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Goals and Objectives
The goal of the Comprehensive Community Mental Health Services for Children and their Families Program is to reduce impairment, improve short- and long-term mental health, and enhance both educational and social functioning of youth with serious emotional disturbances, thereby improving the opportunity for productive, active adulthood.
Program Activity
Since 1993, grants under this program, spanning 44 separate States, have served more than 40,000 children. Today, over 67 sites are implementing and evaluating the effect of community-specific systems of care on the lives of local children and adolescents with serious emotional disturbances and their families. The Program, which requires communities to match Federal dollars over a six-year award, expands community service capacity for a culturally competent, community-based, coordinated cross-agency approach to serving children and adolescents with serious emotional disturbances and their families. Individualized case planning, coordination, and other program elements enable communities to integrate child and family-serving agencies (e.g., health, mental health, substance abuse treatment, child welfare, education, health, and juvenile justice) into a community-based system of care. This ensures a role for families that includes engagement in the development and implementation of local mental health services and supports for their children.
Inpatient treatment days for children in the program decreased 44 percent in FY 1998 and have held steady. Regular school attendance rose from 70 percent in FY 1997 to 82 percent in FY 2000. Referrals from juvenile justice and cross-agency treatment planning increased so much that targets were revised upward.
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