21 results on '"Mcdermid, Samantha"'
Search Results
2. How social workers spend their time in frontline children's social care in England
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Holmes, Lisa and McDermid, Samantha
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- 2013
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3. Calculating and comparing the costs of multidimensional treatment foster care in English local authorities
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Holmes, Lisa, Ward, Harriet, and McDermid, Samantha
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- 2012
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4. Therapeutic Residential Care Viewed in Cross National Perspective: What is the Future?
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Whittaker, James K., Holmes, Lisa, del Valle, Jorge F., Ainsworth, Frank, Andreassen, Tore, Anglin, James, Bellonci, Christopher, Berridge, David, Bravo, Amaia, Canali, Cinzia, Courtney, Mark, Currey, Laurah, Daly, Daniel, Gilligan, Robbie, Grietens, Hans, Harder, Annemiek, Holden, Martha, James, Sigrid, Kendrick, Andrew, Knorth, Erik, Lausten, Mette, Lyons, John, Martin, Eduardo, McDermid, Samantha, McNamara, Patricia, Palareti, Laura, Ramsey, Susan, Sisson, Kari, Small, Richard, Thoburn, June, Thompson, Ronald, Zeira, Anat, Whittaker, James K., Holmes, Lisa, del Valle, Jorge F., Ainsworth, Frank, Andreassen, Tore, Anglin, Jame, Bellonci, Christopher, Berridge, David, Bravo, Amaia, Canali, Cinzia, Courtney, Mark, Currey, Laurah, Daly, Daniel, Gilligan, Robbie, Grietens, Han, Harder, Annemiek, Holden, Martha, James, Sigrid, Kendrick, Andrew, Knorth, Erik, Lausten, Mette, Lyons, John, Martin, Eduardo, McDermid, Samantha, McNamara, Patricia, Palareti, Laura, Ramsey, Susan, Sisson, Kari, Small, Richard, Thoburn, June, Thompson, Ronald, and Zeira, Anat
- Subjects
Therapeutic Residential Care, international perspectives, Principles, Research - Abstract
The International Work Group for Therapeutic Residential Care convened an International Summit on ‘Pathways to Evidence-Based Practice’ at Loughborough University (GBR), Centre for Child and Family Research on 27-29 April, 2016 with generous support from the Sir Halley Stewart Trust and in partnership with The European Scientific Association on Residential and Family Care for Children and Adolescents (NLD) (EUSARF), the International Association for Outcome-Based Evaluation and Research on Family and Children’s Services (ITA) (IAOBER) and the Association of Children’s Residential Centers (USA) and with the additional support of Action for Children (GBR) and the National Implementation Service (NIS) (GBR). Membership includes: Lisa Holmes (Chair), Director, Centre for Child and Family Research, Loughborough University (GBR); James K. Whittaker (Co-Chair), Charles O. Cressey Endowed Professor Emeritus, University of Washington, School of Social Work, Seattle (USA); Jorge Fernandez del Valle, Professor of Psychology and Director, Child and Family Research Group, University of Oviedo (ESP); Frank Ainsworth, Senior Principal Research Fellow (Adjunct), James Cook University, School of Social Work and Human Services, Townsville, Queensland (AUS); Tore Andreassen, Psychologist, The Norwegian Directorate for Children, Youth and Family Affairs (NOR); James P. Anglin, Professor, Faculty of the School of Child and Youth Care, University of Victoria (CAN); Christopher Bellonci, Board-Certified Child/Adolescent and Adult Psychiatrist; Associate Professor, Psychiatry Department, Tufts University School of Medicine, Boston, MA (USA); David Berridge, Professor of Child and Family Welfare, School for Policy Studies, University of Bristol (GBR); Amaia Bravo, Lecturer, Department of Psychology, University of Oviedo (ESP); Cinzia Canali, Senior Researcher, Fondazione Emanuela Zancan, Padova (ITA) and President, International Association of Outcome-Based Evaluation and Research in Family and Children’s Services (IAOBER); Mark Courtney, Professor, School of Social Service Administration, University of Chicago (USA); Laurah Currey, Chief Operating Officer, Pressley Ridge, Pittsburgh, PA (USA) and President, Association for Children’s Residential Centers, (USA); Daniel. L. Daly, Executive Vice President and Director of Youth Care, Father Flanagan’s Boys’ Home, Boys Town, NE (USA); Robbie Gilligan, Professor of Social Work and Social Policy, Trinity College Dublin IRE), Hans Grietens, Professor, Centre for Special Needs Education & Youth Care, University of Groningen (NLD) and President, European Scientific Association on Residential and Family Care for Children and Adolescents (EUSARF); Annemiek T. Harder, Assistant professor, Department of Special Needs Education and Youth Care, University of Groningen (NLD); Martha J. Holden, Senior Extension Associate with the Bronfenbrenner Center for Translational Research and the Principal Investigator and Director of the Residential Child Care Project at Cornell University, Ithaca, NY (USA); Sigrid James, Professor, Department of Social Work & Social Ecology, School of Behavioral Health, Loma Linda University, CA (USA); Andrew Kendrick, Professor of Residential Child Care, School of Social Work and Social Policy at the University of Strathclyde (GBR) and Consultant at the Centre of Excellence for Looked After Children in Scotland (CELCIS) and the Centre for Youth and Criminal Justice (CYCJ) (UK); Erik J. Knorth, Professor, Department of Special Needs Education and Youth Care, University of Groningen (NLD); Mette Lausten, Senior Researcher at SFI - The Danish National Centre for Social Research, Copenhagen (DNK), John S. Lyons, Senior Policy Fellow at Chapin Hall, University of Chicago, IL (USA); Eduardo Martin, Lecturer at the Department of Developmental and Educational Psychology, University of La Laguna, Tenerife (ESP); Samantha McDermid, Research Fellow, Centre for Child and Family Research, Loughborough University (GBR); Patricia McNamara, Senior Fellow (Honorary), Department of Social Work, University of Melbourne (AUS); Laura Palareti, Assistant Professor in Social Psychology, Department of Education Studies, University of Bologna (ITA); Susan Ramsey, Parent and Former Children’s Mental Health Advocate, The Walker School, Needham, MA (USA); Kari M. Sisson, Executive Director, Association of Children’s Residential Centers (USA); Richard W. Small, Walker Executive Director Emeritus, The Walker School, Needham, MA (USA); June Thoburn, Emeritus Professor of Social Work, University of East Anglia (GBR); Ronald Thompson, Senior Director, Boys Town National Research Institute for Child and Family Studies, Boys Town, NE (USA); Anat Zeira, Professor, School of Social Work and Social Welfare, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, and Head of Research and Evaluation at the Haruv Institute (ISR). Our work group wishes to thank CFRC staffer Laura Dale at Loughborough for extraordinary efforts in producing this statement in record time and for her care and assistance with all phases of our Summit activity.
- Published
- 2020
5. Foster Carers’ Receptiveness to New Innovations and Programmes: An Example from the Introduction of Social Pedagogy to UK Foster Care
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McDermid, Samantha, primary, Trivedi, Helen, additional, Holmes, Lisa, additional, and Boddy, Janet, additional
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- 2021
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6. Foster Carers' Receptiveness to New Innovations and Programmes: An Example from the Introduction of Social Pedagogy to UK Foster Care.
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McDermid, Samantha, Trivedi, Helen, Holmes, Lisa, and Boddy, Janet
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MATHEMATICAL models ,RESEARCH methodology ,INTERVIEWING ,HUMAN services programs ,LABOR supply ,PSYCHOSOCIAL factors ,PHILOSOPHY of education ,THEORY ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,SOCIAL work education ,THEMATIC analysis ,FOSTER home care ,FOSTER parents ,MEDICAL needs assessment - Abstract
Foster carers characterise a highly diverse workforce that shares the choice to provide a home and family for children who can no longer reside with their family. This diversity makes supporting and providing for carers' training needs a complex task for fostering services. Understanding what might influence their engagement in training would be useful. This article outlines themes related to foster carers' engagement with social pedagogy, using data from the Head, Heart, Hands (HHH) programme evaluation. Analysis of interviews with seventy-six foster carers over a period of three years is presented. The emerging themes were used to devise an illustrative typology of receptiveness to training. The themes relate to the perceived impact of HHH on their practice and compatibility with the existing children's social care (CSC) system. The article explores the factors that may influence foster carers' positioning within the typology. The contributions that such a typology might make to the wider evidence base across CSC, in terms of the implementation and potential impacts of intervention, are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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7. טיפול פנימייתי לילדים ולבני נוער: נייר עמדה של קבוצת מומחים במפגש הפסגה הבין-לאומית לפנימיות טיפוליות. (Therapeutic residential care for children and youth: A consensus statement of the international work group on therapeutic residential care)
- Author
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Whittaker, James K., Holmes, Lisa, del Valle, Jorge F., Ainsworth, Frank, Andreassen, Tore, Anglin, James, Bellonci, Christopher, Berridge, David, Bravo, Amaia, Canali, Cinzia, Courtney, Mark, Currey, Laurah, Daly, Daniel, Gilligan, Robbie, Grietens, Hans, Harder, Annemiek, Holden, Martha, James, Sigrid, Kendrick, Andrew, Knorth, Erik, Lausten, Mette, Lyons, John, Martin, Eduardo, McDermid, Samantha, McNamara, Patricia, Palareti, Laura, Ramsey, Susan, Sisson, Kari, Small, Richard, Thoburn, June, Thompson, Ronald, Zeira, Anat, Whittaker, James K., Holmes, Lisa, del Valle, Jorge F., Ainsworth, Frank, Andreassen, Tore, Anglin, Jame, Bellonci, Christopher, Berridge, David, Bravo, Amaia, Canali, Cinzia, Courtney, Mark, Currey, Laurah, Daly, Daniel, Gilligan, Robbie, Grietens, Han, Harder, Annemiek, Holden, Martha, James, Sigrid, Kendrick, Andrew, Knorth, Erik, Lausten, Mette, Lyons, John, Martin, Eduardo, McDermid, Samantha, McNamara, Patricia, Palareti, Laura, Ramsey, Susan, Sisson, Kari, Small, Richard, Thoburn, June, Thompson, Ronald, and Zeira, Anat
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children residential care - Abstract
ג'יימס ק. וויטאקר )ארה"ב(, ליסה הולמס )בריטניה(, חורחה פ. דל וואלה )ספרד(, פרנק איינסוורת' )אוסטרליה(, טורה אנדריאסן )נורבגיה(, ג'יימס אנגלין )קנדה(, כריסטופר בלונצ'י )ארה"ב(, דיוויד ברידג' )בריטניה(, אמאיה בראבו )ספרד(, צ'ינציה קנאלי )איטליה(, מרק קורטני )ארה"ב(, לורה קורי )ארה"ב(, דניאל דיילי )ארה"ב(, רובי גיליגאן )אירלנד(, הנס גריטנס )הולנד(, אנמיאק הרדר )הולנד(, מרתה הולדן )ארה"ב(, סיגריד ג'יימס )ארה"ב(, אנדרו קנדריק )בריטניה(, אריק קנורת' )הולנד(, מטה לאוסטן )דנמרק(, ג'ון ליונס )ארה"ב(, אדוארדו מרטין )ספרד(, סמנת'ה מקדרמיד )בריטניה(, פטרישיה מקנמרה )אוסטרליה(, לאורה פאלארטי )איטליה(, סוזן רמזי )ארה"ב(, קארי סיזון )ארה"ב(, ריצ'רד וו. סמול )ארה"ב(, ג'ון ת'ובורן )בריטניה(, רונלד תומפסון )ארה"ב(, ענת זעירא )ישראל( 1
- Published
- 2016
8. טיפול פנימייתי לילדים ולבני נוער : נייר עמדה של קבוצת מומחים במפגש הפסגה הבין-לאומית לפנימיות טיפוליות
- Author
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Whittaker, James K., Holmes, Lisa, del Valle, Jorge F., Ainsworth, Frank, Andreassen, Tore, Anglin, James P., Bellonci, Christopher, Berridge, David, Bravo, Amaia, Canali, Cinzia, Courtney, Mark E., Currey, Laurah, Daly, Daniel L., Gilligan, Robbie, Grietens, Hans, Harder, Annemiek T., Holden, Martha J., James, Sigrid, Kendrick, Andrew, Knorth, Erik J., Lausten, Mette, Lyons, John S., Martín, Eduardo, McDermid, Samantha, McNamara, Patricia M., Palareti, Laura, Ramsay, Susan, Sisson, Kari M., Small, Richard W., Thoburn, June, Thompson, Robert W., and Zeira, Anat
- Subjects
BF - Abstract
In many developed countries around the world residential care interventions for children and adolescents have come under increasing scrutiny. Against this background an international summit was organised in England (spring 2016) with experts from 13 countries to reflect on therapeutic residential care (TRC). The following working definition of TRC was leading: "Therapeutic residential care involves the planful use of a purposefully constructed, multi-dimensional living environment designed to enhance or provide treatment, education, socialization, support, and protection to children and youth with identified mental health or behavioural needs in partnership with their families and in collaboration with a full spectrum of community based formal and informal helping resources". The meeting was characterised by exchange of information and evidence, and by preparing an international research agenda. In addition, the outlines of a consensus statement on TRC were discussed. This statement, originally published in English and now reproduced in a Hebrew translation, comprises inter alia five basic principles of care that according to the Work Group on Therapeutic Residential Care should be guiding for residential youth care provided at any time.
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- 2016
9. Mapping Needs, Costs and Outcomes: The English Adoption Journey
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Holmes, Lisa, McDermid, Samantha, and Simmonds, John
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- 2016
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10. Facilitating Peer Support between Foster Carers in the UK
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McDermid, Samantha
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- 2016
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11. Normalizing post adoption support for all
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Lushey, Clare, primary, Holmes, Lisa, additional, and McDermid, Samantha, additional
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- 2017
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12. Looking for long-term outcomes: What early interventions are needed for children and young people at risk of maltreatment in England?
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McDermid, Samantha, Hyde-Dryden, Georgia, and Ward, Harriet
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Safeguarding ,Early Intervention ,Long term outcomes - Abstract
The Safeguarding Children Research Initiative (Davies & Ward, 2012) was a programme of fifteen studies commissioned by the Department of Health and what is now the Department for Education, each of which explored a different aspect of safeguarding children. This paper brings together the findings of these studies to explore the types of strategies that have been shown to promote positive long-term outcomes for children and young people at risk of maltreatment. The authors highlight the potential harm caused to children when they are exposed to maltreatment and demonstrate the range of interventions that have been developed to improve their long-term outcomes. The paper provides examples of universal, targeted and intensive services with a strong evidence base for success. The most effective intensive interventions are found to be those that prevent the occurrence or re-occurrence of maltreatment, address the underlying factors associated with maltreatment and the various stages associated with the process of change. The authors also examine the supplementary issues practitioners need to be aware of when considering the choice of intervention, including some of the obstacles to providing support, such as the nature of the evidence base, the extent to which different agencies work together to provide services for vulnerable children and families, the availability of resources and the ways in which children and families move between different parts of the child welfare system. If practitioners are to make best use of the available interventions, it is important that they select those underpinned by robust evidence showing that positive outcomes have been achieved for families in similar circumstances.
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- 2015
13. The evaluation of the Mockingbird Family Model Final evaluation report October 2016
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McDermid, Samantha, Baker, Claire, Lawson, Doug, Holmes, Lisa, McDermid, Samantha, Baker, Claire, Lawson, Doug, and Holmes, Lisa
- Published
- 2016
14. Therapeutic Residential Care for Children and Youth: A Consensus Statement of the International Work Group on Therapeutic Residential Care*
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Whittaker, James K., primary, Holmes, Lisa, additional, del Valle, Jorge F., additional, Ainsworth, Frank, additional, Andreassen, Tore, additional, Anglin, James, additional, Bellonci, Christopher, additional, Berridge, David, additional, Bravo, Amaia, additional, Canali, Cinzia, additional, Courtney, Mark, additional, Currey, Laurah, additional, Daly, Daniel, additional, Gilligan, Robbie, additional, Grietens, Hans, additional, Harder, Annemiek, additional, Holden, Martha, additional, James, Sigrid, additional, Kendrick, Andrew, additional, Knorth, Erik, additional, Lausten, Mette, additional, Lyons, John, additional, Martin, Eduardo, additional, McDermid, Samantha, additional, McNamara, Patricia, additional, Palareti, Laura, additional, Ramsey, Susan, additional, Sisson, Kari, additional, Small, Richard, additional, Thoburn, June, additional, Thompson, Ronald, additional, and Zeira, Anat, additional
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- 2016
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15. Normalizing post adoption support for all.
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Lushey, Clare, Holmes, Lisa, and McDermid, Samantha
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ADOPTION ,CHILD welfare ,FAMILY health ,FAMILY services ,INTERVIEWING ,RESEARCH methodology ,NEEDS assessment ,RESOURCE allocation ,SOCIAL services ,SOCIAL workers ,SURVEYS ,SAMPLE size (Statistics) ,GOVERNMENT policy ,SOCIAL support ,DATA analysis software ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Abstract: Within a context of substantial adoption policy reform in England, this paper explores post adoption support. Findings from a small‐scale survey of 22 local authorities in England and interviews with 11 adoption practitioners (from 11 of the authorities that completed the survey) are presented and related national policy discussed. The paper argues that support should continue postmatching a child with their adoptive parent(s) and that this should be the norm rather than the exception. It also emphasizes the need to improve the availability of and access to post adoption support in a timely manner. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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16. The Common Assessment Framework: the impact of the lead professional on families and professionals as part of a continuum of care in England
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Holmes, Lisa, primary and McDermid, Samantha, additional
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- 2014
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17. Support for adopted children and their families in England
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Lushey, Clare, primary, Holmes, Lisa, additional, and McDermid, Samantha, additional
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- 2014
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18. The Common Assessment Framework: the impact of the lead professional on families and professionals as part of a continuum of care in England.
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Holmes, Lisa and McDermid, Samantha
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CHILD health services , *CHILD welfare , *CONTINUUM of care , *FAMILY health , *FAMILY services , *FOCUS groups , *INTERVIEWING , *RESEARCH methodology , *EVALUATION of medical care , *PEOPLE with intellectual disabilities , *PROFESSIONS , *RESEARCH funding , *SOCIAL case work , *EMPLOYEES' workload , *QUALITATIVE research , *JOB performance , *OCCUPATIONAL roles , *QUANTITATIVE research , *SOCIAL impact assessment , *DATA analysis software - Abstract
This paper utilizes data gathered as part of an exploratory study to assess the costs and impact of the Common Assessment Framework (CAF), to examine the impact that the lead professional role had on families and workers. The study found that both families and workers believed the lead professional to be central to the CAF process, providing a range of support, coordinating multi‐agency responses to need and acting as a single point of contact between families and workers. The paper highlights the need for consideration to be given to inter‐agency working, data sharing, training for workers and the capacity implications for those taking on the role. The extent to which the lead professional might be more integrated into the continuum of support for vulnerable children and families is also examined. The paper highlights the need to consider the lead professional's role in not only preventing the need for more intensive services, such as those provided by statutory social work, but also maintaining outcomes achieved once a child protection plan is closed, or a child is reunified with his or her birth family after a period of being in care. The implications of the findings for policy and practice are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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19. Improving outcomes for children and young people in care
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Ward, Harriet, primary, Courtney, Mark, additional, Del Valle, Jorge F., additional, McDermid, Samantha, additional, and Zeira, Anat, additional
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- 2009
- Full Text
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20. Therapeutic Residential Care for Children and Youth: A Consensus Statement of the International Work Group on Therapeutic Residential Care
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Annemiek Harder, Christopher Bellonci, Andrew Kendrick, Susan Ramsey, Cinzia Canali, David Berridge, Tore Andreassen, Ronald W. Thompson, Mette Lausten, Robbie Gilligan, Kari M. Sisson, Lisa Holmes, Anat Zeira, Sigrid James, Eduardo Martín, Jorge F. del Valle, James K. Whittaker, Erik J. Knorth, James P. Anglin, Mark E. Courtney, Daniel L. Daly, Laura Currey, June Thoburn, Richard W. Small, Martha J. Holden, Patricia McNamara, Laura Palareti, Hans Grietens, Frank Ainsworth, Samantha McDermid, Amaia Bravo, John S. Lyons, Developmental and behavioural disorders in education and care: assessment and intervention, Whittaker, James K, Holmes, Lisa, del Valle, Jorge F., Ainsworth, Frank, Andreassen, Tore, Anglin, Jame, Bellonci, Christopher, Berridge, David, Bravo, Amaia, Canali, Cinzia, Courtney, Mark, Currey, Laurah, Daly, Daniel, Gilligan, Robbie, Grietens, Han, Harder, Annemiek, Holden, Martha, James, Sigrid, Kendrick, Andrew, Knorth, Erik, Lausten, Mette, Lyons, John, Martin, Eduardo, Mcdermid, Samantha, Mcnamara, Patricia, Palareti, Laura, Ramsey, Susan, Sisson, Kari, Small, Richard, Thoburn, June, Thompson, Ronald, Zeira, Anat, DIPARTIMENTO DI SCIENZE DELL'EDUCAZIONE 'GIOVANNI MARIA BERTIN', and AREA MIN. 11 - Scienze storiche, filosofiche, pedagogiche e psicologiche
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Adolescent ,Statement (logic) ,Child Welfare ,Therapeutic Residential Care ,Group care ,Nursing ,Residential care ,Medicine ,Humans ,Therapeutic Residential Care, international perspectives, Principles, Research ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Quality of care ,Child ,Residential Treatment ,business.industry ,Research ,05 social sciences ,050301 education ,international perspectives ,Variety (cybernetics) ,Work (electrical) ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,business ,0503 education ,Law ,Principles ,050104 developmental & child psychology - Abstract
none 32 si The International Work Group for Therapeutic Residential Care convened an International Summit on ‘Pathways to Evidence-Based Practice’ at Loughborough University (GBR), Centre for Child and Family Research on 27-29 April, 2016 with generous support from the Sir Halley Stewart Trust and in partnership with The European Scientific Association on Residential and Family Care for Children and Adolescents (NLD) (EUSARF), the International Association for Outcome-Based Evaluation and Research on Family and Children’s Services (ITA) (IAOBER) and the Association of Children’s Residential Centers (USA) and with the additional support of Action for Children (GBR) and the National Implementation Service (NIS) (GBR). Membership includes: Lisa Holmes (Chair), Director, Centre for Child and Family Research, Loughborough University (GBR); James K. Whittaker (Co-Chair), Charles O. Cressey Endowed Professor Emeritus, University of Washington, School of Social Work, Seattle (USA); Jorge Fernandez del Valle, Professor of Psychology and Director, Child and Family Research Group, University of Oviedo (ESP); Frank Ainsworth, Senior Principal Research Fellow (Adjunct), James Cook University, School of Social Work and Human Services, Townsville, Queensland (AUS); Tore Andreassen, Psychologist, The Norwegian Directorate for Children, Youth and Family Affairs (NOR); James P. Anglin, Professor, Faculty of the School of Child and Youth Care, University of Victoria (CAN); Christopher Bellonci, Board-Certified Child/Adolescent and Adult Psychiatrist; Associate Professor, Psychiatry Department, Tufts University School of Medicine, Boston, MA (USA); David Berridge, Professor of Child and Family Welfare, School for Policy Studies, University of Bristol (GBR); Amaia Bravo, Lecturer, Department of Psychology, University of Oviedo (ESP); Cinzia Canali, Senior Researcher, Fondazione Emanuela Zancan, Padova (ITA) and President, International Association of Outcome-Based Evaluation and Research in Family and Children’s Services (IAOBER); Mark Courtney, Professor, School of Social Service Administration, University of Chicago (USA); Laurah Currey, Chief Operating Officer, Pressley Ridge, Pittsburgh, PA (USA) and President, Association for Children’s Residential Centers, (USA); Daniel. L. Daly, Executive Vice President and Director of Youth Care, Father Flanagan’s Boys’ Home, Boys Town, NE (USA); Robbie Gilligan, Professor of Social Work and Social Policy, Trinity College Dublin IRE), Hans Grietens, Professor, Centre for Special Needs Education & Youth Care, University of Groningen (NLD) and President, European Scientific Association on Residential and Family Care for Children and Adolescents (EUSARF); Annemiek T. Harder, Assistant professor, Department of Special Needs Education and Youth Care, University of Groningen (NLD); Martha J. Holden, Senior Extension Associate with the Bronfenbrenner Center for Translational Research and the Principal Investigator and Director of the Residential Child Care Project at Cornell University, Ithaca, NY (USA); Sigrid James, Professor, Department of Social Work & Social Ecology, School of Behavioral Health, Loma Linda University, CA (USA); Andrew Kendrick, Professor of Residential Child Care, School of Social Work and Social Policy at the University of Strathclyde (GBR) and Consultant at the Centre of Excellence for Looked After Children in Scotland (CELCIS) and the Centre for Youth and Criminal Justice (CYCJ) (UK); Erik J. Knorth, Professor, Department of Special Needs Education and Youth Care, University of Groningen (NLD); Mette Lausten, Senior Researcher at SFI - The Danish National Centre for Social Research, Copenhagen (DNK), John S. Lyons, Senior Policy Fellow at Chapin Hall, University of Chicago, IL (USA); Eduardo Martin, Lecturer at the Department of Developmental and Educational Psychology, University of La Laguna, Tenerife (ESP); Samantha McDermid, Research Fellow, Centre for Child and Family Research, Loughborough University (GBR); Patricia McNamara, Senior Fellow (Honorary), Department of Social Work, University of Melbourne (AUS); Laura Palareti, Assistant Professor in Social Psychology, Department of Education Studies, University of Bologna (ITA); Susan Ramsey, Parent and Former Children’s Mental Health Advocate, The Walker School, Needham, MA (USA); Kari M. Sisson, Executive Director, Association of Children’s Residential Centers (USA); Richard W. Small, Walker Executive Director Emeritus, The Walker School, Needham, MA (USA); June Thoburn, Emeritus Professor of Social Work, University of East Anglia (GBR); Ronald Thompson, Senior Director, Boys Town National Research Institute for Child and Family Studies, Boys Town, NE (USA); Anat Zeira, Professor, School of Social Work and Social Welfare, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, and Head of Research and Evaluation at the Haruv Institute (ISR). Our work group wishes to thank CFRC staffer Laura Dale at Loughborough for extraordinary efforts in producing this statement in record time and for her care and assistance with all phases of our Summit activity. Whittaker, James K; Holmes, Lisa; del Valle, Jorge F.; Ainsworth, Frank; Andreassen, Tore; Anglin, James; Bellonci, Christopher; Berridge, David; Bravo, Amaia; Canali, Cinzia; Courtney, Mark; Currey, Laurah; Daly, Daniel; Gilligan, Robbie; Grietens, Hans; Harder, Annemiek; Holden, Martha; James, Sigrid; Kendrick, Andrew; Knorth, Erik; Lausten, Mette; Lyons, John; Martin, Eduardo; Mcdermid, Samantha; Mcnamara, Patricia; Palareti, Laura; Ramsey, Susan; Sisson, Kari; Small, Richard; Thoburn, June; Thompson, Ronald; Zeira, Anat Whittaker, James K; Holmes, Lisa; del Valle, Jorge F.; Ainsworth, Frank; Andreassen, Tore; Anglin, James; Bellonci, Christopher; Berridge, David; Bravo, Amaia; Canali, Cinzia; Courtney, Mark; Currey, Laurah; Daly, Daniel; Gilligan, Robbie; Grietens, Hans; Harder, Annemiek; Holden, Martha; James, Sigrid; Kendrick, Andrew; Knorth, Erik; Lausten, Mette; Lyons, John; Martin, Eduardo; Mcdermid, Samantha; Mcnamara, Patricia; Palareti, Laura; Ramsey, Susan; Sisson, Kari; Small, Richard; Thoburn, June; Thompson, Ronald; Zeira, Anat
- Published
- 2016
21. [Therapeutic Residential Care for Children and Youth: A Consensus Statement of the International Work Group on Therapeutic Residential Care].
- Author
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Whittaker JK, Holmes L, Del Valle JF, Ainsworth F, Andreassen T, Anglin J, Bellonci C, Berridge D, Bravo A, Canali C, Courtney M, Currey L, Daly D, Gilligan R, Grietens H, Harder A, Holden M, James S, Kendrick A, Knorth E, Lausten M, Lyons J, Martin E, McDermid S, McNamara P, Palareti L, Ramsey S, Sisson K, Small R, Thoburn J, Thompson R, and Zeira A
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Humans, Child Welfare, Residential Treatment standards
- Abstract
Therapeutic Residential Care for Children and Youth: A Consensus Statement of the International Work Group on Therapeutic Residential Care. In many developed countries around the world residential care interventions for children and adolescents have come under increasing scrutiny. Against this background an international summit was organised in England (spring 2016) with experts from 13 countries to reflect on therapeutic residential care (TRC). The following working definition of TRC was leading: “Therapeutic residential care involves the planful use of a purposefully constructed, multi-dimensional living environment designed to enhance or provide treatment, education, socialization, support, and protection to children and youth with identified mental health or behavioral needs in partnership with their families and in collaboration with a full spectrum of community based formal and informal helping resources”. The meeting was characterised by exchange of information and evidence, and by preparing an international research agenda. In addition, the outlines of a consensus statement on TRC were discussed. This statement, originally published in English and now reproduced in a Spanish translation, comprises inter alia five basic principles of care that according to the Work Group on Therapeutic Residental Care should be guiding for residential youth care provided at any time.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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