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Journal Article

Citation

Bunger AC, Stiffman AR, Foster KA, Shi P. Adv. Soc. Work 2010; 10(1): 19-38.

Affiliation

Alicia C. Bunger is a doctoral student at the Brown School of Social Work in St. Louis, MO. Arlene R. Stiffman, Ph.D., is the Barbara A. Bailey Professor of Social Work, Emeritus and Director of the NIDA Comorbidity and Addictions Center; Kirk A. Foster is a doctoral student and NIDA Comorbidity and Addictions Center Administrator; and Peichang Shi is a statistical data specialist, all at the Brown School of Social Work.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2010, Indiana University School of Social Work)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

20204163

PMCID

PMC2829886

Abstract

Youth involved in the child welfare system are at high risk for mental illness, substance abuse, and other behavioral health issues, which child welfare workers are expected to address through referrals. Child welfare workers (N=27) who participated in Project IMPROVE (Intervention for Multisector Provider Enhancement) reported on services they provided to youth (N=307) in their caseloads. Using survey and administrative data, this paper examines workers' service actions on behalf of youth. Results were consistent with the Gateway Provider Model and showed that youth received help from a greater variety of service sectors when their workers were able to identify behavioral health problems, and were familiar with and connected to other providers in the community. Improving service delivery to youth in child welfare may be accomplished by training workers in the signs and symptoms of behavioral health problems and familiarizing them with providers in the community.


Language: en

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