How to use GoToWebinar

Similar documents
Investing in Reclaiming Futures webinar for public agencies, policymakers, & foundations

SBIRT Youth Learning Community

How to use GoToWebinar

Helping Young People Get Treatment in Juvenile Justice and Beyond

Montgomery County Juvenile Drug Court Program

Mayor s Gang Prevention Task Force

How to use GoToWebinar

Recommendation #1: Expand Drug Courts

Okanogan County Juvenile Department. Okanogan County Juvenile Justice Center

Montgomery County Juvenile Treatment Court Program

Findings from the Economic Analysis of JDC/RF: Policy Implications for Juvenile Drug Courts

Overview of MET/CBT 5 Adoption

... raising the standard of care for traumatized children and their families...

COMMUNITY REPORT 2015

Oklahoma Family Drug Courts: Engaging and Empowering Families Agenda. May 10, 2016 Embassy Suites 2501 Conference Dr. Norman, Oklahoma 73069

Center for Child & Family Health/National Center for Child Traumatic Stress Internship Application

Nebraska LB605: This bill is designed to reduce prison overcrowding and allows for alternatives to incarceration like CAM.

Canadian Mental Health Association

Community-based sanctions

Reclaiming Futures in our Community. Jennifer Kirby, Youth Services Director

BJA is currently undergoing a comprehensive review of the enclosed curriculum for official approval, at which point the BJA logo may be added.

Evidence-Based Correctional Program Checklist (CPC 2.0) Acknowledgments. Purpose of the CPC 2/22/16

National Resource Center on Justice Involved Women Announcement

National Findings on Mental Illness and Drug Use by Prisoners and Jail Inmates. Thursday, August 17

Developing Partnerships with Community-Based Service Providers Part II

Allegheny County Justice Related Services for Individuals with Mental Illness:

OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL COURT DIVERSION AND PRETRIAL SERVICES FISCAL YEAR 2019

Youth Courts and the School Disciplinary Process. Center for Court Innovation

Problem Gambling and Crime: Impacts and Solutions

Request for Proposals (RFP) for School-Based Screening, Brief Intervention, and Referral to Treatment (SBIRT) Services

Behavioral Health Workforce Development: 2016 and Beyond

The Role of Family Run Organizations Across Systems. January 27, :00pm to 3:30pm (Eastern Time)

Take Home Points. Problems are multiple, complex, and persistent

From Shelter to Safe Housing: Reframing our Movement s Response to Survivors Housing Needs

Photo courtesy Conrad N. Hilton Foundation. EVALUATION OF THE Conrad N. Hilton Foundation Chronic Homelessness Initiative 2015 REPORT

Evaluation of the First Judicial District Court Adult Drug Court: Quasi-Experimental Outcome Study Using Historical Information

What Works/ Effective Treatment: Adolescents with Substance Use and Co-occurring Mental Health Disorders

National Family Drug Court JJDP Grantee Welcome Webinar Wednesday, January 18, :00am 11:30 am (Pacific Time)

Responding to Homelessness. 11 Ideas for the Justice System

PRIORITY 3 BEHAVIORAL HEALTH AIM: Create a sustainable system of behavioral health care. STATE HEALTH IMPROVEMENT PLAN

Moving Towards a Continuum of Services. Plumas County Alcohol & Drug Strategic Planning Process DRAFT PLAN

From Mass Incarceration to Effective and Sustainable Decarceration

MODULE 1 SBIRT: AN OVERVIEW

Evidence Based Practice in Behavioral Health: An Overview. 12 Steps of EBPs by Bonnie Malek, Marion County

A BETTER WAY FOR TOUGH KIDS:

Learning Objectives. 1. Developing an idea of what High-Fidelity Wraparound (HFW)looks like in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

FLORIDA DEPARTMENT OF JUVENILE JUSTICE. Overview of Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services For DJJ Youth

FY17 Justice and Mental Health Collaboration Program Category 3 Orientation Webinar. Tuesday, November 21, 2017

National Organization of Forensic Social Work

Strengthening Providers of Substance Use Treatment in Los Angeles County

Healing, Justice, & Trust

Can you see me now: Disseminating Treatments for Trauma Related Disorders in Children and Adolescents Using Videoconference

SAMHSA s National GAINS Center 7/8/2015

Introduction to the Six Questions County Leaders Need to Ask. February 2017

LUCAS COUNTY TASC, INC. OUTCOME ANALYSIS

The Prevention Hub of Marin County

Kimberly McCarthy, EPISCenter Prevention Coordinator Grantwriting Training April 25, 2013 Celebration Hall - State College, PA

Orientation Webinar FY 2016 Second Chance Act Smart Reentry Grantees

OCP2 QUARTERLY UPDATE:

Strategic Plan

Peer Support Roles in Criminal Justice Settings

Behavioral Health and Justice Involved Populations

Children s Advocacy Centers: A Natural (and Local) Partner for Youth-Serving Organizations

2017 Executive Summary. The Conrad N. Hilton Foundation s Youth Substance Use Prevention and Early Intervention Strategic Initiative

Please note that this broadcast is being recorded and will be available for viewing on the Transitions RTC s website.

Evidence-based Approaches to Substance Abuse Prevention

Building Partnerships and Educating Families and Professionals about Supported Decision-Making

2016 REQUEST FOR ASSISTANCE

Addressing a National Crisis Too Many People with Mental Illnesses in our Jails

NEW COALITION AIMS TO HELP PREVENT MISUSE, ABUSE AND DIVERSION OF ADHD MEDICATIONS Coalition to Focus Efforts on College Students

Family Drug Court. Peer Learning Court

Fifth Judicial District Veterans Treatment Court

Why It s Not Just One More Thing: Substance Abuse and Child

Addressing a National Crisis: Too Many Individuals with Mental Illnesses in our Jails

UNGALUK FUNDING PROGRAM INFORMATION

Community Health Workers (CHWs) in HIV Services: Insights from Virginia. November 16, 2017

PEER LEARNING COURT PROGRAM DUNKLIN COUNTY FAMILY TREATMENT COURT

Treatment of Individuals Living With Co-occurring Disorders

TUCSON CITY DOMESTIC VIOLENCE COURT

A National Opportunity: Improving the Mental Health and Wellbeing of Adolescents and Young Adults

2016 JDC On-Site Technical Assistance Delivery REQUEST FORM

JUDICIAL PROCEEDINGS PANEL REQUEST FOR INFORMATION SET # 1

WEBER WARRIOR STRONG COALITION

Adult Drug Courts All Rise

Co-occurrence of Substance Use Behaviors in Youth

Hennepin County Drug Court & Change the Outcome

Effective Treatment Strategies in Juvenile Drug Court

Responding to Homelessness. 11 Ideas for the Justice System

Berks County Treatment Courts

WASHINGTON COUNTY, ARKANSAS County Courthouse

National Center for Trauma-Informed Care and Alternatives to Restraint and Seclusion (NCTIC)

Behavioral Health Diversion Interventions

In January 2016, and in response to the Opiate Epidemic, Henrico County Sheriff, Michael

Many Voices, Many Partners: Critical Elements for Policy Development. Nancy Koroloff

The following pages have been excerpted from Reinventing Oral Health: A Midwest Collaborative Initiative Community Grantee Profiles

Oriana House, Inc. Substance Abuse Treatment. Community Corrections. Reentry Services. Drug & Alcohol Testing. Committed to providing programming

Exploration of Child Sexual Abuse Prevention Efforts in Washington State

Implementing Evidence-based Practices in a Louisiana Juvenile Drug Court

ATTUD APPLICATION FORM FOR WEBSITE LISTING (PHASE 1): TOBACCO TREATMENT SPECIALIST (TTS) TRAINING PROGRAM PROGRAM INFORMATION & OVERVIEW

Improving Outcomes for Young Adults in the Justice System

Transcription:

How to use GoToWebinar RESEARCH & TRAINING CENTER FOR PATHWAYS TO POSITIVE FUTURES Move any electronic handheld devices away from your computer and speakers We recommend that you close all file sharing applications and streaming music or video Check your settings in the audio pane if you are experiencing audio problems During the presentation, you can chat questions to the webinar organizer, but these will be held until the end A recording of this webinar will be available online at http://www.pathwaysrtc.pdx.edu/webinars-previous.shtml

Reclaiming Futures: A model for communities helping teens overcome drugs, alcohol and crime April 30, 2013

Presenters

Thank you to Pathways!

Poll Question #1 Who is represented on today s call and what is your role? Mental Health Substance abuse treatment or prevention Child Welfare Juvenile Justice Other

Poll Question #2 Have you heard of Reclaiming Futures? Yes No

Poll Question #3 In your organization or network, is substance abuse treatment a partner on your core planning/implementation team? Yes No

Learning Objectives Understand the need for a different approach Learn about the model and benefits of becoming a Reclaiming Futures community Find out more about Reclaiming Futures across the U.S. including Dayton, Anchorage, and Seattle reclaimingfutures.org

Poll Question #4 How many youth that need treatment actually receive treatment? 1 in 5 1 in 10 1 in 15 1 in 20

Poll Question #4 Answer: How many youth that need treatment actually receive treatment? 1 in 5 1 in 10 1 in 15 1 in 20 (Correct Answer)

The Problem 1.8 million teens need treatment 1 in 20 actually receive treatment Approximately 343,000 young people are arrested annually for drug and alcohol related crimes Even for those who get treatment less than half are retained for 90 days Research shows that young people who use drugs and alcohol are more likely to drop out of school, get into fights, break the law and get arrested reclaimingfutures.org

What We Need: An Alternative Service Delivery System No national standards to identify needs and deliver services Promising models still regarded as specialty programs without broad dissemination There is uneven use of evidence-based practices by treatment programs No standards to integrate care across justice and treatment and other supports in the youth s life reclaimingfutures.org

Reclaiming Futures Mission More Treatment Better Treatment Beyond Treatment reclaimingfutures.org

The Beginning - Integrated Approach Launched national program and local pilots 10 years ago as initiative of the Robert Johnson Foundation Organized evidence base and made accessible to groups nationally Conducted research to establish benchmarks Created the national sixstep model Seattle, Washington reclaimingfutures.org

reclaimingfutures.org

reclaimingfutures.org

Poll Question #5 How many youth in the juvenile justice system have co-occurring disorders (mental health and substance abuse disorders)? 25% 40% 50% 60%

Poll Question #5 Answer How many youth in the juvenile justice system have co-occurring disorders (mental health and substance abuse disorders)? 25% 40% 50% (Correct Answer) 60%

reclaimingfutures.org

reclaimingfutures.org

reclaimingfutures.org

reclaimingfutures.org

Today Curriculum and leadership program Independent evaluation shows the model is working National learning collaborative with support and funding Additional investments by Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention, the Center for Substance Abuse Treatment, North Carolina Department of Public Safety, Kate B. Reynolds Charitable Trust and The Duke Endowment reclaimingfutures.org

37 Reclaiming Futures Communities reclaimingfutures.org

Three Questions for Evaluation Is it possible? Can we change the system? Do these changes positively impact young people s lives? reclaimingfutures.org

Evaluation Jeffrey A. Butts, Ph.D. Executive Director Research and Evaluation Center John Jay College of Criminal Justice City University of New York 555 West 57th Street, Suite 605 New York, NY 10019 212-237-8486 jbutts@jjay.cuny.edu John Roman, Ph.D. Senior Research Associate Justice Policy Center Urban Institute 2100 M Street, NW Washington, DC 20037 202-261-5774 jroman@ui.urban.org reclaimingfutures.org

Proven Approach: Preliminary Data The Reclaiming Futures model increases days of alcohol and drug abstinence by 42% Reclaiming Futures reduces the costs of crime to society by an average of over $216,000 per youth per year Source Note: Dennis, M., Moritz, K., Meckley, R., et al.. (2012). Evaluating the impact of adding the Reclaiming Futures to Juvenile Treatment Drug Courts. Normal, IL: Chestnut Health Systems. The data was supported by the Center for Substance Abuse Treatment (CSAT), Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) contracts #270-2003-00006 and #270-2007-00004C using data provided by the following grantees: TI17433, TI17434, TI17446, TI17475, TI17484, TI17476, TI17486, TI17490, TI17517, TI17523, TI17535, Reclaiming Futures (RF)/CSAT collaboration sites: TI22838, TI22856, TI22874, TI22907, TI23025, TI23037, TI20921, TI20925, TI20920, TI20924, TI20938, TI20941, and the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention (OJJDP)/CSAT collaboration sites: 655371, 655372, 655373. The authors thank these grantees and their participants for agreeing to share their data to support this secondary analysis. The opinions about this data are those of the authors and do not reflect official positions of the government or individual grantees. Please direct correspondence to Michael L. Dennis, Chestnut Health Systems, 448 Wylie Drive, Normal, IL 61701, mdennis@chestnut.org 309-451-7801. reclaimingfutures.org

Leadership: A Community-Directed Approach Judicial Community Alcohol and drug treatment Juvenile Justice Project director reclaimingfutures.org

Questions? reclaimingfutures.org

Montgomery County, Ohio - Vision Create and implement a seamless, innovation system of treatment using strength- based philosophies and practices Integrate Natural Helpers and community members across the system of care for meaningful restorative justice activities Create positive futures with court-involved youth and their families by building community solutions reclaimingfutures.org

Reclaiming Futures Montgomery County, Ohio - Beliefs: All Youth can succeed Everyone shares responsibility for youth success Systems do change when people s beliefs change reclaimingfutures.org

Reclaiming Futures - Montgomery County Secure Commitments to the Department of Youth Services 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 reclaimingfutures.org

Reclaiming Futures Natural Helper Program History Montgomery County Juvenile Court 2003-2011 180 160 140 120 100 80 60 Trained Natural Helpers Youth Referrals Youth Matches 40 20 0 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 reclaimingfutures.org

Anchorage Reclaiming Futures Vision Strengthening Circles: The Eskimo Blanket Toss Many hands pulling together to raise the youth

Anchorage Reclaiming Futures United justice and community partners Created an operating agreement Introduced team approach to juvenile s case Involved families Developed positive youth development opportunities Brought in new partners to sustain the model

Seattle-King County, WA Margaret Soukup, Project Director, Reclaiming Futures

Weekly Substance Use Site: 1 Total 100% Weekly Substance Use 90% 80% 70% 60% 58% 50% 40% 42% 42% 30% 20% 15% 15% 10% 0% Weekly use of anything\4 Weekly Alcohol Use\4 Weekly Tobacco Use\4 Weekly Marijuana Use\4 2% Weekly Crack/Cocaine Use\4 5% 6% Weekly Heroin/Opiod Use\4 Weekly Other Drug Use\4 3% Any past 90 day needle use\4 13+ Days in Controlled Environment\4 N = 10233 \4 During the past 90 days

Substance Problems Site: 1 Total 100% Substance Problems 90% 80% 32% 70% 60% 65% 64% 70% 50% 40% 58% 30% 20% 31% 34% 27% 10% 0% 10% 3% 2% 3% Intake 3 Month 6 Month 12 Month (N = 10233) (N = 742) (N = 298) (N = 94) High Medium Low

Withdrawal Symptoms Site: 100% 1 Total Withdrawal Symptoms 90% 80% 70% 60% 50% 40% 35% 30% 20% 10% 0% 17% Any lifetime Any past week Acute past week 3% N = 10233

Comorbidity Site: 1 Total 100% Comorbidity 90% 80% 70% 60% 50% 48% 40% 30% 37% 30% 24% 39% 33% 20% 13% 16% 10% 0% Any Past Year Internalizing Disorder Major Depression Disorder Generalized Anxiety Disorder Suicidal Thoughts or Actions Traumatic Distress Disorder\10 Any Past Year Externalizing Disorder Conduct Disorder Attention Deficit- Hyperactivity Disorder N = 10233 \10 Post traumatic distress, acute traumatic distress or disorders of extreme stress not otherwise specified

Assessment (GAIN) Engagement and Motivation (MI) Treatment Planning (MATR) Individual Treatment (ACRA, CRA) Group Treatment (Seven Challenges, MRT)

2012 MATR Treatment Planning 2011 -- Clinical Supervision 2011 Motivational Interviewing 2010 ACRA and CRA 2009 -- MRT 2006 -- Seven Challenges 2005 --GAIN Assessment

King County Youth Retention Data Begin Evidencebased Practices GAIN Seven Challenges ACRA/ACC Motivational Interviewing TF-CBT Clinical Supervision Required GAIN M90

Reclaiming Futures - Seattle-King County, WA 1998-2010 Detention Population 200 180 160 140 120 100 80 60 40 20 - King County Secure Juvenile Detention Population 1998-2010 187 164 148 128 118 109 105 107 103 95 90 89 83 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 reclaimingfutures.org

Reclaiming Futures - Seattle-King County, WA 1998-2010 KC Offender Filings Juvenile Offender Filings -- King County 1998-2010 9000 8000 7000 7938 6845 6000 5000 5423 4561 4463 4660 4035 4017 4088 3815 3657 3861 4000 3000 3193 2000 1000 0 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 Filings Misdemeanor Felony reclaimingfutures.org

Reclaiming Futures Communities Receive Technical assistance Tool kit Training Webinars Annual leadership institute Fellowship support Coaching reclaimingfutures.org

The challenge is great, but we are here to help. reclaimingfutures.org

reclaimingfutures.org

Visit us online reclaimingfutures.org

Contact us Susan Richardson National Executive Director Reclaiming Futures Portland, Oregon susan.richardson@pdx.edu 503-725-8914 Margaret Soukup Project Director, Seattle-King County Reclaiming Futures Science to Service/Workforce Development Coordinator Project/Program Manager III Mental Health, Chemical Abuse and Dependency Services Division (MHCADSD) 401 Fifth Avenue, Suite 400 Seattle WA 98104 margaret.soukup@kingcounty.gov 206.263.8958

Acknowledgments/Funders The development of the contents of this presentation were supported by funding from the National Institute of Disability and Rehabilitation Research, United States Department of Education, and the Center for Mental Health Services Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, United States Department of Health and Human Services (NIDRR grant H133B090019). The content does not represent the views or policies of the funding agencies. In addition, you should not assume endorsement by the Federal Government.