Advancing Family Preservation Practice
Edited by:
- E. Susan Morton - Hunter College, University of New York, USA
- R. Kevin Grigsby - UCLA, USA
Volume:
150
Series:
SAGE Focus Editions
SAGE Focus Editions
November 1992 | 158 pages | SAGE Publications, Inc
The breakdown of the family has been blamed for many of today's societal ills. Are there effective ways to support a family with problems (neglect, substance abuse, terminal illness, etc.), prevent its break up, and make a positive change? How effective has the Intensive Family Preservation Services (IFPS) been at solving these kinds of family problems and situations? What about families that don't respond to IFPS programs? Do the programs differ in their effectiveness? Through an exploration of these issues, knowledgeable contributors offer their own experiences as a basis for tracing the evolution of IFPS and of the advances that have been made in the field. Advancing Family Preservation Practice covers such topics as the evolution of family preservation and the theories that guide it, child protective services, clinician-support worker teams, and the relative effectiveness of family preservation services with neglectful families.
Aimed at helping evaluators, practitioners, and administrators incorporate what has been discovered in IFPS practice, Advancing Family Preservation Practice is an important resource for those involved in the development, implementation, and evaluation of family programs.
"The issues [covered in Advancing Family Preservation Practice] are very relevant to the debates that are going on across the country among administrators, advocates, and legislators, as states are struggling to balance budgets with fewer federal dollars and skyrocketing costs for mandated health and social welfare programs. Support for "preventive services" will only continue to be available if these programs can be shown to be both successful in preventing family dissolution and cost-effective. Advancing Family Preservation Practice provides the most extensive documentation to date on potential program benefits of intensive family preservation services using program descriptions and research findings from established practice centers across the country.
Policymakers and practitioners need to read this book. Faced with the task of providing a safe alternative to foster care for children who have been abused or neglected, the material compiled in this text is essential to a realistic assessment of potential outcomes for children and families at high risk."
--Linda Heisner, Director
Office of Family & Children's Services,
Maryland Department of Human Resources, Baltimore
"This is a scholarly, down-to-earth book for all those who serve children and their parents. Bold, imaginative and practical, this volume crosses those disciplinary lines that separate social work, medicine, nursing, psychology, law, and education; and it captures how paraprofessionals function as supervised "experts" in transmitting the hands-on knowledge from all these disciplines into front-line, state-of-the-art, home-centered services for children at risk of losing their parents and their vitality. This book is a vital resource because it packs hard-earned empirical knowledge into an upward spiral of rediscovering and innovating community-based, home-centered services for disadvantaged children and their parents; and for those dedicated adults who have the competence and the passion to serve them."
--Albert J. Solnit, M.D., Sterling Professor Emeritus,
Yale University and Commissioner,
Department of Mental Health, Connecticut
R Kevin Grigsby and E Susan Morton
Introduction
PART ONE: BACKGROUND
E Susan Morton
The Evolution of Family Preservation
R Kevin Grigsby
Theories That Guide Intensive Family Preservation Services
Ann E Quinn
Child Protective Services and Intensive Family Preservation
PART TWO: EVOLVING PRACTICE MODELS
Charles R Soulé, Kaarina Massarene and Kathleen Abate
Clinician-Support Worker Teams in Family Preservation
Richard Schafer and Sandra D Erickson
Evolving Family Preservation Services
Marianne Berry
The Relative Effectiveness of Family Preservation Services with Neglectful Families
Julia H Littell et al
Shifting Objectives in Family Preservation Programs
PART THREE: SPECIAL POPULATIONS
D Jean Adnopoz and Steven F Nagler
Supporting HIV Infected Children in Their Own Families Through Family Centered Practice
PART FOUR: EVALUATION
Bruce A Thyer
Promoting Evaluation Research in the Field of Family Preservation
E Susan Morton and William Eyberse
Epilogue