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A Rural, Community-Based Program of Day Treatment Wraparound Services for
At-Risk Youth
Kristine A. Bricker, I.C.S.W., C.A.D.C. III, N.C.A.C. II Clinic Director The
Bricker Clinic, Inc. Saukville, Wisconsin
Michael G. Bricker, M.S., C.A.D.C. III, I.C.A.D.C. The STEMSS Institute,
Inc. Saukville, Wisconsin
Abstract During
its first months of operation, the Adolescent Day Program of the Bricker Clinic,
Inc., located in rural Saukville, Wisconsin, appears to be successful in
providing cooperative, wraparound services to high-risk youth in this rural
community. The At-Risk Youth Development Program is a truly community-based
initiative, bringing together a consortium of schools, county social services,
corrections and law enforcement, local churches, and community organizations to
support the alcohol/drug and family therapy interventions of the Bricker Clinic.
The program utilizes several innovative techniques, including Sylvia Rimm's
Parenting Curriculum, computer-assisted alcohol and other drug abuse (AODA)
education, special education services, and a voluntary community service
component. The program sequentially addresses both Erikson's stages of
psychosocial development and the high-risk factors for youth identified by the
Center for Substance Abuse Prevention. |
When the Bricker Clinic, Inc. opened a year ago, a needs assessment survey
was conducted to identify services perceived as needed by the community and to
target development toward those services. In an effort to avoid duplication of
existing services and "plug the holes" in the continuum of care, the
survey asked for input from business leaders, the local Council on Alcohol and
Other Drug Abuse, treatment providers, the school system, Ozaukee County social
services, law enforcement, third-party payors, and parent groups. One
identified need was to be able to provide an alternative to either incarceration
or hospitalization for high-risk youth.
The Need for an At-Risk Youth Program
The target population of adolescents 14 to 18 years of age tend to be
multiple-problem, multiple-system clients from troubled families. These young
people have several defining characteristics:
- Low academic skills and motivation
- Alcohol and other drug abuse (AODA) problems
- School discipline problems, truancy, and/or expulsion
- Repeated contacts with social services and law enforcement
- Family of origin problems
- High-risk sexual behaviors
In looking at the array of available services for this population, we found
some excellent programs available within our systems: a Student Assistance
Program here, an excellent adolescent AODA counselor there, and good Exceptional
Education services at another school. But there were no providers who could
coordinate programs across systems to help youths maximize and
generalize gains in all life areas. Improvement in functioning tends to be
short lived for these youths, because they are psychosocially delayed, heavily
influenced by a troubled peer group, and often unable to maintain new skills
within a dysfunctional family system. There appeared to be a need for
wraparound services to bridge the transition points between service systems.
Planning the New Program
In June 1994, the authors convened a Community Advisory Board to address
this perceived need for a program to serve high-risk youth. This board was
comprised of representatives from Ozaukee County social services, the Cedarburg
School District, the Saukville police, the Ozaukee County Council on AODA, local
businesses, and churches. Over the course of several meetings, a consensus was
forged on the following requisite characteristics that a successful program
should include:
- An Exceptional Education component so youths could continue to earn
academic credits
- Counseling on AODA and mental health issues
- Education on HIV and high-risk sexual behavior
- Family therapy and parenting skills classes for parents
- "Sane and sober" recreational skills to help adolescents forge
healthy peer relationships
- Opportunities for both emotional and physical expressive therapy
- Close coordination with existing programs and services
- Transportation services
- Services available after school and on weekends
- A "community volunteer service" component to help instill the
intrinsic value of work
Representatives agreed to investigate and make available a modest amount of
discretionary funding to support the program. The Bricker Clinic, Inc. agreed
to provide staffing and site support. This is a clinic committed to address
community needs in the area of mental health and AODA services. The Bricker
Clinic mission is to offer effective, cost-efficient treatment that is community
based and family focused. The staff of the program provided by the Bricker
Clinic includes one full-time AODA-certified Independent Clinical Social Worker
(the principal author), who is also a licensed teacher certified to teach
emotionally disturbed/learning disabled children; a part-time AODA counselor; an
art therapy intern; a dual-diagnosis specialist (the second author); a part-time
psychiatrist; and a part-time support staff person.
Because of the requirements of State licensure (such as provision of meals)
and limitations of the clinic site, it was decided not to license the program as
Adolescent Day Treatment. Rather, a flexible continuum was designed for service
delivery that includes intensive outpatient (up to 6 hours per day), outpatient,
and continuing care (for the program schedule, see figure 1). The program was
initiated in September 1994 and currently has an enrollment of one full-time and
five part-time youths.
As a background to developing program strategies, staff reviewed research
done by the Center for Substance Abuse Prevention (U.S. Department of Health and
Human Services, 1987) under the High-Risk Youth Demonstration Grant Program.
Staff also elicited ideas from many Ozaukee County groups, including the Council
on AODA, Ozaukee County Department of Health and Human Services, various church
leaders, special education and regular education staff, and the Saukville police
department. The following risk factors seemed common among the Ozaukee County
at-risk population:
- Individual-based risk factors
- Family-based risk factors
- School-based risk factors
- Peer group-based risk factors
- Community-based risk factors
Obviously, no single initiative can hope to address the many issues stemming
from divorce, economic dislocation, the significant decrease in family and
community cohesion, and a significant rise in the number of families in which
both parents are employed outside the home. However, it is hoped that a program
jointly designed and monitored by the Ozaukee schools, the Ozaukee Department of
Health and Human Services, and the staff of the Bricker Clinicwith
continued input from community businesses, churches, and police forcescan
be the most effective and cost-conscious means for providing service to this
at-risk population.
Figure 1. The Bricker Clinic Adolescent Program Schedule Daily
Program Schedule
|
Monday |
11:30 1:00
1:00 2:00
2:00 2:15
2:15 3:45
3:45 4:00
4:00 5:00
5:00 5:30 5:30 6:30 |
Pick-up and transport from home/school
Art therapy or dual diagnosis group
Break/snack
Study skills group
Break/snack
Dual diagnosis art therapy or group therapy*
Goal setting for the evening/next day
Transport home |
|
Tuesday |
11:30 1:00
1:00 2:00
2:00 2:15
2:15 3:30
3:30 4:00
4:00 5:00
5:00 5:30 5:30 6:30 |
Pick-up and transport from home/school
Dual diagnosis group therapy
Break/snack
Study skills group
Transport to work adjustment group
Work adjustment group
Goal setting for the evening/next day
Transport home |
|
Wednesday |
See Monday schedule. |
| |
5:30 6:30
6:30 7:30 |
Individual/family session
Individual/family session |
|
Thursday |
See Monday schedule. |
| |
5:30 6:30
6:30 7:30 |
Individual/family session
Individual/family session |
|
Friday |
11:30 1:00
1:00 4:00
4:00 4:30
5:30 6:30 |
Pick-up and transport from home/school
Recreation and social skills therapy
Goal setting for the evening/next day
Transport home |
|
Saturday |
9:00 10:00 9:00 10:00 10:00 10:15 10:15
11:30 11:30 1:00 1:00 5:00 |
Adolescent STEMSS group*
Parenting group*
Break*
Multifamily group*
Lunch (pot luck - family members)
Monthly structured family activity |
| Intensive
Outpatient Adolescent Program Schedule |
|---|
| Monday | 3:45 4:00
4:00 5:00
5:00 5:30
5:30 6:30 | Break/snack
Dual diagnosis group or art therapy
Goal setting for the evening/next day
Individual/family session | | Tuesday |
3:30 4:00 4:00 5:00 5:00
5:30 | Travel to work site
Work adjustment group
Goal setting for the evening/next day | | Wednesday | See Monday schedule. |
| Thursday | See
Tuesday schedule. | | Saturday |
9:00 10:00 9:00 10:00 10:00
10:15 10:15 11:30 11:30 1:00 1:00
5:00 | Adolescent STEMSS group
Parenting group
Break
Multifamily group
Lunch (pot luck - family members)
Monthly structured family activity |
| Continuing Care Adolescent Program
Schedule |
|---|
| Monday | 4:00 5:00 5:00 5:30 |
Dual diagnosis or art therapy group
Goals group | | Wednesday |
See Monday schedule. | | Saturday | 9:00
10:00 9:00 10:00 10:00 10:15 10:15
11:30 | Adolescent STEMSS group
Parenting group
Break
Multifamily group | *Denotes
Intensive Outpatient Program participation |
Figure 2 depicts the Bricker Clinic's developmental approach to community
interventions for at-risk youth and their families. The following are
strategies being developed at the clinic that are specifically designed to
address the five types of identified risk factors for these youth.
1. Individual-based risk factors: Risk factors identified include
inadequate life skills, lack of self-control, poor assertiveness and
peer-refusal skills, low self-esteem and self-confidence, emotional and
psychological problems, favorable attitudes toward alcohol and other drug use,
rejection of commonly held values and religion, school failure, lack of school
bonding, and such early antisocial behavior as lying, stealing, and aggression,
often combined with shyness or hyperactivity.
Strategies
- Social and life-skills training
- Alternative activities
- Dual-diagnosed individual/group therapy
These interventions help develop communication, problem solving, and
decision-making skills; help youth find ways to control their anger and
aggressive impulses; and help them identify, access, and verbalize their
emotions with congruent statements of need.
Alternative interventions include the following:
- Monthly nature appreciation classes and activities at Riveredge Nature
Center
- Weekly tai chi classes
- Quarterly interaction with community police (such as jail/morgue visits
with an AODA focus and police-patrol rides)
- Monthly community volunteer activities sponsored by area churches and the
Chamber of Commerce
- Weekly individual and group art therapy
- Daily individual and group therapy focused on AODA and mental health
- Weekly peer tutors and homework support activities
2. Family-based factors: Risk factors identified include family
conflict and domestic violence; lack of family cohesion; heightened family
stress, such as financial and career strains; social isolation of families;
family attitudes favorable to drug use; ambiguous, lax, or inconsistent rules
and sanctions regarding drug use; poor child supervision and discipline
practices; and unrealistic developmental expectations.
Strategies
- Family therapy
- Family skills training
- Play therapy
- A parent training program
- A parent involvement program
Alternative interventions include:
- Structural/functional, intergenerational family therapy with a
dual-diagnosis perspective for AODA/mental health issues
- Weekly multifamily parenting classes focused on AODA/mental health (the
model used is the Sylvia Rimm Parenting Curriculum with group leaders certified
as Parent Trainers); these classes include built-in AODA education and group
therapy for support of clients in dealing with specific problems that exist
concurrent to programming
- Peers contacted by Families Anonymous/Parents Anonymous to accompany family
members to their first support group outside of therapy
- Structured family involvement outings to enhance parenting education and to
encourage family involvement and networking, as well as stress reduction, as a
way of receiving ongoing community support
3. School-based risk factors: Risk factors identified include
availability of tobacco, alcohol, and other drugs and youths' lack of bonding to
school.
Strategies
- Cooperative learning
- Peer tutors
- Enhancement of school bonding
Alternative interventions include:
- Audiovisual study assignment alternatives to the regular didactic
teaching methods
- Interaction directly with teachers in working toward specific classroom
behaviors and/or specific assignment goals that may be different from the norm
- Individualized study assistance with a focus on the strongest modality for
the student
- Peer tutoring in a supervised setting
- Community service volunteer activities that may result in attaining
academic credits
- Random urine screens to ensure drug abstinence
4. Peer group-based risk factors: Risk factors identified include
association of youths with delinquent, drug-using peers; association with peers
who have favorable attitudes toward drug use; and being susceptible to peer
pressure.
Strategies
- Positive peer groups
- Correcting youths' perceptions of group social norms
- Peer resistance training
- Positive peer models
- Peer leadership and counseling interventions
Alternative interventions include:
- Participants will practice life skills, alternative activities, and
attend family-focused events designed to increase cultural awareness and help
support health-promoting choices
- Accurate information will be presented concerning peer norms (most kids are
not users) and this will decrease the pressure to use
- Interactive role-plays will teach saying "no" to alcohol and
other drugs, as well as to antisocial behaviors
- Youth will learn to identify negative family, peer, or media pressure and
to practice different ways of resisting old behavior and in getting themselves
to a safe place
- Arrangements will be made to provide participants with nonusers or former
drug users who will serve as Big Brothers and Sisters for positive peer modeling
- Participants will help facilitate prevention activities for younger youth
within the school system
5. Community-based risk factors: Risk factors identified include
communities that lack the fiscal resources to create drug-free opportunities for
children and families, thus setting up an environment in which drug problems are
most likely to develop; communities in which young people do not feel as though
they belongfor example, where youth do not identify with neighbors, where
they feel as though people do not care about their welfare, where they have
difficulty in finding positive role models, and where there is a lack of
cultural pride; communities in which large numbers of adults believe that AOD
use is acceptable; communities where it is relatively easy for youths to obtain
alcohol and other drugs; and communities that offer inadequate youth services
and opportunities for prosocial involvement.
Strategies
- Cultural enhancement activities
- Orientation to community services
- Development of community responsibility
- Positive drug-free youth/family groups
- Community service activities
- Community media education activities
- Safe haven activities
Alternative interventions include:
- Interaction with the Historical Society in preparing for next year's
Saukville "Rendezvous"
- Assessment of parent/child awareness of community services; development of
access to these resources
- Field trips to community art exhibits, historical sites, area parks, and
places where recreation can occur without the use of mood-altering chemicals
- Development of a drug-free alternative handbook for teen recreation that
spans a four-county area and will eventually be distributed to area schools
- Development of a peer-facilitated Support Together for Emotional/ Mental
Serenity and Sobriety (STEMSS) support group
- Volunteer activities, such as assisting at nursing homes, assisting
specific families in need as identified by area churches, cleaning up parks, and
helping with area food pantries
- Teaching/supporting already existing prevention activities
- Development of multimedia campaigns opposing drug use and promoting healthy
lifestyles
Conclusion
The At-Risk Youth Development Program of the Bricker Clinic, Inc. has
several unique and defining characteristics:
- It is the result of a collaborative community
effort to provide a linkage of wraparound services.
- It is the result of a collaborative community effort to provide a linkage
of wraparound services.
- The program provides for psychosocial development based on the research of
Erik Erikson.
- The program offers unique benefits to the participants, their families, and
the community through volunteer community service.
Since the program has been in operation only a short time, it would be
premature to draw definitive conclusions. However, initial reactions from the
participants are encouraging. We hope that this initiative will spark the
interest of other rural communities and encourage them to investigate starting
such a program. For other areas as well as ours, a multifaceted, intersystem
cooperative effort may be a practical method for providing cost-efficient
wraparound services for at-risk youth and their families.
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Last Updated 11-7-02
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