I am not sure exactly what you are looking for, but in California we have "foster family agency" homes in which a adult couple works with a child or children in out of home care under the intensive supervision and case management of a social worker. The child lives in their home. We use these agency homes for children with more challenging placement needs than our usual foster families are prepared to deal with. We pay the agency, which provides the recruitment, training and extra supervision for these families, rather than working directly with the family. We also have "therapeutic foster families" in which WE have specially trained and recruited foster parents with special, but short term training in child development and parenting psychology who are foster parents to children we have designated as having very special needs: a behavioral or handicapping physical condition, or both. We contract with a community mental health agency to help us recruit the parents and to provide special support for these families. We pay a supplemental stipend to the foster parents to help them deal with the challenges above the usual foster care rates per month. The goal is to give the challenged child a therapeutic "milieu" in a family prepared for some challenges, with extra resources to deal with them - mental health and public health nursing. The parents are not "therapists" but provide a home environment and attachment support which supports the goals of the mental and physical health care the child is receiving. In contradistinction, these "family" homes are different from "group homes" in which there is no putative "parent/couple" environment, although there is supposed to be a therapeutic program or regime of special benefit to the child we have placed there, often behavior modification programs - intended to bring a child's behavior under sufficient control/tolerability to return to a home setting and stay there. Only children who are not able to be cared for safely in a family home-like environment are placed in these group home settings. We have several levels of care/risk for group homes, and use a multidisciplinary placement committee including mental health clinicians to make the placement decision where higher level group care is being considered. Do these categories of care (for family homes)represent some of what you are looking for information about? Freya J. Schultz Staff Analyst Santa Barbara County Social Services 234 Camino del Remedio Santa Barbara, CA 93110 805-681-4626 Fax 681-4403 email f.schultz@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx -----Original Message----- From: owner-CHILD-MALTREATMENT-RESEARCH-L@xxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:owner-CHILD-MALTREATMENT-RESEARCH-L@xxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Hollows, Anne E Sent: Thursday, October 14, 2004 4:27 AM To: Child Maltreatment Researchers Subject: Couples working with children: safeguarding issues I have been asked by a national church organisation to establish whether there is any research/policy guidance on the suitability of couples (married or otherwise) working with groups of children and young people where a thrid party is not present. Dr Anne Hollows Health and Social Care Research Institute Sheffield Hallam University Sheffield UK
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