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NATIONAL TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE CENTER FOR CHILDREN’S MENTAL
HEALTH
http://gucchd.georgetown.edu
National Technical Assistance for Children's Mental Health
Georgetown University Center for Child and Human Development
Box 571485
3300 Whitehaven Street, NW
Suite 3300
Washington, DC 20057
Phone: 202-687-5000
Fax: 202-687-1954
WEB SITE: http://gucchd.georgetown.edu
BACKGROUND
The National Technical Assistance Center is dedicated to helping states,
tribes, territories, and communities discover, apply, and sustain innovative
and collaborative solutions that improve the social, emotional, and behavioral
well being of children and families.
We enhance and strengthen the work of states, tribes, territories, and
communities as they strive to achieve comprehensive mental health delivery
systems for children and families. System of care values and principles
guide our work with states and communities and result in approaches that are:
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Community-based
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Comprehensive, coordinated, and collaborative across agencies and systems
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Involve families and youth as full partners
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Culturally competent with respect to racial, ethnic and linguistic differences
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Individualized, flexible, coordinated and designed to fit each child and family
and
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Strength based
Areas of FOCUS
The National Technical Assistance Center focuses on priority
areas for developing and implementing comprehensive service delivery systems:
policy development, leadership development, strategic planning, interagency
collaboration, family involvement, cultural and linguistic competence, early
intervention, early childhood mental health systems of care, evaluation,
interagency management information systems, evidence-based and promising
practices, financing and managed care, workforce development, and mediation and
negotiation training. The National Technical Assistance Center
activities reach diverse stakeholders including state and local policymakers,
administrators of all child-serving systems, service providers, families,
youth, advocates, researchers and evaluators, and educators.
UPCOMING TRAINING EVENTS
The National Technical Assistance Center offers regular National Training
Institutes, National Conference Call Series, National Policy Academies,
Leadership Academies, Systems of Care Training, training on Developing
Culturally and Linguistically Competent Systems of Care, and training on Early
Childhood Mental Health Systems of Care.
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The next National Training Institutes will be held July 11-15, 2006 in Orlando,
Florida. The Institutes focus is “Developing Local Systems of Care for
Children and Adolescents with Emotional Disturbances and their Families:
Family-Driven, Youth-Guided Services to Improve Outcomes.” The Institutes
is held every two years and brings together over 2,000 people from all across
the country for intensive training in a wide range of topics related to systems
of care development. Each Institutes has a special focus on an area
critical to systems transformation. The 2006 Institutes will offer
four-hour in-depth training institutes and many workshops featuring innovative
and best practices from across the country. A Youth Leadership Program,
Native American Systems of Care Track, and Special Topical Forums will round
out the meeting. A Pre-Institute’s training is offered on Cultural and
Linguistic Competence.
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The National Technical Assistance Center Conference Call Series presents
discussions on critical issues in systems transformation. The monthly
calls are held the third Thursday of each month from 1-2:30pm ET. Details
about the 2006 calls and registration can be found on our web site.
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The sixth National Policy Academy for state, tribal, and territorial applicants
will be held in December 2006. The Policy Academy brings together
delegations from states, tribes and territories to do intensive work on
designing new policies to improve service delivery and outcomes for children
and families with mental health needs. Extensive pre-, onsite, and
follow-up work is done with the delegations to maximize successful policy
development. Applications to participate in Policy Academies are sent to
all governors and tribal authorities.
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Leadership Academies and Leadership training are offered for family and
professional leaders of the federal CMHS Comprehensive Community Mental Health
Services for Children and Their Families Program grantees, leaders of statewide
family organizations, and state mental health agencies. The academies and
training are intensive and designed to enhance the leadership skills of
participants who are implementing systems of care. The curriculum-based
training has a strong focus on leadership and diversity.
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Primer Hands On: Systems of Care Training for Leaders is an intensive course on
understanding the values, principles and operational components of effective
systems of care. The two-day course is designed for state, community and
family leaders in systems of care. Primer Hands On training is held each
Fall and Spring in Washington, DC and once a year for all federally funded
comprehensive community systems of care grantees. Adaptations of the
training are offered for child welfare leaders and directors of family
organizations. A special train-the-trainers course will be offered in
March 2006 for individuals working with Spanish speaking communities.
INDIVIDUALIZED TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE AND CONSULTATION
National Technical Assistance Center faculty and staff provide assistance to
states, territories, tribes and communities on a wide variety of key topics
either by phone or on-site. Faculty and staff frequently work intensively
with individual states and communities around issues related to their systems
development.
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Technical assistance on cultural and linguistic competence is provided through
a partnership between the National Technical Assistance Center and the National
Center for Cultural Competence (NCCC). The mission of the NCCC is to increase
the capacity of health care and mental health programs to design, implement,
and evaluate culturally and linguistically competent service delivery systems.
The NCCC conducts an array of activities to fulfill its mission, including: 1)
training, technical assistance, and consultation; 2) networking, linkages, and
information exchange; and 3) knowledge and product development and
dissemination. Major emphasis is placed on policy development, assistance in
conducting cultural competence organizational self-assessments, and strategic
approaches to the systematic incorporation of culturally competent values,
policy, structures, and practices within organizations.
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Technical assistance on early identification, early intervention, and
behavioral health services and supports for young children is provided for
states, territories, tribes and communities that are designing and implementing
early childhood mental health systems of care. Technical assistance is also
available through Informational resources, including monographs on financing
strategies, mental health consultation in early childhood settings, and models
of medical home program approaches to improving behavioral health.
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Faculty are available to provide technical assistance to communities around
addressing and preventing youth violence and on conflict mediation and
resolution across agencies to improve client outcomes. Mediation training
is often provided for child welfare, juvenile justice, and juvenile court
staff.
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Faculty also provide technical assistance on collaboration across child-serving
agencies at the state and community levels to improve service organization,
delivery and financing. A specialty focus is collaboration between child
welfare and mental health agencies, including policy development, improving
program services, and collaborating on financing service delivery.
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Technical assistance on building evaluation into systems of care and on
building interagency management information systems is provided in a variety of
ways including an ongoing national scan of state and community evaluation
activities posted on the National Technical Assistance Center web site, issues
of Data Matters
newsletter, a management information system Toolkit, the Technical Assistance
on Management Information Systems (TAMIS) listserv, Interagency MIS Roundtable
Meetings, and conference calls on evaluation strategies.
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The National Technical Assistance Center provides support to the Child, Youth
and Family Division of the National Association of State Mental Health Program
Directors. We support the Division in membership communication and in
accomplishing its action agenda.
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The State Infrastructure Grant program, recently funded by CMHS, awarded funds
to six states and one Tribe to build infrastructure that will improve the
integration of mental health and substance abuse services for youth and their
families. The National Technical Assistance Center provides technical
assistance to grantees on meeting their infrastructure development goals and
objectives and implementing collaborative service delivery.
TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE PUBLICATIONS
The National TA Center develops publications, toolkits and issue briefs on
current and emerging topics and best practices in the field. A listing of
publications is available on the National Technical Assistance
Center web site.
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Strategies for understanding, planning for and implementing cultural and
linguistic competence in systems of care are the focus of publications on the
web site of the National Center for Cultural Competence and include, A Guide to
Planning and Implementing Cultural Competence: Organizational Self Assessment,
Planning for Cultural and Linguistic Competence in Systems of Care, Getting
Started…Moving On, and Cultural Competence Planning Guide.
Three new issue briefs are available that showcase promising community
practices in promoting cultural and linguistic competence.
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The National TA Center publishes Data Matters, a summary of current
information and resources on program evaluation, interagency management
systems, and evidenced based practices. Data Matters is written for a
broad audience. Data Matters #6, the most recent issue,
gives an introduction to evidence-based practices and is available on our web
site or it can be ordered.
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Building Systems of Care: A Primer, by Sheila Pires, is a detailed
tool kit for learning the processes and structures necessary to build effective
systems of care. This comprehensive publication covers all components of
systems building and provides many examples of effective community practices.
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A Family’s Guide to the Child Welfare System
is a hands-on resource for families who need to understand and negotiate the
many programs in the child welfare system. The guide is a great resource
for direct services providers and advocates to share with families. The
guide is also very useful as a training tool with direct service providers to
understand the child welfare system from a family’s perspective.
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Another recent issue brief is available on Transforming the Workforce in
Children’s Mental Health. The brief is available on the
National Technical Assistance Center web site.
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An Issue Brief On Systems of Care, by Beth Stroul,
discusses the framework of systems of care in a changing mental health
environment.
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Technical assistance on networking with child welfare around meeting the mental
health needs of children in foster care and child protective services is
provided through a series of monographs available from the National TA Center.
Two new documents are Meeting the Mental Health Needs of Children in the Foster
Care System: Strategies for Implementation and Meeting the Mental
Health Needs of Children in the Foster Care System: Summary of State and
Community Efforts. A variety of Center activities promote
collaboration between the child welfare and mental health systems, including
information on the Adoption and Safe Families Act, the Family Opportunity Act,
and on promising examples of collaborative initiatives.
STAFF
Gary Macbeth, M.S.W.
Director, National Technical Assistance Center for Children's Mental Health
E-mail: gfm5@georgetown.edu
Joan M. Dodge, Ph.D.
Senior Policy Associate and Director of Policy
E-mail: dodgej@georgetown.edu
Rachele Espiritu, Ph.D.
Senior Policy Associate for Research and Evaluation
E-mail: rce3@georgetown.edu
Tawara D. Goode, M.A.
Director, National Center for Cultural Competence
E-mail: tdg2@georgetown.edu
Neal Horen, Ph.D.
Early Childhood Mental Health Specialist and Director, State Infrastructure
Grant Program
E-mail: horenn@georgetown.edu
Vivian Jackson, MSW
Senior Policy Associate for Cultural & Linguistic Competence
E-mail:
vhj@georgetown.edu
Diane Jacobstein, Ph.D.
Psychologist and Developmental Disabilities Specialist
E-mail: jacobstd@georgetown.edu
Ellen B. Kagen, M.S.W.
Director, Leadership Development
E-mail: kageneb@georgetown.edu
Roxane Kaufmann, M.A.
Director, Early Childhood Policy
E-mail: kaufmanr@georgetown.edu
Phyllis Magrab, Ph.D.
Director, Georgetown University Center for Child and Human Development
E-mail: magrabp@georgetown.edu
Jan McCarthy, M.S.W.
Director, Child Welfare Policy
E-mail: jrm33@georgetown.edu
Deborah Perry, Ph.D.
Director of Research and an Early Childhood Mental Health Specialist
E-mail:
dfp2@georgetown.edu
Joyce Sebian, MA
Senior Policy Associate for Violence Prevention
E-mail: jks29@georgetown.edu
Elizabeth Z. Waetzig, J.D.
Director, Conflict Management Program
E-mail: ezw@georgetown.edu
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