By Miranda Lynch, Erika Tullberg, Jane Halladay, Chapin Hall, August 2020
The Family First Prevention Services Act (Family First) represents the most significant piece of federal child welfare legislation enacted in recent history. Chapin Hall is collaborating with jurisdictions and organizations across the country as they assess readiness and plan for Family First implementation and align their child welfare system with the transformational opportunities in the legislation. Chapin Hall and the National Child Traumatic Stress Network jointly produced this brief to recommend concrete strategies for trauma-informed practice when implementing Family First.
What We Did
Chapin Hall and the National Child Traumatic Stress Network reviewed the major provisions of Family First and identified new policy requirements for trauma-informed care. We analyzed the law for provisions that implicate trauma-informed approaches based on the literature. In the brief, we explain how trauma-informed practices support Family First implementation and recommend measures that are consistent with an established framework for a trauma-informed child-welfare system.
What We Found
Family First requires trauma-informed approaches in the delivery of evidence-based prevention services and certain residential-based treatment for children in foster care. In a trauma-informed child welfare system, all parties involved recognize and respond to the impact of traumatic stress on those who have contact with the system, including children, youth, caregivers, and service providers. To support childrenβs safety and well-being needs being met within families consistent with the intent of Family First suggests that agencies need to embed trauma-informed practices in their systems beyond the lawβs requirements.
[Please click here to read more and to download the report.]
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