Definition and Guiding Principes of Family-Driven Care

Definition of Family-Driven Care

  • Family-driven means families have a primary decision making role in the care of their own children as well as the policies and procedures governing care for all children in their community, state, tribe, territory and nation.  This includes:
  • Choosing culturally and linguistically competent supports, services, and providers;
  • Setting goals;
  • Designing, implementing and evaluating programs;
  • Monitoring outcomes; and
  • Partnering in funding decisions.

Guiding Principles of Family-Driven Care

  1. Families and youth, providers and administrators embrace the concept of sharing decision-making and responsibility for outcomes.
  2. Families and youth are given accurate, understandable, and complete information necessary to set goals and to make informed decisions and choices about the right services and supports for individual children and their families.
  3. All children, youth, and families have a biological, adoptive, foster, or surrogate family voice advocating on their behalf and may appoint them as substitute decision makers at any time.
  4. Families and family-run organizations engage in peer support activities to reduce isolation, gather and disseminate accurate information, and strengthen the family voice.
  5. Families and family-run organizations provide direction for decisions that impact funding for services, treatments, and supports and advocate for families and youth to have choices.
  6. Providers take the initiative to change policy and practice from provider-driven to family-driven.
  7. Administrators allocate staff, training, support and resources to make family-driven practice work at the point where services and supports are delivered to children, youth, and families and where family and youth run organizations are funded and sustained.
  8. Community attitude change efforts focus on removing barriers and discrimination created by stigma.
  9. Communities and private agencies embrace, value, and celebrate the diverse cultures of their children, youth, and families and work to eliminate mental health disparities.
  10. Everyone who connects with children, youth, and families continually advances their own cultural and linguistic responsiveness as the population served changes so that the needs of the diverse populations are appropriately addressed.
Upcoming Events

Listed below are upcoming events in the field. If you are a registered chapter, state organization and/or partner and would like to add your event, please email Corey Brown at cbrown@ffcmh.org.

01
05.2013
Washington D.C.

The National Technical Assistance Center for Children’s Mental Health at Georgetown University is

Video Highlight

Sandra Spencer, Executive Director of the National Federation of Families for Children's Mental Health was invited to the White House last week. Listen to how it went! Now in 720p (HD)!

 

 

 

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