1. Information sharing between the child welfare and behavioral health systems: Perspectives from four stakeholder groups.
- Author
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Hwang, Sophia H. J., Mollen, Cynthia J., Kellom, Katherine S., Dougherty, Susan L., and Noonan, Kathleen G.
- Subjects
ACTION research ,ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,CHILD welfare ,FOCUS groups ,FOSTER children ,FOSTER home care ,FOSTER parents ,GROUNDED theory ,INFORMATION storage & retrieval systems ,MEDICAL databases ,INFORMED consent (Medical law) ,INTERVIEWING ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL protocols ,MENTAL health personnel ,MENTAL health services ,METROPOLITAN areas ,QUALITY assurance ,RESEARCH funding ,SOCIAL case work ,SOCIAL workers ,QUALITATIVE research ,GOVERNMENT policy ,JUDGMENT sampling ,OCCUPATIONAL roles ,ACCESS to information ,DATA analysis software ,MEDICAL coding ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
This qualitative study articulates the challenges, best practices, and facilitators to information sharing when addressing the behavioral health needs of children in out-of-home care. 13 interviews and nine focus groups were conducted to illuminate the perspectives of foster parents, mental health clinicians, provider agency social workers, and city-employed child welfare professionals. In total, 65 individuals participated in this qualitative study and data were analyzed using a modified grounded theory approach. Results indicate that challenges and best practices in cross-system information sharing articulated across the four stakeholder groups are attributed to variation in information accessibility, clarity in roles and protocols, ability in obtaining signatures for consent/release forms, and attitudinal differences towards collaboration. Implications to improve policy and practice are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2017
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