Grandfamilies Kinship Care at Children’s Service Society of Utah
Bacall Hincks, LCSW Grandfamilies Program Administrator Washington, DC
Grandfamilies Kinship Care at Childrens Service Society of Utah - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Grandfamilies Kinship Care at Childrens Service Society of Utah Bacall Hincks, LCSW Grandfamilies Program Administrator Washington, DC Childrens Service Society is the Oldest Non-Profit in the State of Utah Childrens Service Society
Bacall Hincks, LCSW Grandfamilies Program Administrator Washington, DC
Children’s Service Society was originally founded in 1884 as a day nursery, later as a home for orphaned children, foster care, and then adoption. Help with childcare, parenting, and kinship family support has always part of the services that Children’s Service Society has provided.
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CHILDREN’S SERVICE SOCIETY of UTAH
SUPPORT SERVICES CARE ABOUT CHILDCARE
GRANDFAMILIES ADOPTIONS QUALITY IMPROVEMENT CHILDCARE REFERRAL PARENTS AS TEACHERS
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In 2002, Grandfamilies was born from a seed grant from Generations United. Since that time Grandfamilies has expanded program services to five counties in Utah and planning for additional expansion from Family First Prevention Service funding
According to the Child Welfare Information Gateway kinship care is defined as "the full-time care, nurturing, and protection of a child by relatives, members of their Tribe or clan, godparents, stepparents, or other adults who have a family relationship to a child." The relationship should be respected
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Siblings
Behavioral Health Cultural Identity
Safety Belonging
Mental Health
Connection to Parents
Stability Permanency
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Generations United State of Grandfamilies Report 2017 Annie E Casey Kids Count Data
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Common Questions
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more adverse childhood experiences compared to 13% in the general population
anxiety, depression and/or behavioral problems than children not in foster care.
(ACEs) are 12 times more likely to have negative health outcomes in adulthood.
high risk for substance use disorders of their own
experiences have not had the opportunity to develop healthy attachments with primary caregivers
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interpersonal skills
self-esteem
expressing feelings
managing feelings
dynamics
coping skills
effects of drugs and alcohol
pressure
techniques
termination
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resources
Interventions
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Activities: Spring Carnival, Holiday Dinner, Halloween party, Summer BBQ, Guest Speakers on pertinent topics, parenting tips and more.
We bring families together to have fun, to educate caregivers on current issues, promote family bonding and attachment, and provide children pro social activities
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"One thing I’ve noticed is that most people go to grandma’s house and get spoiled, but for me it was the only safe place I had. Getting to live with grandma was like ‘going to grandma’s house’ all the time. I had more love there than anywhere else in my life." – Chad Dingle, raised by grandmother, from Generations United State of the Grandfamilies Report 2018
"Family is very important. They embrace us in the good times and the bad."
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“We have friends who are retired who are always telling me about their next cruise to Hawaii. I tell them I go on cruises every day. I cruise to school, I cruise to the doctor’s office, I cruise to the skateboarding park. Joey is my ‘cruise to Hawaii’ and you know what, I wouldn’t trade my cruise for theirs.” – Adrian Charniak, grandparent caregiver from Generations United State of the Grandfamilies Report 2017 “I feel blessed to have this boy in my life. He is a treasure, and most likely, I would not be here without him. He gave me something positive to focus on, rather than the heartaches and sadness and grief. I have a renewed sense of hope, that I’m doing something worthwhile.” 70 – Bonnie Martin, grandparent caregiver from Generations United State of the Grandfamilies Report 2017
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The purpose of RCORP is to support treatment for and prevention of substance use disorder, including opioid use disorder, in rural counties at the highest risk for substance use disorder.
This product was supported by the Federal Office of Rural Health Policy (FORHP), Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA), U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) under grant # U6BRH32364. The information, conclusions and opinions expressed in this product are those of the authors and no endorsement by FORHP, HRSA, or HHS is intended or should be inferred.