| Literature DB >> 20807432 |
Kenneth J McCann1, Jean E Twomey, Donna Caldwell, Rosemary Soave, Lynne Andreozzi Fontaine, Barry M Lester.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Substance use during pregnancy often leads to involvement in the child welfare system, resulting in multiple social service systems and service providers working with families to achieve successful child welfare outcomes. The Vulnerable Infants Program of Rhode Island (VIP-RI) is a care coordination program developed to work with perinatal substance-users to optimize opportunities for reunification and promote permanency for substance-exposed infants. This paper describes services used by VIP-RI participants and child welfare outcomes.Entities:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20807432 PMCID: PMC2944302 DOI: 10.1186/1477-7517-7-19
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Harm Reduct J ISSN: 1477-7517
Services for VIP-RI Participants
| Self-help | Mental health counseling/therapy |
| Outpatient drug treatment | Psychotropic medication management |
| Hospital-based treatment | Peer counseling |
| Residential drug treatment | |
| Residential facility for women & children | |
| Inpatient/outpatient detoxification | |
| HIV education/prevention | Child care |
| HIV screening/assessment | Parenting classes/training and/or support services |
| HIV services/treatment | Respite care |
| HIV pre/post test counseling | |
| Prenatal care | |
| Postnatal care | |
| Public health nurse visit | |
| Primary medical care | |
| Family planning | |
| Financial/entitlement assistance | Legal services/advocacy |
| Food/clothing donations | |
| Housing/rental assistance | |
| Educational/schooling/GED assistance | Case management |
| Vocational/employment/job training | Domestic violence services |
| In-home services | |
| Pastoral care | |
| Permanency services | |
| Recovery support services | |
| Transportation |
Child Welfare Status: Closed Case
| N | Closed Child Welfare Case | N | Open Child Welfare Case | p | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total Cases | 89 | 113 | |||
| HIV screening/assessment | 77 | 28(36.4%) | 95 | 20(21.1%) | < 0.001 |
| HIV pre/post test counseling | 77 | 33(42.9%) | 95 | 13(13.7%) | < 0.001 |
| Prenatal care | 85 | 61(71.8%) | 108 | 46(42.6%) | <.001 |
| Postnatal care | 87 | 75(86.2%) | 111 | 61(55%) | <.001 |
| Public health nurse visit | 86 | 32(37.2) | 106 | 24(22.6%) | 0.027 |
| Primary medical care | 87 | 74(85.1%) | 108 | 57(52.8%) | <.001 |
| Family planning | 81 | 63(77.8%) | 102 | 45(44.1%) | <.001 |
| Entitlement assistance | 85 | 65(76.5%) | 110 | 44(40%) | <.001 |
| Food/clothing donations | 85 | 56(65.9%) | 110 | 42(38.2%) | <.001 |
| Housing/Rental Assistance | 85 | 38(44.7%) | 109 | 31(28.4%) | 0.019 |
| Educational/Schooling/GED | 85 | 18(21.2%) | 111 | 9( 8.1%) | 0.009 |
| Peer Counseling | 86 | 35(40.7%) | 107 | 25(23.4%) | 0.010 |
| Child Care | 85 | 37(43.5%) | 110 | 25(22.7%) | 0.002 |
Child Welfare Status: Reunification
| N | Not Reunified with Biological Mother | N | Reunified with Biological Mother | p | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total Cases | 102 | 102 | |||
| HIV pre/post test counseling | 87 | 13(14.9%) | 86 | 31(36.0%) | 0.001 |
| Primary medical care | 97 | 56(57.7%) | 99 | 73(73.7%) | 0.018 |
| Family planning | 87 | 42(48.3%) | 97 | 65(67%) | 0.010 |
| Entitlement assistance | 99 | 43(43.4%) | 99 | 69(69.7%) | <.001 |
| Food/clothing donations | 98 | 42(42.9%) | 99 | 59(59.6%) | 0.019 |
| In-home Services | 100 | 53(53.0%) | 99 | 71(71.7%) | 0.006 |
| Residential Drug Treatment | 98 | 39(39.8%) | 99 | 20(20.2%) | 0.003 |
| Permanency services | 97 | 60(61.9%) | 99 | 40(40.4%) | 0.003 |
| Recovery support services | 96 | 77(80.2) | 99 | 92(92.9%) | 0.009 |
Child Welfare Status: Permanent Placement
| N | Permanent Placement Not Identified | N | Permanent Placement Identified | p | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total Cases | 73 | 131 | |||
| HIV pre/post test counseling | 59 | 4( 6.8%) | 114 | 40(35.1%) | <.001 |
| Permanency Services | 71 | 44(62.0%) | 125 | 56(44.8%) | 0.021 |
| Recovery Support Services | 69 | 55(79.7%) | 126 | 114(90.5%) | 0.034 |