Overview of the LC process and what we have learned

through the Readiness Assessments and Service Delivery Plans – Chadwick Center

Regional breakout groups Discussion in affinity groups and/or topical groups Closure and next steps

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