Projects and Grants per year
Grants and Contracts Details
Description
Over many years, experts in child welfare, education, developmental psychology, medicine (particularly
in child psychiatry and pediatrics) and mental health have contributed to a dramatically-expanding
knowledge base regarding families and children. Research increasingly supports the critical nature of
early child development and the importance of healthy parent-child attachment and the long-term effects
of abuse and neglect. This new information is critical for the staff of the Department of Community-
Based Services (DCBS) to grasp. It will impact the ways in which they intervene with families they
serve. In the end, it will provide some of the keys to breaking the cycle of child maltreatment and
neglect.
In recognition of the need for expanding training in these and other areas, the DCBS of the Kentucky
Cabinet for Health and Family Services, in conjunction with the University Training Consortium
Project, will provide a specialized training and consultation program. This program will provide
consultation to current and new DCBS staff in an ongoing, intensive manner. Training will be provided
in scheduled didactic presentations and in a case-specific fashion (consultation). The case-specific
training will be provided “in the field” to DCBS staff as requested. It will be coordinated by Regional
Clinical Associates at the discretion of the Service Region Administrators or their designees (SRA’s). A
significant portion of this training will be centered on a case at hand and will be ongoing as the issues in
the case evolve and the interventions are carried out. This training will be provided on-site in DCBS
field offices, and on-site at the CATS project. This type of problem-based learning has been shown to
effectively teach specific knowledge, but has also been shown to enhance communications skills and
improve staff problem-solving skills. These new skills can then be applied in that staff’s daily work.
BTC consults will attend monthly RCC conference meetings as requested in Southern Bluegrass and
will provided consultation to other regions of the state as requested. A annual report will document the
case consultation list, along with the region served.
Specific content of training will include skill development in recognition and intervening in families
who are facing a variety of challenges such as domestic violence, alcohol and drug, trauma, addiction
and other chronic stressors. Training/consultation will focus on identifying known risk factors for poor
long-term outcome and interventions to minimize the long-term sequelae of abuse and/or neglect. It will
include specific skills that will promote healthy and stable attachment relationships for the 4-E eligible
child.
By conducting training in direct collaboration with local staff, an assessment of training needs for staff
can be undertaken and recommendations to DCBS leadership can be made. This assessment can serve
as a basis for developing curriculum.
DCBS staff need training in determining what levels of intervention should be implemented to ensure
the best outcomes. Some of this involves knowledge of developmental variations in how children
Subaward Agreement, Page 9
normally cope in stressful situations. What is normal at one age may be a marker calling for more
intense interventions at another level. Through training and consultation, staff can more effectively
provide services and better function as advocates for the needs of the 4-E eligible children they serve.
Status | Finished |
---|---|
Effective start/end date | 7/1/19 → 6/30/20 |
Funding
- Eastern Kentucky University
Fingerprint
Explore the research topics touched on by this project. These labels are generated based on the underlying awards/grants. Together they form a unique fingerprint.
Projects
- 1 Finished
-
University Training Consortium (Breaking the Cycle-CTAC)
Sprang, G. & Whitt-Woosley, A.
7/1/19 → 6/30/20
Project: Research project