Group Home Program Description Manual
This paper presents findings from a structured review of treatment models that are relevant to group care and residential treatment settings for children involved with the child welfare system. Initiated and guided by The California Evidence-Based Clearinghouse for Child Welfare, five treatment models – Positive Peer Culture, Teaching Family Model, Sanctuary Model, Stop-Gap Model, and Re-ED – were reviewed for effectiveness. In this paper, each model s treatment features are described and relevant outcome studies reviewed in terms of their effectiveness as well as relevance for child welfare practice. Findings indicate that four of the models are either supported or promising in terms of evidence for effectiveness.
Dec 13, 2016 - Service Description. • Therapeutic. Are defined in a new Residential Services Manual which shall be developed by the Department of. Revised program requirements for therapeutic group home services. • Enhanced family.
Implications for group care practice and research are discussed. Introduction Group care is a very broad term that encompasses many different forms of residentially-based placement and treatment services provided to children and youth with a wide range of needs. It is a placement option or service at the intersect of the three major child serving systems - child welfare, mental health and juvenile justice – describing “a continuum of programs from substance abuse treatment centers to locked units for sexual offenders to family-style residential group homes, and occasionally even residential schoolsor therapeutic boarding schools”. Clear operational distinctions between different group care settings do not exist in the research literature (; ), leading to the aggregation of diverse programs under one umbrella term as if group care were a monolithic construct. Yet, group care differs along a range of dimensions, including function, target population, length of stay, level of restrictiveness, and treatment approach (; ). Group care has a long and often debated history in child welfare practice. It is theoretically intended as a placement of last resort, and as a response to characteristics or psychosocial problems that cannot be addressed in less restrictive family-based settings (Barth, 2002).
Since the emergence of a growing number of alternative family- and home-based treatment options, group care has increasingly fallen into disrepute. Concerns are manifold. Group care is very costly with limited scientific evidence for its effectiveness. It is also an intervention that ideologically departs from system of care emphasis on community-based care in the least restrictive setting (Stroul & Friedman, 1986).
Concerns further revolve around reliance on shift staff with often inadequate training and high turnover rates, issues of safety and potential for abuse as well as negative peer processes (e.g.,; ). Group care treatment cannot be found on any list of evidence-based treatments for youth with serious emotional and behavioral problems (NREPP SAMHSA, 2009). Instead, it has sometimes been cited as a treatment that may potentially have adverse effects (; ). Nonetheless, placement into group care settings remains a common occurrence for some youth, particularly for youth with extended stays in out-of-home care for whom alternative family- or home-based treatment options are less available. As such, it remains an integral part of the continuum of services for a sizable proportion of children in out-of-home care , and questions about the effectiveness and outcomes of services provided through group care settings are highly relevant. The Effectiveness and Outcomes of Group Care The outcome literature on group care is scant, and current knowledge about its effect on targeted outcomes is mostly based on studies with small nonrepresentative samples, and weak study designs, lacking control groups and standardized measures (;; ).
Existing studies, relying mostly on pre-experimental designs, have measured outcome in terms of symptom reduction (; ), behavioral and socio-emotional functioning (;;;; ), and academic success (; ). In general, youths who have less severe dysfunction, greater capacity for interpersonal relationships and acute rather than chronic onset of problems tend to have better outcomes (; ). Involvement of families in treatment during group care placement, availability of after-care services as well as shorter lengths of stay in group care further mitigate outcome and have been associated with a better prognosis or outcome (; ). Predictors of poor outcome include co-morbid substance use disorder, a history of physical or sexual abuse and early onset of persistent conduct problems and delinquency. While findings from pre-post or nonequivalent comparison group studies point to improvements in functioning following group care placement, a final verdict on the outcomes associated with group care cannot be rendered without carefully selected comparison groups to address threats to internal validity. A handful of studies have compared the outcomes of group care to those associated with home- or community-based interventions (;;;; James, Roesch & Zhang, under review; ). One of the main challenges is to address the baseline differences that are inherent to the placement of children along the continuum of services and that may not be random.
A few studies have addressed this issue via design or through statistical methods. Findings from these studies have been mixed. A few studies found more favorable outcomes for youth receiving community-based treatments (; ). Two studies found no differences in outcome after adjusting for initial baseline differences (; James et al., under review). Contrary to these studies, found that group care youth compared to youth in treatment foster care were more likely to be favorably discharged, more likely to return home, and less likely to experience subsequent placement in the first 6 months following discharge. Authors cautioned not to generalize results to other group care settings given the unique characteristics of the Boys Town residential campus. A limitation of much of the existing research is the treatment of group care as a uniform construct.
With few exceptions (e.g.,; ), most studies do not report on specific group care models, and provide limited information on the type of group care received by the study population. Purpose of Current Review The current paper responds to this limitation by presenting the findings of a structured review initiated and guided by the California Evidence-Based Clearinghouse for Child Welfare on prevalent group care treatment models relevant to children in the child welfare system. There are several reasons for this particular focus. First, a considerable proportion of children in group care settings come from the child welfare system. Currently, close to 80,000 children and youth under the supervision of child welfare systems are placed in group care and residential treatment settings This represents an estimated 16 percent of the current foster care population. Secondly, despite similar background characteristics among youth from different service systems, children involved with the child welfare system also have unique characteristics and challenges. Children in foster care have high rates of mental health problems stemming from histories of abuse and/or neglect, familial dysfunction, and experiences of separation (e.g.,; ).
While foster children have been shown to be high users of specialty mental health services , family- or home/based treatment alternatives to group care may be less available to them given removal from their biological family. This places them at particularly high risk for group home placement (; ). Thirdly, about 10 to 15 percent of the foster care population experiences considerable placement instability. Frequent placement moves along with older age and a higher rate of emotional and behavioral problems have been consistently correlated with a greater likelihood of placement into group care (e.g., ). Finally, the field of child welfare has progressed more slowly than either mental health or juvenile justice in building an evidence-based knowledge base; as such it is a stated mandate of the California Evidence-Based Clearinghouse for Child Welfare (CEBC) to advance the knowledge base in child welfare.
The California Evidence-Based Clearinghouse for Child Welfare The California Evidence-Based Clearinghouse for Child Welfare (CEBC) was created through a collaborative effort between the California Department of Social Services, Chadwick Center for Children and Families (Rady Children s Hospital, San Diego) and Child and Adolescent Services Research Center. The CEBC is meant as a tool for identifying, selecting and implementing evidence-based child welfare practices in order to improve the safety, permanency and well-being of children and families in the care of the child welfare system. Kohler 5ecd generator parts manual.
While recognizing a special responsibility to child welfare practice in California, the CEBC provides information that may be useful for any child welfare system. Review Procedures The CEBC uses a standardized review process, which involves a statewide Advisory Committee, a Scientific Panel consisting of leading national child welfare researchers, and Topic Experts. One of the topics of interest that had been identified involved higher level placement. While higher level placement may also involve settings such as treatment foster care and inpatient psychiatric care, the current review was only focused on group care. The review took place in 2008, and since then has been updated. A team of child welfare experts identified primary treatment models relevant to residential care.
The available published and peer-reviewed literature was searched, using the following databases: Campbell and Cochrane Collaboratives, National Child Welfare Clearinghouse, PubMed, Psych Info, Google, Google Scholar, and NREPP. Next, outcome studies were reviewed by the Topic Expert and rated on an effectiveness scale with five categories ranging from well-supported effective practice to concerning practice. Specifies both criteria for rating as well as the types of studies considered in the rating process.
Dissertations, descriptive articles about a treatment model or program, and reports to funders were not part of the review. Only peer-reviewed literature was included in the final rating process. The classification system uses criteria regarding a practice s clinical and/or empirical support, documentation, acceptance within the field, and potential for harm. A lower score indicates a greater level of support for the practice protocol.
In 2008, a not rated category was added for programs that are generally accepted as clinical practice, do not seem to present a substantial risk to those receiving it, but lack literature that would provide evidence of a benefit. Given the focus on child welfare practice, the CEBC further evaluates each model s relevance to child welfare populations and child welfare outcomes in the area of permanency, safety and child/family well-being. Overview The Positive Peer Culture (PPC) treatment model was developed by in response to the failure of conventional treatment approaches to effectively deal with negative peer pressure among troubled youth.
It is grounded in theories of social psychology and argues that social context is a powerful determinant of thoughts and behaviors. As such, PPC aims to transform a negative peer context into a positive peer culture, in which adult authority is deemphasized.
Group norms that reinforce mutual responsibility, prosocial attitudes and social concern are fostered through the development of trust and respect. The model assumes that as youth become more committed to caring for others, hurtful behaviors are replaced by prosocial and responsible behaviors, and self-worth is increased. Some of the behaviors and attitudes that are fostered include:. Treatment features PPC has four essential treatment components: (1) Building Group Responsibility: group members learn to keep one another out of trouble; (2) The importance of the Group Meeting: The group meeting serves as the problem-solving arena in which youth are able to help one of their peers in a safe environment; meetings are structured and involve problem reporting, problem solving, group leader s summary, etc. A distinct problem list is used in the program to ensure a universal language; (3) Service Learning: Youth are engaged in multiple community projects, developed to reinforce the value of helping others; many projects are conducted along side adult service clubs. Youth are taught that community service is an expected part of community living, not a punishment for misbehavior.
In the context of a PPC program, service learning is not simply a program component but a life-style of community responsibility and action; (4) Teamwork Primacy: a highly successful program management model which assumes that “teamwork” is the highest administrative priority. Staff teams are organized around distinct groups of children. PPC was designed for group settings, and has been applied in residential settings, outpatient facilities and schools. PPC is generally delivered in groups of 8 to 12 youth in 90-minute structured group meetings, which ideally occur five times per week over a six to nine month period. PPC does not have a parent component. PPC is manualized, and training is available in the form of classroom training and program immersion. It has been acknowledged that the successful implementation of PPC has been a challenge due to a lack of attention given to quality control.
Adequate training of staff is an essential component to successfully guide the group process (; ). Evidence for effectiveness Evaluative studies of PPC that have appeared in the peer-reviewed published literature are very limited, but include one randomized and one quasi-experimental study within the context of a residential treatment facility. In addition, one quasi-experimental study evaluated the effectiveness of PPC with “street-corner gangs.” It needs to be noted that both the Leeman et al. And Nas et al.
Studies were conducted on an adaptation of the PPC program, namely the EQUIP program. EQUIP combines elements of PPC, moral discussion groups and social skills training.
Measured outcomes include moral judgment, cognitive distortions, behavior problems, social skills and self-concept as well as recidivism. All studies were conducted with delinquent youth. Experimental study reported significant gains in institutional conduct and social skills in the experimental group relative to the control group; they also reported a 50 percent reduction in recidivism after six months, and a one-third reduction at 1-year follow-up.
In the quasi-experimental study by, significant reductions in some cognitive distortions and also in covert antisocial behavior were noted. However, this study did not find significant differences in moral judgment and social skills, overt antisocial behavior or the cognitive distortion of “assuming the worst” between treatment and comparison group. Similarly, the 1985 Sherer study reported improvements on resistance to temptation and moral development in the PPC group, but no differences in other areas (e.g., confession). The limited outcome literature suggests that PPC can be effective with delinquent youth in residential facilities with regard to some outcomes, such as improved self-concept and recidivism. However, there are also concerns about PPC. A case-control study by cautioned that PPC may not be the most effective strategy for youth in the juvenile justice system that had experienced maltreatment. Conducted qualitative interviews with youth who went through PPC programs and were highly critical of the group process.
Based on established CEBC criteria, PPC is considered to be “supported by research evidence” (Level 2). With regard to relevance to child welfare practice received a medium (2) rating.
Outcomes focused on child and family well-being. Overview Of all group home models, the Teaching-Family Model (TFM) is probably the most described and researched model in the literature. A 2002 annotated bibliography of publications of the TFM lists more than 150 titles, addressing a range of topics from research on treatment procedures, practitioner training, program fidelity, administrative support to dissemination/replication.
The TFM was first implemented in 1967 with the opening of a group home for delinquent youth as the Achievement Place Research Project at Kansas University. The TFM is best known because of its utilization at Boys Town (formerly Father Flanagan s Boys Town). Boys Town uses an advanced and updated adaptation of the TFM that has been described in detail. An emphasis on family-style living and learning in a normalizing care environment Besides residential group care, the TFM has also been applied to home-based services, foster care and treatment foster care, schools and psychiatric institutions. The model uses a married couple or other “teaching parents” to offer a family-like environment in the residence.
The teaching parents help with learning living skills and positive interpersonal interaction skills. They are also involved with children s parents, teachers and other support network to help maintain progress. TFM has been highlighted by the Surgeon General s Report on Mental Health, the American Psychological Association, the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention, and the Juvenile Forensic Evaluation Resource Center. Inspired by attempts to professionalize and improve care for vulnerable youth, the TFM has been disseminated through the International Teaching Family Association.
TFM is manualized and training is provided through regional TFM sponsoring agencies. Evidence for effectiveness Our review yielded seven articles, summarizing nine studies that met review criteria. Studied outcomes included behavior problems, symptomatology, family functioning and parental effectiveness, academic outcomes as well as service level outcomes, such as level of restrictiveness, and number of restraints. Studies reviewed included one randomized trial , one quasi-experimental study with an equivalent comparison group , four quasi-experimental studies with non-equivalent/non-matched comparison groups (;; ), and three pre-posttest studies (;; ).
Lewis experimental study was subsequently removed from rating considerations since the study used an adaptation of the TFM within a family-based, not a group care setting. Reported significant differences in improvements in academic functioning between youth receiving the TFM and an equivalent comparison group receiving treatment as usual. Compared changes in functioning for youth placed in TFM residential homes versus youth placed in non-TFM homes. Findings were based on observer protocols that measured adult/youth interactions, teaching, intolerance of deviance, youth social behavior, pleasantness of the environment, and family-likeness and youth self-report of delinquency. TFM homes were rated as having significantly higher levels of adult/youth communication and instances of adults teaching youth.
Kirigin et al. Evaluated the effectiveness of TFM homes compared to similar residential programs. Comparison group homes were similar to treatment homes in terms of youths served, size and staffing by a live-in married couple. TFM was associated with fewer offenses during treatment while the rate actually increased for non-TFM boys. In a pretest posttest study of 440 youth in a residential program, found significant improvements in problem behaviors as measured by the Child Behavior Checklist, significant reductions in psychiatric symptomatology and discharges to settings of lesser restrictiveness. A 2003 study by Jones and Timbers, using archival data, reported significant reductions in coercive behavioral control interventions following the introduction of the TFM.
Reported on a series of studies conducted in residential care homes in Canada and the Netherlands. The first study, a pre-post investigation, reported significant improvements in such area as overall adjustment, family adjustment, relationship with parents, and offense rates. However, the study also reported increases in post-treatment drinking. Study 2 measured levels of juvenile delinquency in youth experiencing a TFM program in the Netherlands and compared them to a cohort of Canadian youth in the same age range. The number of TFM-youth staying at the same offending level was half that of the comparison group.
Significantly more TFM youth moved toward a less serious offending level. The TFM was rated as “promising” (Level 3) with a medium (2) rating for relevance for child welfare practice. Outcomes primarily involve domains of child and family well-being. Overview The Sanctuary® Model represents a trauma-informed method for creating or changing an organizational culture in order to more effectively provide a cohesive context within which healing from psychological and social traumatic experience can be addressed.
It is a whole system approach designed to facilitate the development of structures, processes and behaviors on the part of staff, children, and the community that can counteract the biological, affective, cognitive, social, and existential wounds suffered by the children in care. Sanctuary® was developed by Sandra Bloom and colleagues within the context of a short-term acute inpatient psychiatric setting.
The model has been implemented and modified in a range of settings, including group care. Treatment features The Sanctuary® Model has several explicit features that constitute the foundation for creating a shared vision and common goals among treatment staff.
The model places emphasis on nonviolence, emotional intelligence, inquiry and social learning, shared governance, open communication, social responsibility and growth and change. Recovery from trauma is conceptualized as occurring in four stages that focus on Safety, Emotional Management, Loss, and Future (SELF). Using this trauma recovery framework along with cognitive-behavioral strategies, youths are taught skills aimed at improving their ability to adapt to and cope with traumatic and other stressful life experiences. The model is implemented in a variety of ways through staff dialogue and self evaluations of residential units structure and functioning, staff training, ongoing technical assistance, twice-daily community meetings, psychoeducation exercises used by staff in daily interactions with youth, and weekly psychoeducation groups. The curriculum to conduct the groups was developed for 12 sessions, which address the elements of the trauma recovery framework.
The model does not include a specific parent component. The overall Sanctuary® Model is not manualized, but training is available to guide its implementation. If an agency deems itself ready to commit to the full implementation, the agency undergoes a rigorous initial assessment. The assessment includes reflections from leadership on their readiness and willingness to implement the model, and on-site visit from a trainer to better assess the organization s culture.
The training takes five days with follow-up consultation available. Evidence for effectiveness Evaluative work of the sanctuary model is very limited. Targeted outcomes have included self-esteem, trauma symptoms, behavior problems, parent and peer attachment, as well as coping and problem solving skills, using a range of well-accepted standardized measures. In a quasiexperimental study, examined implementation and short-term effects of the Sanctuary® Model for 158 youths with histories of maltreatment placed in residential treatment facilities.
Using a series of standardized measures, the study reported significant differences in outcomes for youth in Sanctuary® Model programs compared to those placed in other group care facilities. Differences in improvement were noted in the area of interpersonal conflict, personal control, verbal aggression, and problem solving. According to CEBC criteria, the model is considered to be “promising.” The relevance to child welfare practice is medium (2). Research on the Sanctuary® Model has addressed outcomes of child and family well-being.
Overview The Stop-Gap model, introduced by reconceptualizes group care as a short-term arrangement aimed at stabilizing youth sufficiently for discharge to a lower level community-based treatment. It incorporates evidence-based practices within a three-tiered approach (i.e., environment-based, intensive, and discharge related) of service delivery for group care settings. The two-fold goal of the Stop-Gap model is to interrupt the youth s downward spiral imposed by increasingly disruptive behavior and prepare the post-discharge environment for the youth s timely re-integration. The Stop-Gap model recognizes the importance of community-based service delivery approach while providing intensive and short-term support for youths with the most challenging behaviors.
Treatment features Youths enter the model at Tier I, where they receive environment-based and discharge-related services. The focus at Tier I is on the immediate reduction of “barrier” behaviors (i.e., problem behaviors that prevent re-integration) through intensive ecological and skill teaching interventions. This includes interventions such as token economy, academic interventions, social skills training, problem-solving and anger management skills training. Simultaneously, discharge related interventions commence (Tier II).
These activities are designed to connect youth to critical community supports and include Intensive Case Management, Parent Management Training, and community integration activities. To the extent that problem behaviors are not reduced at Tier I, intensive Tier III interventions that include function-based behavior support planning are implemented. Depending on the needs of the individual child, it is anticipated that the duration of service may range from 90 days to one year.
Evidence for effectiveness Evaluative work on this model is still in early stages. McCurdy and McIntyre present data on the comparative rates of therapeutic holds in two units of a residential treatment center, one of which introduced the environment-based intervention after seven months. Groups were matched on population number, gender and disability. At twelve months, the intervention residence showed a decline in therapeutic holds, while the comparison group showed an increase over the same period. The model was rated as “promising.” The relevance to child welfare ratings was considered “medium.”.
Overview Re-ED (originally called Re-Education of children with Emotional Disturbance) is an ecological competence approach to helping troubled children and youth and their families entering child serving systems (e.g.,; ). This philosophy-based approach has refined its beliefs and practice since the early 1960s. Re-ED signified a change in service paradigm for youth, emphasizing a strength-based approach, an ecological orientation, a focus on competence and learning, an emphasis on relationship-building and the development of a culture of questioning and informed or data-driven decision-making. Re-ED was originally implemented and tested in short-term residential treatment programs as well as public school support services programs. Since then, the model has been adapted to a wide variety of community needs.
Treatment features Re-ED is intended to be implemented as a group approach with about eight to ten children or youth in one group. The treatment intensity as well as duration can vary depending on setting. Group meetings may be held multiple times a day for specific purposes, e.g., planning, problem solving, strengths-building. The length of group sessions lasts from fifteen minutes to more than an hour, but is primarily determined by the purpose, structure and goals of the particular group. From its beginning, Re-ED was committed to short-term enrollment (about 4–6 months residential care enrollment) and return to the community as soon as possible.
Some Re-ED services operate without a group meeting format, but still meet as family/professional teams to work toward targeted goals. Re-ED includes a homework component that is focused on the implementation of behavioral goals by youth and their parents. Re-ED was designed with a parent component. Discussion This structured review identified five treatment models relevant to group care for children referred by the child welfare system. Four of the models were rated as either being supported by research evidence (PPC) or being promising (TFM, Sanctuary Model, Stop-Gap). The Re-ED model could not be rated due to lack of evaluative data, which would meet CEBC rating criteria.
The models were generally considered to be of medium relevance to the child welfare population, and all studies included in the review primarily targeted child and family well-being outcomes rather than outcomes of safety or permanency. What do these ratings mean for research in this area, for group care providers and child-serving systems? There are several issues to consider. Limitations of Group Care Research This review introduces professionals and researchers interested in this field to group care treatment models that are fairly well specified and relevant to child welfare populations. The encouraging news is that four out of the five models had sufficient evidence to be rated, and that the quality of the studies warranted a rating of support or promise for effectiveness.
On the other hand, the combined body of rigorous studies on these models remains painfully small and, in some cases, dated. Currently, researcher Elizabeth Farmer is conducting NIMH-funded work on the effectiveness of the Teaching Family Model , and her work promises to advance the knowledge base in this area. However, there does not appear to be much progression of knowledge with regard to the other models, and the emphasis on the development of less expensive community-based interventions is unlikely to encourage development and implementation of new group care models. The limitations of group care research also need to be considered to understand the rating of “effective” for the PPC model versus the rating of “promising” for three other programs. PPC s rating is primarily based on one experimental study and the length of its follow up period.
While more studies have evaluated the effectiveness of the TFM, randomization remains the hallmark to determine efficacy, and more studies like the Leeman et al. Study are needed. However, conducting experimental studies in real-world settings, especially with vulnerable youths continues to be an extraordinary challenge that is often abandoned for pragmatic as well as ethical reasons (e.g., ).
Yet it is exactly this type of scientific rigor that will be required to provide definitive answers about the effectiveness of a model. Considering core ingredients Comparing the models to each other in their utility for group care settings is not straightforward. All models target youth considered to be “troubled” or “at risk.” However, while PPC, TFM, Stop-Gap and Re-ED appear to be particularly equipped to deal with youth who exhibit externalizing behavior problems, the Sanctuary® Model places explicit emphasis on addressing trauma within a safe and supporting milieu.
PPC and the Sanctuary® Model are intended for use with adolescents whereas the age range for TFM, StopGap and Re-ED extends to younger ages. None of the models have race/ethnicity or maltreatment type specifications. All models are described as short-term programs with stays ranging from 3 months to about 1 year. Emphasis on group treatment varies across the models: PPC and Re-ED rely heavily on (almost) daily structured group meetings. TFM and Stop-Gap may utilize a group format, but rely on groups to a lesser degree. The Sanctuary® Model is not specifically designed with a group component, but is more milieu-oriented.
A major criticism of group care has been its lack of connection and involvement with the youth s biological family. All models except for PPC include a parent component. However, we do not know at this time how consistently this aspect is implemented in each model. Unfortunately, research on group care models remains in early developmental stages and prohibits identification of essential or core ingredients at this time. However, there are a few treatment components in some of the models that are unique, and determining their role in the effectiveness of the model would deserve further investigation. For instance, a distinguishing factor of the TFM model is the use of Teaching Parents who live with about six to eight youths in small therapeutic group home units. As such TFM homes tend to bear more resemblance with treatment foster homes than with larger group care facilities, which traditionally rely on shift staff.
Given the stronger evidence for treatment foster care (in particular Multidimensional Treatment Foster Care) , this is a feature that makes the TFM particularly promising. Small therapeutic group care settings have been described as a realistic alternative for difficult-to-manage youth when treatment foster care is not available. In contrast, PPC s emphasis on peer culture raises concerns in light of prior research on iatrogenic effects (e.g., ). While the presence of these effects is not undisputed (Lee & Thompson, 2009) and is countered by some of the positive findings of studies evaluating PPC, there is evidence that adult-mediated treatment models compared to peer-mediated models are more effective for youth with significant behavioral problems and that heavy reliance on group processes can have detrimental effects. It deserves noting that PPC is not the only model that integrates concepts of peer governance and positive influence of peers. Many group care programs rely on group processes to some degree.
Within the context of this review, this includes TFM and Re-ED. The benefits and liabilities of placing youth with emotional and behavioral disturbances into one setting, and the factors that may mediate these effects, need to continue being the subject of systematic investigation.
The Stop-Gap model is undergirded by a conceptual model that is particularly compelling in today s evidence-based driven environment, emphasizing integration of a range of evidence-based treatments (e.g., parent management, intensive case management, cognitive behavioral therapy) within the context of a group care delivery model that is tied to the overall treatment and discharge planning of the youth. Unfortunately, it does not appear that Stop-Gap has been implemented or evaluated beyond the program described in the publication. The model has a lot of face validity, and group care programs and child-serving systems would be well advised to review it. However, without further implementation and research to test the effectiveness of the model, Stop-Gap will not grow beyond the “promising” stage. Considering outcomes The studies reviewed measured effectiveness along a range of outcomes, including moral judgment, cognitive distortions, moral beliefs, behavioral outcomes, self-concept, family functioning, restrictiveness of environment, academic performance, etc.
The utility of the models is in part determined by the relevance of the outcomes to group care settings and more generally to child welfare practice. Studies considered in this review primarily addressed domains of well-being, only two measured permanency outcomes (; ), and none measured outcomes related to child safety. However, little is known about the outcomes that are most important to group care providers and how much these outcomes may vary across programs or how much they converge with the targeted outcomes of a youth s overall case plan.
Group care settings whose programs aim to improve outcomes in domains similar to the ones captured in the studies here are encouraged to closely review the respective treatment model. To Manualize or not to Manualize? This review most of all highlights the need to specify group care models.
Only specified, and preferably manualized models lend themselves to dissemination and evaluation and thus, knowledge development. A relationship between well-conceptualized and implemented programs and achievement of targeted outcomes has been shown in the area of group care for juvenile offenders.
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Yet there is little evidence that group care settings follow clearly specified models, and even less evidence that they follow one of the models reviewed here. Usual care group care, like other bundled or multi-component interventions (e.g., treatment foster care, inpatient psychiatric care), presents a black box in which individual group care facilities “stuff” a broad array of treatments and services. At minimum, there are expectations that children and youth are safely housed and supervised, and state licensing agencies are in charge of supervising this aspect of group care. The placement or residential aspect of group care settings is generally funded through child welfare dollars. However, many group care settings are also expected - and receive mental health dollars - to provide treatment to address the emotional and behavioral needs of the youth in their care. Yet once a group care facility s initial program is licensed there is relatively little oversight unless there are overt violations of licensing standards. Thus, group care facilities have enormous freedom in determining their treatment philosophy and approach.
Current research knowledge about usual care group care is limited, but experience supported by some research indicate that there is considerable variability within and between group care facilities with regard to how and what type of services are delivered. Given our limited systematic knowledge about group care and the variability in client population, age range, treatment approach, lengths of stay, services provided, and targeted outcomes, it appears to be bad science to aggregate all group care under one umbrella construct and attempt to determine its effectiveness. However, classifying group care settings more accurately may be difficult or even impossible since (a) group care settings may not be able to identify a unifying and consistent treatment approach; (b) researchers may have insufficient information about the particular features and characteristics of a group care setting; and (c) doing so may lead to a critical shrinking of sample size that would undermine the usability of data.
Conclusion This is a time of unprecedented pressure for group care settings. Increased emphasis on evidence and outcomes, policy directives and class action lawsuits urging reduction of group care utilization, along with a growing number of home- and community-based interventions that promise to provide better care and outcomes for children with serious emotional and behavioral disorders have placed group care settings under renewed scrutiny. Many child serving systems have already successfully reduced their group care utilization rates and are in a position of leverage to demand greater transparency from group care settings about the services they provide and the quality of these services.
Research on group care remains in early developmental stages, and as this review indicated, far too few rigorous studies have been conducted to make a strong recommendation for one or the other treatment model. However, it is in the best interest of group care settings that genuinely try to deliver quality care to collaborate with child welfare service systems and researchers to identify the essential elements of their program, to critically review their program in light of the needs of the youth they serve, and to consider adopting or learning from the treatment models that already have an evidence-base.
. Review and to ensure that your program will be able to meet the requirements. To request an application, complete and submit an form along with the fee to: Child Welfare Licensing 141 NW Barstow Street Room 104 Waukesha, WI 53188 Review and complete the application. Once your application has been received, carefully review all materials.
Complete the application and gather ALL supporting documents. Submit all materials to the department as directed in the application packet. Once submitted, the application will be reviewed by the Child Welfare Licensing staff and you will be contacted about the next steps in the process.
Any questions regarding this process may be sent to License Continuation Child Welfare Licenses are non-expiring but need to be continued every 2 years. Facilities are notified by email when continuation materials are available on the (PIE). Materials must be completed and submitted to PIE 30 days prior to continuation.