|
Federal grant brings mental health
consultations to public preschools
Department of Health and Human Services
gives $375,000
to
local children’s mental health network
May 6, 2009
(Athens, OH) – The U.S. Department of
Health and Human Services Office of
Rural Health Policy awarded $375,000 to
the local rural health network,
Integrating Professionals for
Appalachian Children (IPAC).
The three-year grant, “Building
capacity: Raising resiliency,” focuses
on two goals: bringing childhood mental
health consultations to public preschool
classrooms and implementing a workforce
development initiative.
“This
grant will improve early outcomes in
children’s mental health and increase
the capacity of early childhood health
professionals,” says Jane
Hamel-Lambert, Ph.D., IPAC president and
director of interdisciplinary mental
health education at the Ohio University
Heritage College of Osteopathic Medicine
(OU-HCOM).
The
first part of the grant, the Early
Childhood Mental Health Consultation (ECMH)
Program brings together an
interdisciplinary team of IPAC
participants – ECMH consultants from the
Tri-County Mental Health and Counseling
Services, Inc., a pediatric
neuropsychologist and the IPAC “family
care navigator” – to provide mental
health consultations for preschool-aged
children in Athens County.
IPAC’s
Family Care Navigator program provides a
point person to help parents and
caregivers make decisions related to
children’s mental health, find treatment
providers and reduce barriers to care.
The current family care navigator,
Sue Meeks, R.N., is a nurse
coordinator for OU-HCOM’s Office of
Community Health Programs.
The
grant also funds the
Early
Childhood Workforce Initiative, which
offers teachers and other school
employees training and consultation
services related to early childhood
mental health. The program provides
on-site instruction and coaching to all
19 Athens County public preschools,
including special education programs.
Other services include collaborative
peer group supervision, learning
communities, journal readings and
program consultation by state and
national experts.
“These
and other efforts broaden the ECMH
consultation and treatment agenda,
placing it within the greater public
health agenda,” says Sherry Shamblin, an
ECMH consultant with Tri-County Mental
Health and Counseling Services, Inc.,
and a founding IPAC board member.
“By
creating a strong community-university
partnership, we have been able to
leverage funding and resources on behalf
of young children and families in our
region,” Shamblin says. “IPAC serves as
a model for collaboration in our state
by creating a strong
community-university partnership.”
This
grant proposal expands the work of IPAC,
a regional network of organizations
committed to improving children’s mental
health. This non-profit network includes
local families; fourteen community
agencies in Athens, Hocking, Meigs and
Vinton Counties; and several Ohio
University departments and clinics.
“IPAC
works to provide coordinated and
comprehensive care for Appalachian Ohio
children through early screenings,
increased referrals and better
collaboration,” says John Borchard,
B.S.N., R.N., director of program
development for the Southern Consortium
for Children and chair of IPAC’s board
of directors. “This new grant will help
us get the best and earliest care to
children in our region.”
|