Transcript Document

Family Reunification:
Permanent Connections for Youth
and Young Adults
Shawn Sivly, Friends of Youth | Abbi Griffin, YMCA of Greater Seattle
Washington State Conference on Ending Homelessness | May 22, 2014
VISION
Friends of Youth envisions all youth having every
opportunity to succeed.
MISSION
We deliver a broad range of services to youth and
their families to improve their emotional stability and
self-sufficiency.
Client Services
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Friends of Youth provides services to at-risk youth
and homeless young people at 20 sites in 17 cities,
primarily in east King County. With 60+ years of
experience and national accreditation, we provide
safe places and emotional support for youth in
challenging circumstances.
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In FY 2013, Friends of Youth served over 5,100 youth
and their families through our three core programs.
Three Core Program Areas
Residential Treatment Services
• Therapeutic residential services, including foster care and emergency shelter care, to
youth under age 18.
Homeless Youth Services
• Street outreach, overnight shelter, individual case management, employment and
transitional housing programs for homeless youth and young adults throughout East
and North King County and South Snohomish County.
Youth & Family Services
• Mental health counseling, substance abuse treatment, school-based prevention
education and parenting programs in Issaquah, Snoqualmie and Riverview School
District communities.
Youth Haven Shelter
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Shelter provides immediate need for youth in foster care,
runaway, homeless and street youth under the age of 18
on the Eastside of King County.
24 hour intake phone to respond to any youth or family
needing help.
12 beds of shelter and supportive services for 6 girls and
6 boys (4 beds reserved for RHY and 8 beds reserved
Youth and their families receive counseling services and
community referrals to assist them in moving to
reconciliation.
Structured time apart can provide space and time for
youth and families needing to make a plan for a safe and
stable future.
Youth Haven Services
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Within 24 hours of first contact:
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Within 72 Hours:
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Youth meets with a Master Level Therapeutic Case Manager who completes a
Psychosocial Interview and initial Case Goal Plan which includes a domain that
addresses family planning/reunification.
A Master Level Therapeutic Case Manager contacts the youth parent/s and or
legal guardian .
A family session is scheduled.
Within 5 days:
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Intake Assessment completed
First Family session is completed.
Youth can stay from 21 to 30 days. Youth Haven offers 24 hour staff
support, a therapeutic environment, structured schedule, rules and
expectations, level system, assessments (D/A issues, mental health issues,
Independent living skills), weekly individual and family sessions.
Causes of Youth Homelessness
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Family Conflict
Economic Problems
Residential Instability
These factors define youth homelessness on the Eastside of King County. Intake information
on youth entering Friends of Youth shelters parallel data on youth homelessness in King
County, the state and the nation. At our Youth Haven emergency shelters, runaway and
homeless youth report the following issues at intake:
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Family Conflict – 41%
Abuse – 35%
Runaway – 23%
Homelessness – 12%
Substance Abuse – 9%
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Eviction – 6%
Respite – 5%
Mental Illness – 4%
Legal Issues – 2%
Family Conflict
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Many young people leave home to escape abusive family
situations. According to the UWKC Community
Assessment, 17 % to 35% of homeless youth have
suffered physical or sexual abuse. Other youth leave
home due to parental neglect, where parents under
“extreme stress” cannot continue to care for their child
or assume that their teen/s are old enough to care for
themselves” outside the home.
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Other family problems that lead to a youth being
displaced from their home: youth “come out” or identify
as LGBTQ, drugs/alcohol, mental health/emotional
issues, economic issues, conflicting personalities, etc.
Youth Outcomes
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Increased sense of safety
 Includes goals in areas of the youth’s life surrounding safe and stable housing
and immediate, basic needs, including immediate medical needs.
Increased sense of well-being
 Includes goals in the areas of long-term medical/health needs, substance
abuse treatment, mental health counseling, and development of coping skills
and interpersonal skills.
Increased self-sufficiency
 Includes educational and vocational goals and independent living skills
development goals.
Increased number of permanent connections with caring adults
 Includes goals for family counseling and reunification, if appropriate; goals
for aftercare treatment with community mental health and substance abuse
treatment providers; discharge placement goals for safe and stable housing
following shelter exit.
Strategies for Engaging Families
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Clear, honest, and respectful communication with families, which helps set a
foundation for building trust.
Commitment to family-centered practice and it’s underlying philosophy and values.
Sufficient frequency and length of contact with families, their identified formal and
informal supports.
A strength-based approach that recognizes and reinforces families capabilities and
not just their needs or problems.
Shared decision-making and participatory planning which result in mutually
agreed-upon goals and plans reflecting both the TCM training and the family’s
knowledge of their own situation.
Broad-based involvements by both parents, extended family members, informal
networks and community supports (Wrap Around Services).
Individualized service plans that respond to needs of youth and parent/s
Concrete services that meet immediate needs for food, housing, child care,
transportation, and other costs, and help communicate to families a strong desire
to help.
Praise and Recognition of parents who are making life changes that result in safe
and permanent living situations for their youth
Family-Centered Practice
Identify the family unit as the focus attention. Focus
on the needs and welfare of children and youth
within the context of their families and communities.
 Assist the family to strengthen their ability to
function together effectively.
 Provide individualized, culturally responsive, flexible,
and relevant services.
 Link family and youth with comprehensive, diverse,
and community-based networks of supports and
services.
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Evidence Based Approaches
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Strengths-Based Perspective: Provide a strengths-based
perspective in their handling the day-to-day intensive
support of our youth. The strengths perspective is based
on the belief that individuals possess abilities and inner
resources that allow them to cope effectively with life’s
challenges.
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Dialectical Behavior Therapy: The primary goal of DBT is
to help youth develop skills (their interpersonal skills to
improve their relationships with adults and peers, learn
to adapt to new situations, develop coping skills, and
increase their capacity to regulate their internal
emotions).
Mindfulness Skills
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Pay Attention
Be less impulsive
Focus
Be flexible
Wise Mind (balancing the rational mind over emotional
mind)
What Skills- What I need to do to be mindful (observe,
describe, and Participate)
How Skills- Be non-judgmental (Focus on the facts), Be
mindful, Effective (focus on what works instead of what
doesn’t work).
Distress Tolerance
Cope with pain and crisis
 Skillfully distract yourself
 Accept Reality
 ACCEPTS (Activities, Contributing, Comparisons,
Emotions, Pushing Away, Thoughts, Sensations
 Radical Acceptance
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Interpersonal Effectiveness
How to make a request
 DEARMAN (Describe, Express, Assert, Reinforce,
Mindful, Appear Confident, Negotiate)
 Building Relationships
 People Skills
 GIVE (Gentle, Interested, Validate, Easy manner)
 Building Self Respect
 FAST (Fair, No apologies, Stick to Values, Truthful
 Understanding the feelings of others
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Emotional Regulation
Accepting Emotions
 Changing emotions
 Observing and Describing Emotions
 People Skills
 Opposite Action
 Please (Physical, Eating habits, Avoid mood-altering
drug/alcohol, Sleep, Exercise)
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Problem Solving
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5 easy steps in solving a problem
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Describing the problem
Brain Storm
Pros and Cons
Evaluate the Results
Make a choice and take action
4 options for dealing with any problem
Youth Haven Outcomes
17 RHY served (October 2013-April 2014).
 11 out of 17 families engaged in family therapy.
 16 out of 17 youth exited to safe and stable housing
(11 of those youth returned to family).
 16 out of 17 youth accomplished 50% of their goals
on their case goal plan.
 8 out of 11 youth reported that their circumstances.
improved within the home. Aftercare was continued
with these 8 families.
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Thank You!
On behalf of the
homeless and at risk
young people who rely
on our housing,
counseling,
employment,
shelter, and case
management services,
thank you!
“
Resident of New Ground Bothell, Transitional Housing for Homeless Moms 18-21 and their babies.
YMCA Lifelong Family
Connections Program
ABBI GRIFFIN
SEAT TLE, WA
YMCA of Greater Seattle:
We are more than a gym
Family Services and Mental Health
◦ Strengthen health and safety of youth, families and
communities
◦ Evidence-based practice
◦ Support of natural networks and community partners
◦ Provide strengths-based, solutions-focused, culturally
competent, individualized crisis support, mental health,
permanency services, and training that is costumerdriven
◦ Advocates for child healthcare, mental health, and child
welfare systems change
YMCA Young Adult Services
◦ Youth and Young Adults aging out of foster care
and homeless youth up to age 25
◦ Staff support and assistance for education,
employment, family connections, housing,
financial assistance and life skills
◦ Drop-In center resources
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LFI
Affordable Healthcare
IDA
Youth Housing Connection
Program Overview
What we do
How we do it
Where we do it
What We Do
Former and current foster youth
Ages 11-25
Limited to youth and young adults without any
supportive adult connections (not counting social
service professionals)
What We Do: Challenges
Family commitment/consistency
Engagement with Department restrictions
Adoption Records
DSHS records/history
What We Do: Successes
Youth engagement/enthusiasm
Statistics
Partnerships
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Casey Family Programs
United Way of King County
Street Youth Ministries
Northwest Adoption Exchange
DSHS
Seneca Center
How We Do It: Tools
Mobility Map
Connectedness Map
Connection Bubbles
Mobility Map Example
Connectedness Map Example
Connection Bubbles Example
How We Do It: Strategies
Seneca Center Search
DSHS Relative Search Unit
Public Resources
◦ White pages
◦ King County Jail
◦ Vital Records
Social Media
◦ Facebook
◦ Linked In
◦ Pipl.com
Where We Do It
Everywhere in King County!
◦ Coffee shops
◦ Restaurants
◦ Libraries
◦ Schools
◦ 2100 Building
Resources
Mobility Mapping:
http://www.pacwcbt.pitt.edu/curriculum/207%20Family%20Finding/Day%201_2/TrnrRsrc
s/Res04_MbltyMppng_FlwDgrms.pdf
Connectedness Map:
http://www.pacwcbt.pitt.edu/curriculum/207%20Family%20Finding/Day%201_2/Hndts/H
O16_OthrFmlyFndngTls.pdf
Casey Family Programs-Austin, TX Office: http://www.casey.org/Locations/Texas/Austin/
YMCA Webpage: http://www.seattleymca.org/Locations/FSMH/Pages/Home.aspx
United Way of King County: http://www.uwkc.org/
NIPFC: http://www.familyfinding.org/
Questions?
Contact Information
Shawn Sivly, Friends of Youth
[email protected]
Abbi Griffin, YMCA of Greater Seattle
[email protected]