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The emergence of the Wraparound process as an alternative
paradigm to the traditional treatment planning processes for children
and adolescents with emotional and behavioral disorders is described by
Van Den Berg, et al. (1996). This research compares current practices
in the field to the Wraparound process and describes procedures to aid
communities in the implementation of the Wraparound process. Positive
results were reported for individualized Wraparound strategies among foster
children with confirmed emotional/behavioral disturbances and their families
by McDonald et al. (1995).
Malysiak et al. (1998) examine the theoretical and
paradigmatic basis to better define fidelity in a Wraparound approach
to service delivery, drawing on team discussion data with seven families
in Tampa, FL, follow-up interviews with 56 of these participants, and
a review of case files. The literature is examined in an effort to clarify
terms and suggest a paradigmatic and theoretical base for Wraparound.
Results suggest that Wraparound is an emerging collaborative model based
in systems theory. This research also proposes steps in clarifying the
process of implementation and evaluation of the Wraparound approach that
can contribute to better definitions for treatment fidelity.
Research on Wraparound as an intervention is also abundant.
Family-centered policy and practice has generally used expert models that
define families with children with serious emotional disturbances as dysfunctional.
Wraparound engages these families as decision-making participants using
naturally occurring strengths to ìwrapî individualized supports
around the child & family. Malysiak (1997) posits that Wraparoundís
principles can be used to descriptively identify and ensure the integrity
of the collaborative model.
Wraparound as described by Handron et al. (1998) is
a strengths-based, family-driven orientation role that focuses on the
uniqueness of each child and family. The professionalís role in
Wraparound is to offer an historical perspective and clinical practice
implications for family nurses or service providers as other disciplines
are explored. This case study demonstrates how structural family therapy
may be used as a theoretical framework in concert with the Wraparound
process. Another case study by Epstein (1997) on the actions of professional
social workers and family workers in a family support program designed
with a Wraparound philosophy (Kaleidoscope, Inc, a nonprofit child welfare
organization in Chicago, IL) found that more than 33 percent of a social
workerís day is devoted to indirect care activities (e.g., writing
reports, attending meetings, & collateral contacts) and that family
workers spend more of their time working directly with families.
Finally Carney et al. (1997) and Rosenblatt (1996)
define the individualized Wraparound processes for children with the most
challenging emotional/behavioral disturbances and their families, and
provide an overview of the state of research. It is argued that the future
of Wraparound depends on carefully defining the process, including how
to best integrate Wraparound services with reforms based on the principles
of a comprehensive system of care. A strong commitment must be made at
all levels to the process of accumulating knowledge and building and creating
innovative research along with programs.
As an intervention, Wraparound was demonstrated to
be effective in Ontario with children ages 2 to 15 with moderate to severe
emotional difficulties who would have needed residential care if not provided
with Wraparound services as an alternative. The approach was to provide
participants with services they requested. Parents identified in-home
help, stress reduction and individual (one-on-one) services as the major
contributors to success. The program was demonstrated to be cost-effective
with cases averaging 17% of the mean cost of local community out-of-home
placements (Brown, 1996). A Wraparound service model in Baltimore, MD
targeting 25 severely maladjusted youth resulted in one youth being returned
home and 24 being diverted from out-of-state residential treatment centers
to Wraparound services (Hyde, 1996).
In an evaluation of a community-based
treatment program in rural New England using a Wraparound model, the research
examined adjustment to home and school among children with severe emotional
and behavioral problems. The Child Behavior Checklist and the Teacher
Report Form provided standardized information on the severity of problems
according to parents and classroom teachers. The Wraparound services included
intensive home and school-based services. The results indicated substantial
improvement in child functioning in the home though these results were
not found in the school (Clarke, 1992). Keller (1999) describes a technology
transfer initiative in which network therapy (a version of Wraparound)
was used in substance abuse treatment utilizing peer and family support
in New York City. Following counselor training that included a didactic
seminar, role-playing, use of videotaped illustrations, and clinical supervision,
counselors implemented the NT approach. Using a comparison group, Keller
et al found that network therapy patients had significantly less positive
urinalysis (UAs) than comparison group patients. In 1994 a Community-Initiated
Wraparound services model called Breakthrough for Families targeting the
most hard-to-reach families, i.e., those struggling with parental substance
abuse, youth at high risk, and other complex needs cutting across existing
categorical programs, reported strong positive outcomes (Ray, 1998).
In addition to describing the positive outcomes for
treatment versus comparison groups in the Fostering Individualized Assistance
Program (FIAP) in Florida the evaluation research also details the approach
and participants in the program. To further attest to the salience of
the Florida research for the Gilroy project participants, the Florida
participants ranged in age from 7 to 15 at entry and had been adjudicated
dependent, and averaged 2.6 years in out-of-home placement with an average
of four placement changes per year. Family specialists served as clinical
case managers, providing strengths-based assessment, life-domain planning,
home-based services, brokered services, & follow-along monitoring
& supports. While there was a significant increase in days in incarceration
for both groups, there was a significantly greater likelihood that an
FIAP child would achieve permanent placement. The findings support the
superiority of individualized strategies of service delivery such as Wraparound
for children with severe emotional and behavioral disturbances (Clark,
1996).
Interventions with chronic juvenile delinquents and
their families have often been unsuccessful in reducing crimes because
they fail to account for the social system in which the delinquents operate.
The Wraparound model described by Northey et al. (1997) includes the following
premises: the quality of attachment to others affects the adolescentís
behavior; interventions must take the adolescentís interpersonal
interactions into account; interventions should focus on intrapsychic
and interactional experiences of the adolescent, family, extended family
and ìfictiveî kin networks, and the integration of these
premises in a systems perspective decreases conflict in the network. The
key to the model is impacting family interactions at different levels,
building on family strengths, and clarifying meanings associated with
problematic behavior.
In addition to empirical evidence of the effectiveness
of Wraparound for children and adolescent with severe behavioral and emotional
disorders who may have co-occuring substance abuse issues, strong support
is also found among service providers and consumer families. Support among
providers and consumers has been found by Quinn (1995) who surveyed 180
direct service providers about barriers to providing services, specific
service priorities for system development and how services could best
be developed and implemented and found support for a Wraparound model.
Telephone surveys with 20 youths receiving community-based, Wraparound
services in Vermont indicated a high degree of satisfaction, sense of
involvement, and feelings of unconditional care. Further, each of these
variables was related to behavioral adjustment. Wraparound was also found
to enhance youthsí sense of involvement and their perceptions that
care was unconditional and this was strongly associated with satisfaction
with services (Rosen, 1994).
In Vermont the Wraparound Care Initiative providing
residential, educational, and behavioral outcome data for a cohort of
40 youth receiving Wraparound care over a 12-month period were reported
to show that after 12 months youth who had previously been removed from
their homes or were at risk of removal were residing in significantly
less restrictive community-based living arrangements and exhibiting significantly
fewer problem behaviors than at intake (Yoe, 1996).
The use of Wraparound approaches across a variety of
educational settings to prevent out-of-school and out-of-home care was
reported by Eber, et al. (1998). The researchers examined the application
of a school-based Wraparound approach for the past three years by the
La Grange (IL) Area Dept of Special Education. The project has been implementing
a school-based individualized service network for students with emotional
and behavioral disabilities that are now being integrated into larger
special education, mental health, and social services systems. Students
who were identified through self-contained special education classrooms
were compared to students who were identified from various other school
and mental health settings and were found to be less clinically involved.
Perhaps the best researched approach, Choose-Get-Keep
(CGK), is based on the values of psychiatric rehabilitation including
consumer choice, individual planning, and consumer involvement in the
rehabilitation process (Farkas & Anthony, 1989). ìThe Choose-Get-Keep
Approach to Employment Support: Operational Guidelinesî manual (Danley
& MacDonald-Wilson, 1996) is published by the Center for Psychiatric
Rehabilitation. Earlier versions of this manual have been available for
studies since the late 1980s.
In addition to the technology of psychiatric rehabilitation,
such as how to set goals with consumers, how to ìconnectî
with consumers, how to teach skills to consumers, and how to develop resources
with and for consumers (Cohen, et al., 1985; 1986; 1988; 1990) the CGK
approach has been evaluated in a variety of community applications. In
a multi-site comparison of the CGK approach in three psychosocial rehabilitation
centers in Virginia, Georgia, and Oregon, competitive employment was achieved
for 41% of 275 clients. Skills were found to increase and symptoms decreased
for those who became employed (Rogers, Anthony, Toole & Brown, 1991).
At Boston University, a supported education program model incorporating
the CGK approach was developed and demonstrated effective for patients
who were ìpsychiatrically disabled.î Employment and self-esteem
significantly increased over a two and one-half year period and hospitalizations
significantly decreased (Unger, Anthony, Sciarappa & Rogers, 1991).
The adaptation of the CGK model for Latinos is currently being investigated
(Restrepo-Toro & Spaniol, 1998).
SOUTH COUNTY WRAPAROUND PROJECT FOR LATINO CHILDREN
AND YOUTH
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