grant

Equipping social workers on the front line: The child welfare and addiction specialist fellowship program

Organization VIRGINIA COMMONWEALTH UNIVERSITYLocation RICHMOND, UNITED STATESPosted 1 Apr 2023Deadline 28 Feb 2027
NIHUS FederalResearch GrantFY20260-11 years oldAddressAdoptedAlcohol Chemical ClassAlcoholsAreaAttitudeCare GiversCaregiversChildChild Abuse and NeglectChild WelfareChild YouthChildhood maltreatmentChildren (0-21)ClinicalCommunitiesCompetenceComplexCountryDevelopmentEducationEducation and TrainingEducational ModelsEducational aspectsEducational workshopEvidence based interventionEvidence based programEvidence based treatmentFamilyFeedbackFellowship ProgramFundingGoalsHealth Care ProfessionalHealth ProfessionalHomeIndividualInstructional ModelsInterventionInterviewKnowledgeLinkMedicalMethodsModelingOutcomePatientsPreventionProfessional PracticeProviderPsychiatryPublic HealthQualifyingQualitative MethodsResearch ResourcesResourcesRiskSAMHSAServicesSocial ServiceSocial WorkSocial WorkersSpecialistSubstance Abuse and Mental Health Services AdministrationSubstance Use DisorderSubstance abuse problemSupervisionSystemTimeTrainingTraining ProgramsTraining and EducationUnited States Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services AdministrationUniversitiesVirginiaWorkshopabuse of substancesaddictionaddictive disorderadolescent welfarealcohol abuse therapyalcohol abuse treatmentalcohol treatmentalcohol use disorderbehavior changechild maltreatmentchild well beingchild wellbeingdevelopmentaleducation researcheducational methodseducational practiceseducational principleseffective interventioneffective therapyeffective treatmentethanol use disorderfoster carehealth care professional practicehigh riskhomesimprovedinnovateinnovationinnovativekidsmaltreatmentmedication-assisted therapymedication-assisted treatmentmistreatmentmultidisciplinaryopiate crisisopioid crisisopioid epidemicoutreach programpeerprogramsqualitative reasoningrecruitresponsescreeningscreeningsskillsstandardize measuresubstance abusesubstance usesubstance use and disordersubstance usingtoolunder served communityunderserved communityyoungster
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Full Description

PROJECT SUMMARY
Best estimates suggest up to 68% of child welfare cases involve a caregiver with an alcohol and/or other

substance use disorder (AOSUDs), which is a significant public health problem given that in 2020 alone there

were 3.9 million child welfare referrals involving 7.1 million children! Child welfare professionals lack knowledge

of AOSUDs and their evidence-based treatments and many caregivers’ AOSUDs go unidentified and

untreated, which puts children at greater risk for maltreatment and out-of-home placements. To address this

issue, the proposed training program seeks funding to enhance Virginia Commonwealth University’s (VCU)

federally-supported Title IV-E child welfare professional training program with specialized training on AOSUDs

integrated with an ongoing clinical/peer supervision and a tele-education (ECHO) model. Project aims include:

(a) to recruit 30 child welfare professionals who are alumni of VCU’s Title IV-E child welfare program to

participate in a two-year specialized training program; (b) to assess the impact of the program on caseworker

skill and confidence in screening, intervening, and referring child-welfare involved families impacted by

AOSUDs; and (c) to identify barriers and facilitators to the effective implementation of AOSUD training in child

welfare settings. Without enhanced training programs such as the one proposed here, child welfare

professionals will continue to lack the education and support they need to address AOSUDs among the

majority of families and children involved in the child welfare system. With almost 150 Title IV-E programs

across 35 states, the findings from this innovative training program will inform the development of an evidence-

based program that can be replicated to improve child welfare outcomes across the country.

Grant Number: 5R25DA058484-04
NIH Institute/Center: NIH

Principal Investigator: Karen Chartier

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