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UACF Glossary
- Accessible services:
- Services that are affordable, located nearby, and open
during evenings and weekends. Staff is sensitive to and
incorporates individual and cultural values. Staff is also
sensitive to barriers that may keep a person from getting help.
For example, an adolescent may be more willing to attend a
support group meeting in a church or club near home than to
travel to a mental health center. An accessible service can
handle consumer demand without placing people on a long waiting
list.
- Appropriate services:
- Designed to meet the specific needs of each individual child
and family. For example, one family may need day treatment,
while another may need home-based services. Appropriate
services for one child and family may not be appropriate for
another. Appropriate services usually are provided in the
child's community.
- Assessment:
- A professional review of child and family needs that is done
when services are first sought from a caregiver. The
assessment of the child includes a review of physical and mental
health, intelligence, school performance, family situation, and
behavior in the community. The assessment identifies the
strengths of the child and family. Together, the caregiver
and family decide what kind of treatment and supports, if any,
are needed.
- Caregiver:
- A person who has special training to help people with mental
health problems. Examples include social workers, teachers,
psychologists, psychiatrists, and mentors.
- Case manager:
- An individual who organizes and coordinates services and
supports for children with mental health problems and their
families. (Alternate terms: service coordinator, advocate, and
facilitator.)
- Case management:
- A service that helps people arrange for appropriate
services and supports. A case manager coordinates
mental health, social work, educational, health, vocational,
transportation, advocacy, respite care, and
recreational services, as needed. The case manager
makes sure that the changing needs of the child and family are
met. (This definition does not apply to managed care.)
- Child protective services:
- Designed to safeguard the child when abuse, neglect, or
abandonment is suspected, or when there is no family to take
care of the child. Examples of help delivered in the home
include financial assistance, vocational training, homemaker
services, and daycare. If in-home supports are insufficient, the
child may be removed from the home on a temporary or permanent
basis. Ideally, the goal is to keep the child with the family
whenever possible.
- Children and adolescents at risk for mental health
problems:
- Children are at greater risk for developing mental health
problems when certain factors occur in their lives or
environments. Factors include physical abuse, emotional abuse or
neglect, harmful stress, discrimination, poverty, loss of a
loved one, frequent relocation, alcohol and other drug use,
trauma, and exposure to violence.
- Continuum of care:
- A term that implies a progression of services that a child
moves through, usually one service at a time. More recently, it
has come to mean comprehensive services. Also see system of
care and wraparound services.
- Coordinated services:
- Child-serving organizations talk with the family and agree
upon a plan of care that meets the child's needs. These
organizations can include mental health, education, juvenile
justice, and child welfare. Case management is
necessary to coordinate services. Also see family-centered
services and wraparound services.
- Crisis residential treatment services:
- Short-term, round-the-clock help provided in a nonhospital
setting during a crisis. For example, when a child becomes
aggressive and uncontrollable, despite in-home supports, a
parent can temporarily place the child in a crisis
residential treatment service. The purposes of this care
are to avoid inpatient hospitalization, help stabilize
the child, and determine the next appropriate step.
- Cultural competence:
- Help that is sensitive and responsive to cultural
differences. Caregivers are aware of the impact of
culture and possess skills to help provide services that respond
appropriately to a person's unique cultural differences,
including race and ethnicity, national origin, religion, age,
gender, sexual orientation, or physical disability. They also
adapt their skills to fit a family's values and customs.
- Day treatment:
- Day treatment includes special education,
counseling, parent training, vocational training, skill
building, crisis intervention, and recreational therapy. It
lasts at least 4 hours a day. Day treatment programs
work in conjunction with mental health, recreation, and
education organizations and may even be provided by them.
- DSM-IV (Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of
Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition):
- An official manual of mental health problems developed by
the American Psychiatric Association. Psychiatrists,
psychologists, social workers, and other health and mental
health care providers use this reference book to understand and
diagnose mental health problems. Insurance companies and health
care providers also use the terms and explanations in this book
when discussing mental health problems.
- Early intervention:
- A process used to recognize warning signs for mental health
problems and to take early action against factors that put
individuals at risk. Early intervention can help
children get better in less time and can prevent problems from
becoming worse.
- Emergency and crisis services:
- A group of services that is available 24 hours a day, 7 days
a week, to help during a mental health emergency. Examples
include telephone crisis hotlines, suicide hotlines, crisis
counseling, crisis residential treatment services,
crisis outreach teams, and crisis respite care.
- Family-centered services:
- Help designed to meet the specific needs of each individual
child and family. Children and families should not be expected
to fit into services that do not meet their needs. Also see
appropriate services, coordinated services, wraparound services,
and cultural competence.
- Family support services:
- Help designed to keep the family together, while coping with
mental health problems that affect them. These services may
include consumer information workshops, in-home supports, family
therapy, parenting training, crisis services, and
respite care.
- Home-based services:
- Help provided in a family's home either for a defined period
of time or for as long as it takes to deal with a mental health
problem. Examples include parent training, counseling, and
working with family members to identify, find, or provide other
necessary help. The goal is to prevent the child from being
placed outside of the home. (Alternate term: in-home supports.)
- Independent living services:
- Support for a young person living on his or her own. These
services include therapeutic group homes, supervised
apartment living, and job placement. Services teach youth how to
handle financial, medical, housing, transportation, and other
daily living needs, as well as how to get along with others.
- Individualized services:
- Services designed to meet the unique needs of each child and
family. Services are individualized when the caregivers
pay attention to the needs and strengths, ages, and stages of
development of the child and individual family members. Also see
appropriate services and family-centered services.
- Inpatient hospitalization:
- Mental health treatment provided in a hospital setting 24
hours a day. Inpatient hospitalization provides: (1) short-term
treatment in cases where a child is in crisis and possibly a
danger to his/herself or others, and (2) diagnosis and treatment
when the patient cannot be evaluated or treated appropriately in
an outpatient setting.
- Managed care:
- A way to supervise the delivery of health care services.
Managed care may specify which caregivers the
insured family can see and may also limit the number of visits
and kinds of services that are covered by insurance.
- Mental health:
- How a person thinks, feels, and acts when faced with life's
situations. Mental health is how people look at
themselves, their lives, and the other people in their lives;
evaluate their challenges and problems; and explore choices.
This includes handling stress, relating to other people, and
making decisions.
- Mental health problems:
- Mental health problems are real. They affect one's thoughts,
body, feelings, and behavior. Mental health problems are not
just a passing phase. They can be severe, seriously interfere
with a person's life, and even cause a person to become
disabled. Mental health problems include depression, bipolar
disorder (manic-depressive illness), attention-deficit/
hyperactivity disorder, anxiety disorders, eating disorders,
schizophrenia, and conduct disorder.
- Mental disorders:
- Another term used for mental health problems.
- Mental illnesses:
- This term is usually used to refer to severe mental health
problems in adults.
- Plan of care:
- A treatment plan especially designed for each child and
family, based on individual strengths and needs. The
caregiver(s) develop(s) the plan with input from the
family. The plan establishes goals and details appropriate
treatment and services to meet the special needs of the child
and family.
- Residential treatment centers:
- Facilities that provide treatment 24 hours a day and can
usually serve more than 12 young people at a time. Children with
serious emotional disturbances receive constant
supervision and care. Treatment may include individual, group,
and family therapy; behavior therapy; special education;
recreation therapy; and medical services. Residential treatment
is usually more long-term than inpatient hospitalization.
Centers are also known as therapeutic group homes.
- Respite care:
- A service that provides a break for parents who have a child
with a serious emotional disturbance. Trained parents
or counselors take care of the child for a brief period of time
to give families relief from the strain of caring for the child.
This type of care can be provided in the home or in another
location. Some parents may need this help every week.
- Serious emotional disturbances:
- Diagnosable disorders in children and adolescents that
severely disrupt their daily functioning in the home, school, or
community. Serious emotional disturbances affect one in 10 young
people. These disorders include depression,
attention-deficit/hyperactivity, anxiety disorders, conduct
disorder, and eating disorders.
- Service:
- A type of support or clinical intervention designed to
address the specific mental health needs of a child and his or
her family. A service could be provided only one time or
repeated over a course of time, as determined by the child,
family, and service provider.
This glossary is taken from SAMHSA's National Mental Health
Center.
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