Sie können Bookmarks mittels Listen verwalten, loggen Sie sich dafür bitte in Ihr SLUB Benutzerkonto ein.
Medientyp:
E-Artikel
Titel:
The Family Empowerment Program: An Interdisciplinary Approach to Working with Multi‐Stressed Urban Families
Beteiligte:
Cleek, Elizabeth N.;
Wofsy, Matt;
Boyd‐Franklin, Nancy;
Mundy, Brian;
Howell, Tamika J.
Erschienen:
Wiley, 2012
Erschienen in:
Family Process, 51 (2012) 2, Seite 207-217
Sprache:
Englisch
DOI:
10.1111/j.1545-5300.2012.01392.x
ISSN:
0014-7370;
1545-5300
Entstehung:
Anmerkungen:
Beschreibung:
The family empowerment program (FEP) is a multi‐systemic family therapy program that partners multi‐stressed families with an interdisciplinary resource team while remaining attached to a “traditional” mental health clinic. The rationale for this model is that far too often, families presenting at community mental health centers struggle with multiple psychosocial forces, for example problems with housing, domestic violence, child care, entitlements, racism, substance abuse, and foster care, as well as chronic medical and psychiatric illnesses, that exacerbate symptoms and impact traditional service delivery and access to effective treatment. Thus, families often experience fragmented care and are involved with multiple systems with contradictory and competing agendas. As a result, services frequently fail to harness the family's inherent strengths. The FEP partners the family with a unified team that includes representatives from Entitlements Services, Family Support and Parent Advocacy, and Clinical Staff from the agency's Outpatient Mental Health Clinic practicing from a strength‐based family therapy perspective. The goal of the FEP is to support the family in achieving their goals. This is accomplished through co‐construction of a service plan that addresses the family's needs in an efficient and coherent manner—emphasizing family strengths and competencies and supporting family self‐sufficiency.