Top Banner
Child and Family Service Review Outcomes: Strategies to Improve Domestic Violence Responses in CFSR Program Improvement Plans FVPF and NRCCPS Webinar September 23, 2009
29

Child and Family Service Review Outcomes: Strategies to Improve Domestic Violence Responses in CFSR Program Improvement Plans FVPF and NRCCPS Webinar September.

Mar 27, 2015

Download

Documents

Grace Burgess
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Child and Family Service Review Outcomes: Strategies to Improve Domestic Violence Responses in CFSR Program Improvement Plans FVPF and NRCCPS Webinar September.

Child and Family Service Review Outcomes:Strategies to Improve Domestic

Violence Responses in CFSRProgram Improvement Plans

FVPF and NRCCPS WebinarSeptember 23, 2009

Page 2: Child and Family Service Review Outcomes: Strategies to Improve Domestic Violence Responses in CFSR Program Improvement Plans FVPF and NRCCPS Webinar September.

Presenters

• Lonna DavisChildren’s Program DirectorFamily Violence Prevention Fund

• Theresa CostelloDirector, National Resource Center forChild Protective Services

• Shellie TaggartAuthor

Page 3: Child and Family Service Review Outcomes: Strategies to Improve Domestic Violence Responses in CFSR Program Improvement Plans FVPF and NRCCPS Webinar September.

How did we get here?

Page 4: Child and Family Service Review Outcomes: Strategies to Improve Domestic Violence Responses in CFSR Program Improvement Plans FVPF and NRCCPS Webinar September.

Child and Family Service Review

• Adoption and Safe Families Act (1997)– Changed the focus of federal

reviews of child protection agencies to OUTCOMES for children and families

• Safety• Permanency• Well-Being

– Engaged states as partners in the process

– Provided for technical assistance, and accountability for non-compliance

Page 5: Child and Family Service Review Outcomes: Strategies to Improve Domestic Violence Responses in CFSR Program Improvement Plans FVPF and NRCCPS Webinar September.

Child and Family Service Review

• Statewide assessment (with stakeholders)

• In-person review of 65 cases across 3 sites in the state (foster care and in-home), with interviews of involved parties

• Report with findings

• Program Improvement Plan (PIP)

– 2 year plan focused on systemic changes

– Roadmap for ultimately achieving outcomes

www.acf.hhs.gov/programs/cb/cwmonitoring/index.htm

Page 6: Child and Family Service Review Outcomes: Strategies to Improve Domestic Violence Responses in CFSR Program Improvement Plans FVPF and NRCCPS Webinar September.

Goal

• Improve Safety, Permanency, and Well-Being outcomes for children and their families in which domestic violence* is occurring

– Improve CPS practice and policy– Enhance systems of care– Build effective partnerships

between DV and CPS

*Intimate partner violence, including coercive control

Page 7: Child and Family Service Review Outcomes: Strategies to Improve Domestic Violence Responses in CFSR Program Improvement Plans FVPF and NRCCPS Webinar September.

Child and Family Service Review

• Safety– Children are protected from

abuse and neglect– Children are safely maintained

in their homes whenever possible and appropriate

• Permanency– Children have permanency and stability in their

living situations.

– The continuity of family relationships and connections is preserved for families.

Page 8: Child and Family Service Review Outcomes: Strategies to Improve Domestic Violence Responses in CFSR Program Improvement Plans FVPF and NRCCPS Webinar September.

Child and Family Service Review

• Well-Being

– Families have enhanced capacity to provide for their children’s needs.

– Children receive appropriate services to meet their educational needs.

– Children receive adequate services to meet their physical and mental health needs.

Page 9: Child and Family Service Review Outcomes: Strategies to Improve Domestic Violence Responses in CFSR Program Improvement Plans FVPF and NRCCPS Webinar September.

DV/CFSR Paper Strategies

• Make explicit connections between best CPS/DV policy and practice to Safety, Permanency, and Well-Being

• Summarize research on children and domestic violence

• Provide guidance on how CPS will know when they are getting it right

• Suggest how DV/CPS collaborations can focus their efforts in current budget climate

Page 10: Child and Family Service Review Outcomes: Strategies to Improve Domestic Violence Responses in CFSR Program Improvement Plans FVPF and NRCCPS Webinar September.

Co-occurrence: Domestic Violence and Child Maltreatment

• Over 100 studies available• Most studies found 30% to 60%

overlap, 41% was median• High rates of overlap found in:

– Child fatality reviews (41% - 43%)– Abused child studies– Battered mother studies

Edleson (1999b), Appel & Holden (1998)

Page 11: Child and Family Service Review Outcomes: Strategies to Improve Domestic Violence Responses in CFSR Program Improvement Plans FVPF and NRCCPS Webinar September.

Domestic Violence and Repeat

Child Maltreatment

• Review of 20 (second-round) CFSR Final Reports in April 2009

– Seven (35%) make a connection between domestic violence and repeat maltreatment

– In MA, one office reviewed all repeat maltreatment cases for 6 months, and found that 70% involved domestic violence

Page 12: Child and Family Service Review Outcomes: Strategies to Improve Domestic Violence Responses in CFSR Program Improvement Plans FVPF and NRCCPS Webinar September.

Domestic Violence within Child Protection

• Child protection system (CPS) case workers identify a history of domestic violence in 45% of families when active universal screening (using formal policies, procedures, and tools) for domestic violence occurs.

– Greenbook Demonstration Initiative, 2004

Page 13: Child and Family Service Review Outcomes: Strategies to Improve Domestic Violence Responses in CFSR Program Improvement Plans FVPF and NRCCPS Webinar September.

• May be physically hurt during assault against mother (accidently or purposefully)

• May be neglected, particularly when DV is severe

• May be sexually assaulted by DV offender (as well as mother)

• May be exposed to domestic violence and other co-occurring issues, e.g. substances

• May be exposed to domestic violence without other forms of maltreatment

How Children Enter CPS

Page 14: Child and Family Service Review Outcomes: Strategies to Improve Domestic Violence Responses in CFSR Program Improvement Plans FVPF and NRCCPS Webinar September.

Child Exposure to Domestic ViolenceChildren may:• Hear the violence, name

calling, intimidation, threats, disrespect

• Feel the tension• See the aftermath—broken

furniture, injuries to their mother, father being taken away by police

• Be used to relay messages, keep tabs on mother, harass mother after separation

Page 15: Child and Family Service Review Outcomes: Strategies to Improve Domestic Violence Responses in CFSR Program Improvement Plans FVPF and NRCCPS Webinar September.

Child Exposure to Domestic Violence

Children may:

• May have their own safety or well-being threatened—threats to kill, threats to call CPS (removal), threats of kidnapping or never seeing their mother again

• Be forced to participate in or watch the abuse of their mother

• Directly witness assault, rape of their mother

• Witness homicide of their mother

• Be injured or killed themselves, directly or as a result of intervening on their mother’s behalf

Page 16: Child and Family Service Review Outcomes: Strategies to Improve Domestic Violence Responses in CFSR Program Improvement Plans FVPF and NRCCPS Webinar September.

Differential Impact of ExposureFactors

• Severity and frequency of violence

• Age, and age at first exposure

• Length of time since exposure

• Co-occurrence of exposure and child abuse

• How child understands the violence

• Child’s own temperament

• Presence of consistent and caring adults

• Opportunities for healing and success

• Assets in the community

Page 17: Child and Family Service Review Outcomes: Strategies to Improve Domestic Violence Responses in CFSR Program Improvement Plans FVPF and NRCCPS Webinar September.

Implications for CPS Practice

• Screen all families for domestic violence

• When domestic violence is identified, conduct danger/safety and risk assessment specific to DV

• Demonstrate nexus between domestic violence and impact on child

• Increase safety of the non-offending parent and child together

• Tailor CPS intervention to the family based on the specific needs of the child

• Engage domestic violence offender to hold him accountable for harm to the child

Page 18: Child and Family Service Review Outcomes: Strategies to Improve Domestic Violence Responses in CFSR Program Improvement Plans FVPF and NRCCPS Webinar September.

Safety Outcomes

• Children are protected from abuse and neglect– Clarify thresholds and definitions related to domestic

violence, and use them consistently in practice

– Conduct universal screening

– Assess nature, frequency, severity of violence

– Implement domestic violence best practice to avoid increasing danger or risk

Page 19: Child and Family Service Review Outcomes: Strategies to Improve Domestic Violence Responses in CFSR Program Improvement Plans FVPF and NRCCPS Webinar September.

Safety Outcomes

• Children are safely maintained in their homes when possible and appropriate– Increase safety of non-offending parent

and child together by providing resources and holding DV offender responsible

– Establish family engagement and family team meeting strategies that keep children and mothers safe

– Provide workers specialized consultation for planning for DV cases

Page 20: Child and Family Service Review Outcomes: Strategies to Improve Domestic Violence Responses in CFSR Program Improvement Plans FVPF and NRCCPS Webinar September.

Permanency Outcomes

• Children have permanency and stability in their living situations.– Screen foster and adoptive families for domestic

violence

– For relative placements, explore loyalties and potential fears of domestic violence offender

– Provide training to foster and kin caregivers on supporting children exposed to domestic violence

– Establish DV reasonable efforts criteria

Page 21: Child and Family Service Review Outcomes: Strategies to Improve Domestic Violence Responses in CFSR Program Improvement Plans FVPF and NRCCPS Webinar September.

Permanency Outcomes

• The continuity of family relationships and connections is preserved for families.– Explore natural support system of child and recruit

placement resources based on existing relationships

– Establish guidelines for separate and safe visits for non-offending parent and domestic violence offender

– Explore availability and appropriateness of non-resident parent to provide a home or respite for the child

Page 22: Child and Family Service Review Outcomes: Strategies to Improve Domestic Violence Responses in CFSR Program Improvement Plans FVPF and NRCCPS Webinar September.

Well-Being Outcomes

• Families have enhanced capacity to provide for their children’s needs.– Provide funding for basic needs

– Refer individuals to appropriate services (avoid anger management, couples counseling, routine psychological evaluations, in home services that are not trained in domestic violence intervention)

– Support and encourage parents, when safe to do so, to talk to their child about the violence

– Develop a trauma-informed system of care

Page 23: Child and Family Service Review Outcomes: Strategies to Improve Domestic Violence Responses in CFSR Program Improvement Plans FVPF and NRCCPS Webinar September.

Well-Being Outcomes

• Children receive appropriate educational services.– Engage schools in development of screening tools

and processes for children exposed to domestic violence.

– Ensure that impact of exposure to violence is considered in development of IEPs

Page 24: Child and Family Service Review Outcomes: Strategies to Improve Domestic Violence Responses in CFSR Program Improvement Plans FVPF and NRCCPS Webinar September.

Well-Being Outcomes

• Children receive adequate services to meet their physical and mental health needs.– Establish basic screening for exposure to domestic

violence as a core function for all contracted services

– Fund/build capacity in domestic violence programs to serve children

– Fund trauma evaluations when needed

Page 25: Child and Family Service Review Outcomes: Strategies to Improve Domestic Violence Responses in CFSR Program Improvement Plans FVPF and NRCCPS Webinar September.

Systemic Factors

Collaborate with DV partners in:

• Data collection– Collect and analyze prevalence and practice level

data

• Training– Provide integrated, progressive skill development

• Case planning– Write separate plans for DV offender and non-

offending parent

Page 26: Child and Family Service Review Outcomes: Strategies to Improve Domestic Violence Responses in CFSR Program Improvement Plans FVPF and NRCCPS Webinar September.

Systemic Factors

Collaborate with DV partners in:• Quality Assurance efforts

– Conduct DV case reviews• System of care development

– Therapeutic services for children, children and mother together

– Highly skilled in home workers who are trained in domestic violence intervention

– Advocacy services for the non-offending parent– Batterer intervention services, responsible fatherhood

programs for the DV offender– Culturally specific services– Supervised visitation– Gender-specific substance abuse and mental health

services

Page 27: Child and Family Service Review Outcomes: Strategies to Improve Domestic Violence Responses in CFSR Program Improvement Plans FVPF and NRCCPS Webinar September.

Resources

• The Greenbook Demonstration Initiativewww.thegreenbook.info

• National Latino Alliance for the Elimination of Domestic Violencewww.dvalianza.org

• Institute on Domestic Violence in the African American Community www.dvinstitute.org

Page 28: Child and Family Service Review Outcomes: Strategies to Improve Domestic Violence Responses in CFSR Program Improvement Plans FVPF and NRCCPS Webinar September.

Resources

• Asian & Pacific Islander Institute on Domestic Violence www.apiahf.org

• National Resource Center on Domestic Violencewww.nrcdv.org

• Minnesota Center Against Violence and Abusewww.mincava.umn.edu

Page 29: Child and Family Service Review Outcomes: Strategies to Improve Domestic Violence Responses in CFSR Program Improvement Plans FVPF and NRCCPS Webinar September.

Resources

• National Resource Center on Child Protective Services www.nrccps.org

• Family Violence Prevention Fundwww.endabuse.org

• National Council of Juvenile and Family Court Judges, Family Violence Departmentwww.ncjfcj.org

and Technical Assistance