Literature DB >> 19653455

Engaging parents in child welfare services: bridging family needs and child welfare mandates.

Susan P Kemp1, Maureen O Marcenko, Kimberly Hoagwood, William Vesneski.   

Abstract

Calls for expanded use of tested child mental health interventions in child welfare practice add new urgency to the longstanding question of how to enhance parent engagement in child welfare services, where low and uneven levels of engagement are pervasive, and services to parents and children tend to be separated, leaving important opportunities for parent-child interventions underutilized. Tackling these issues requires both expanded understandings of what engagement entails and the incorporation into child welfare practice of systematic, research-based strategies for supporting parental involvement. Drawing on a review of factors that shape (and often confound) efforts to engage parents in child welfare, and on relevant research, this paper lays the initial foundation for such an approach by identifying and describing six core dimensions of engagement and related intervention strategies.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19653455

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Child Welfare        ISSN: 0009-4021


  19 in total

1.  "That's not me anymore": Resistance strategies for managing intersectional stigmas for women with substance use and incarceration histories.

Authors:  Alana J Gunn; Tina K Sacks; Alexis Jemal
Journal:  Qual Soc Work       Date:  2016-12-15

2.  Multiple Family Groups to reduce child disruptive behavior difficulties: moderating effects of child welfare status on child outcomes.

Authors:  Geetha Gopalan; Latoya Small; Ashley Fuss; Melissa Bowman; Jerrold Jackson; Sue Marcus; Anil Chacko
Journal:  Child Abuse Negl       Date:  2015-07-16

3.  Translating and Implementing Evidence-Based Mental Health Services in Child Welfare.

Authors:  Joshua P Mersky; James Topitzes; Colleen E Janczewski; Chien-Ti Plummer Lee; Gabriel McGaughey; Cheryl B McNeil
Journal:  Adm Policy Ment Health       Date:  2020-09

4.  Facilitating Mental Health Service Use for Caregivers: Referral Strategies among Child Welfare Caseworkers.

Authors:  Alicia C Bunger; Emmeline Chuang; Bowen McBeath
Journal:  Child Youth Serv Rev       Date:  2012-04-01

5.  Child Welfare Involved Caregiver Perceptions of Family Support in Child Mental Health Treatment.

Authors:  Geetha Gopalan; Mary Acri; Marina Lalayants; Cole Hooley; Eddie Einbinder
Journal:  J Family Strengths       Date:  2014-12-31

6.  Under What Conditions Does Caseworker-Caregiver Racial/Ethnic Similarity Matter for Housing Service Provision? An Application of Representative Bureaucracy Theory.

Authors:  Bowen McBeath; Emmeline Chuang; Alicia Bunger; Jennifer Blakeslee
Journal:  Soc Serv Rev       Date:  2014-03

7.  A Randomized Trial of Home Visitation for CPS-Involved Families: The Moderating Impact of Maternal Depression and CPS History.

Authors:  Melissa Jonson-Reid; Brett Drake; John N Constantino; Mini Tandon; Laura Pons; Patricia Kohl; Scott Roesch; Ellie Wideman; Allison Dunnigan; Wendy Auslander
Journal:  Child Maltreat       Date:  2018-01-11

8.  Parent Management Training, Relationships with Agency Staff, and Child Mental Health: Urban Foster Parents' Perspectives.

Authors:  Jill E Spielfogel; Sonya J Leathers; Errick Christian; Lorri S McMeel
Journal:  Child Youth Serv Rev       Date:  2011-11

9.  Perceptions Among Child Welfare Staff when Modifying A Child Mental Health Intervention to be Implemented in Child Welfare Services.

Authors:  Geetha Gopalan; Cole Hooley; Andrew Winters; Tricia Stephens
Journal:  Am J Community Psychol       Date:  2019-01-29

10.  Underexamined points of vulnerability for black mothers in the child welfare system: The role of number of births, age of first use of substances and criminal justice involvement.

Authors:  Tricia Stephens; Alexis Kuerbis; Caterina Pisciotta; Jon Morgenstern
Journal:  Child Youth Serv Rev       Date:  2019-10-31
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