NCTSN Military Family Program: Building Partnerships with the National Child Traumatic Stress Network (NCTSN)

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Presentation transcript:

NCTSN Military Family Program: Building Partnerships with the National Child Traumatic Stress Network (NCTSN)

The National Child Traumatic Stress Network The National Child Traumatic Stress Network is supported through funding from the Donald J. Cohen National Child Traumatic Stress Initiative, administered by the US Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS), Center for Mental Health Services (CMHS), Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA)

National Child Traumatic Stress Network The mission of the National Child Traumatic Stress Network (NCTSN) is to raise the standard of care and improve access to services for traumatized children, their families and communities throughout the United States

National Child Traumatic Stress Network Vision Statement The NCTSN will raise public awareness of the scope and serious impact of child traumatic stress on the safety and healthy development of our nation’s children and families. We will improve the standard of care by integrating developmental and cultural knowledge to advance a broad range of effective services and interventions that will preserve and restore the future of our nation’s traumatized children. We will work with established systems of care, including the health, mental health, education, law enforcement, child welfare and juvenile justice systems, to ensure that there is a comprehensive continuum of care available and accessible to all traumatized children and their families. We will be a community dedicated to collaboration within and beyond the Network to ensure that widely shared knowledge and skills create a national resource to address the problem of child traumatic stress.

Military Families Learning Community: Goals and Objectives NCTSN Learning Center Expert based Speaker Series Partnerships/Communities of Practice –NCTSN, DoD/TRICARE, Department of Veterans Affairs Goals include: –Provide information and resource sharing with community providers to serve military families throughout the country. –Implement and disseminate adapted evidenced based interventions and prevention. –Joint planning and coordination. –Partnerships with offers opportunity for financial sustainment.

National Child Traumatic Stress Network (NCTSN) Military Families Learning Community Working with USUHS CSTS, identify and develop evidence based practices and interventions to support military families and children. –Bibliography –Provide developmental guidance and training on military on NCTSN Learning Center. Distribution for routine dissemination of information to sites. Military Families Knowledge Bank (mfkb.nctsn.org) –Searchable, organized directory dedicated to military family and child resources

Traumatic Grief in Military Children Information Series Target Audience  Parents, caregivers, family members  Educators, school personnel  Medical providers Description  Provides culturally competent materials for educating families, medical professionals, and school personnel about how to better serve military children who are experiencing traumatic grief Format  PDF

Child and Family Psychotherapies Evidence Based Approaches Parent Child Interactive Therapy (PCIT) Trauma-Focus Cognitive Behavior Therapy (TF-CBT) Child Parent Psychotherapy (CPP) Traumatic Grief Component Therapy FOCUS/FOCUS CI Structured Psychotherapy for Adolescents Responding to Chronic Stress (SPARCS)

Alignment of Programs with Military Families and Veterans Families are important gateway to services, given the multiple barriers to care Opportunity for screening, prevention and intervention Destigmatizing framework for promoting psychological health Supporting readiness, recovery, and reintegration

Military and Veteran Families Engagement Strategies De-stigmatize efforts “family program in family friendly settings” Focus on strengths of family Education for those who might encounter Military Families and Veterans Appreciation for all, care for those at greatest risk Flexibility (“things change”) Family friendly hours Appreciation for military culture as well as all other self- identifying attributes Transitions Continuum of care and support Sustained efforts over time

Thank you very much!