Multiple Response System (MRS) and System of Care (SOC)
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Transcript of Multiple Response System (MRS) and System of Care (SOC)
Multiple Response System (MRS) and
System of Care (SOC)
North Carolina’s Child Welfare Reform Model
The North Carolina Foster and Adoptive Parent AssociationShining the Spotlight: A Decade of Dedication
Twin City Quarter Embassy Suites & Marriott April 25-27, 2008
What is MRS?
North Carolina’s Child Welfare Reform
1. Strengths based structured intake2. Choice of two assessment responses for reports of child
neglect and dependency3. Coordination between Work First (TANF) and child welfare4. Coordination with law enforcement on cases of abuse5. Redesign of CPS In-Home Services6. Child and Family Team (CFT) meetings throughout the life of
the case7. Shared Parenting meetings
What is SOC?
“System of Care is not a program – it is a philosophy of how care should be delivered. Systems of Care is an approach to services that recognize the importance of family, school and community, and seeks to promote the full potential of every child and youth by addressing their physical, emotional, intellectual, cultural and social needs.”1
1 United States Department of Health and Human Services, Substance Abuse & Mental Health Services Administration “Systems of Care,” http://systemsofcare.samhsa.gov/
SOC Supports MRS
SOC&MRS
What is SOC?
North Carolina’s Child Welfare Reform Based on a System of Care Model
1. Culturally Competent2. Child, Youth, and Family Involvement3. Individualized, Strengths Based Care4. Community Based Services and Supports5. Interagency Collaboration6. Accountability to Results
What is FCP?
North Carolina’s Child Welfare Reform Based on Six Family Centered-Practice Principles of Partnership
1. Everyone desires respect2. Everyone wants to be heard3. Everyone has strengths4. Judgments can wait5. Partners share power6. Partnership is a process
SOC and FCP A Crosswalk
System of Care Family Centered Practice1. Cultural Competence 1. Everyone Desires
Respect2. Child, Youth, and Family
Involvement2. Everyone Needs to be
Heard
3. Individualized Strengths Based Care
3. Partners Share Power
4. Community Based Services and Support
4. Judgments Can Wait
5. Interagency Collaboration 5. Everyone Has Strengths
6. Accountability to Results 6. Partnership is a Process
How it Works!
What is MRS?
North Carolina’s Child Welfare Reform
1. Strengths based structured intake2. Choice of two assessment responses for reports of child
neglect and dependency3. Coordination between Work First (TANF) and child welfare4. Coordination with law enforcement on cases of abuse5. Redesign of CPS In-Home Services6. Child and Family Team (CFT) meetings throughout the life of
the case7. Shared Parenting meetings
Child and Family Team Meetings
Done MRS / SOC Style…CFT Meetings:
• Recognize and respect the family as the experts of their own children and that no one knows a family’s strengths and needs better than the family
• Moves away from traditional child welfare service planning which is deficits based and assumes child welfare worker is the professional by trusting and believing that families can solve their own problems
• Values the supports (both formal and informal) that the family brings to the table
• Is guided by a neutral facilitator to give voice to both the family and the professionals
Your Role in the CFT Meeting
As Foster and Adoptive Parents You Can Help By:
• Preparing the child in your foster home by helping them understand this meeting
• Supporting the child by helping them express their wishes and desires
• Being willing to be a teacher and an informal support for the birth family
• Being willing to support the birth family by sharing your observations of the child’s daily progress, successes, challenges, and needs
• If adoptive parents, consider being advocate / mentors to both foster parents and birth families during the meetings
What is MRS?
North Carolina’s Child Welfare Reform
1. Strengths based structured intake2. Choice of two assessment responses for reports of child
neglect and dependency3. Coordination between Work First (TANF) and child welfare4. Coordination with law enforcement on cases of abuse5. Redesign of CPS In-Home Services6. Child and Family Team (CFT) meetings throughout the life of
the case7. Shared Parenting meetings
Shared Parenting Meetings
Done MRS / SOC Style…Shared Parenting Meetings:
• Respects the role of the birth family within a child’s life and recognizes the family as the experts of their own children
• Provides an opportunity to value and to continue to help develop the birth family’s strengths by maintaining contact between the child and the birth family
• Provides an opportunity for birth, foster, and adoptive parents to exchange meaningful information about the child
• Provided safety can be assured, is held with 7 days of a child coming into care to underscore the importance of birth family connections
• Can be especially crucial for the success of older children that are adopted
You are Part of the Equation!
What is the PIP?
• A plan to continue enhancing child welfare reform developed through a collaborative process between staff from county departments of social services, youth, parents, foster parents, service providers, and other child and family serving agencies
• It not a new initiative or project; it is a continuation of the work we have already accomplished through MRS/SOC
• Ultimately this plan is about improving outcomes for children and families which can only be accomplished through collaborative efforts
• A plan whose implementation benefits from collaboration between birth families, foster families, and adoptive families
Pieces of the Child Welfare Pie
Local Community Collaborative
A place within a community where foster and adoptive parents can:
• complete a community service needs assessment
• share information about community resources and plan around service array needs for children in care
• advocate for any special needs for foster and adoptive parents
State Community Collaborative
“The North Carolina State Community Collaborative for Children and Families, through a System of Care framework, provides a forum for collaboration, advocacy, and action among families, public and private child and family serving agencies and community partners to improve outcomes for all children, youth and familes.”1
1 North Carolina Collaborative for Children, Youth and Families http://www.nccollaborative.org
The State Collaborative
Thank You!
Please feel free to contact us!
Candice Britt, MSW – Child and Family Services Review [email protected]
R. Patrick Betancourt – Multiple Response System [email protected]
North Carolina Division of Social Services325 North Salisbury St. MSC 2408
Raleigh, NC 27699-2408919-733-4622 / 919-715-6714 fax