Services are available to families who need assistance improving family functioning, increasing child well-being, and keeping children safe at home.
Services are available to families facing challenges that affect child and family safety, well-being, and/or stability when:
- children are at risk of being placed in out-of-home care, or need services to facilitate family reunification; and
- children can remain in, or return to, the home without compromising the safety of any family or community members.
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Research Note: Intensive programs were traditionally intended for families with children at “imminent” risk of placement, and one study found that treatment effects were strongest among the highest risk cases. However, programs may define “imminent” differently, and research suggests that services are generally not delivered to families with children truly at risk of placement. Further, research indicates that it can be difficult to successfully target these families, even when doing so is an explicit program goal. This finding reinforces the importance of measuring broader aspects of child and family functioning rather than focusing solely on placement prevention. |
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When families are referred and mandated to receive services by an agency with statutory responsibility, the organization works with the referring agency to promote efficient case coordination and collaboration.
Interpretation: Services are often provided through the child welfare, juvenile justice, or mental health systems.
NA Families are not referred to services by other agencies.