what is take two?
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What is Take Two?. Take Two. Take Two is a developmental therapeutic service for Child Protection clients who have suffered trauma and disrupted attachment due to their experience of abuse and neglect. - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
What is Take Two?
• Take Two is a developmental therapeutic service for Child Protection clients who have suffered trauma and disrupted attachment due to their experience of abuse and neglect.
• T2 provides a statewide, intensive therapeutic service to those clients who have been severely abused or neglected and are at risk of developing or already demonstrate emotional and/or behavioural disturbance.
Take Two
•Clients of Child Protection who exhibit, or are at risk of developing, severe emotional or behavioural disturbance caused by abuse and/or neglect.
•Clients of Child Protection who are subjects of substantiated significant and/or very severe harm.
•Aged 0-18 years.
•May be living at home, with relatives, or in out of home care.
Who is referred to Take Two?
What does Take Two aim to do?
The T2 program aims to respond to the child’s needs for:
1. Safety
2. Attachment and connectedness
3. Recovery from trauma
4. Promotion of development, health and wellbeing
Box Hill
Bendigo
Wangaratta
Mildura
Ballarat
Geelong
Secure Welfare
Flemington Campbellfield
Dandenong
Morwell
Seymour
Take Two Locations
Horsham
Partnership
• Previous research highlighted that placing these children in out of home care was not enough to keep them safe or to enable them to work towards recovery.
• It was agreed that neither Child Protection, out of home care, nor therapeutic services were enough on their own to achieve the desired outcomes for these children
Partnership
• T2 is a partnership of the service systems of mental health and child welfare and the academic fields of psychology, psychiatry and social work.
• Each of these bring different areas and approaches to research, therapy and focus.
What are the experiences
of children and young people referred to Take Two?
Age and Gender of Take Two Clients - 2004
6
2232
46 4837
12
10
15
19
41
32
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
0-<3 3-<6 6-<9 9-<12 12-<15 15-<18
Age Group of Take Two Clients
Num
ber
Female
Male
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
4
45
50N
um
ber
9%
12%
6% 6%5%
15%
5%
15%
9%
20%
Type of Maltreatment Experienced by T2 Clients
82 82
42
97
62
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
Abandonment Physical abuse Sexual abuse Emotional Abuse Developmentalabuse
Type of Child Maltreatment
Per
cen
t
Type of Placement at Time of Referral to Take Two - 2004
22%
15%
24%
3%
27%
2%7%
Living with one or bothparent/sKinship care
Home-based care
Home-based care –Specialised / IntensiveResidential care
1:1 care
Other
Parental factors relating to abuse/ neglect
Exposure to parental substance abuse
43%
Exposure to physical harm from family violence
45%
Exposure to family violence 59%
Forcing child to witness violence 12%
Exposure to parental psychiatric illness
26%
Other parental /family factors relating to abuse/ neglect
• 82% had mothers with known trauma histories: examples included 52% with history of child abuse; 40% with experience of rape (other than intrafamilial); 22% experienced significant loss through death of others.
• 49% had fathers with known trauma histories: examples included 31% with history of child abuse; 9% with experience of rape (other than intrafamilial); 13% experienced significant loss through death of others.
Child experiences of loss/ separation -
• 36 children (16%) had a parent figure who had died.• 16 children (8%) had another significant person in their life die
(eg sibling)• 36 children (16%) had experienced major loss of contact with
parent figure• 47 children (20%) had at least one parent figure in gaol during
T2 involvement in 2004.• 57 children (25%) had parent’s relationships change during T2
involvement in 2004.• 177 children (76%) were living in out of home care at time of
referral to T2.• 202 children (89%) had experienced at least one previous
placement away from their parents prior to T2 involvement.• 100 children (44%) had experienced six or more previous
placements prior to T2 involvement.
Other trauma experienced by T2 regional clients not including intrafamilial maltreatment
Percent of Cases
Trauma related to parent’s difficulties or lifestyle 81.4
Trauma related to child protection and care involvement 77.0
Parents' separation/divorce 14.7
Sexual abuse - not by parent figure 8.3
Confirmed / query sexual assault (not clear by whom) 4.4
Physically assaulted - not by parent figure or unclear 5.9
Trauma related to siblings 9.8
Bullied/ rejected by other children 5.4
Exposed to general violence 6.9
Medical interventions)/serious illness 4.9
Fear of injury/accident/life threatening incident 3.4
Witnessing of death or overwhelming horrible incident 7.4
What are the experiences
of those who receive service from Take Two?
Stakeholder feedback - 2006
• Stakeholder surveys were sent to clients, parents, carers and workers of T2 teams regarding their perception of outcomes and of their level of satisfaction with service.
• Total of 272 surveys have been returned (including
Percentage of feedback surveys received by whom? (n=270)
9.6 10.818.5
25.6 22.6
7.8 5.10
5
10
15
20
25
30
Clients Parents Carers DHSworkers
CSOworkers
Teacher Other
Types of stakeholders who completed surveys
Percentage of surveys received from different stakeholders - 2005
Stakeholder feedback aboutTake Two “taking time”
• There is a clear relationship between the length of time the client had been in the service and percentage of respondents who believed that T2 had helped the child with their life.
• 60% of respondents who were completing the survey in relation to a client who had been referred to T2 less than 6 months ago agreed T2 had helped the child with their life.
• This increased to 68% for participants who completed the survey in relation to a child who had been in the service for 6-12 months.
• There is a further increase to 83% for participants completing the survey in relation to children who have been with the service for a year or more
Percentage of length of time T2 involved (n=270)
8.2
24.532.2
15.419.7
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
Less than 6months
6-<12months 1-<1.5 years 1.5-<2 years 2-<2.5 years
Length of time Take Two involved
Did T2 help the child/young person with their life? (n=265)
41.136.3
18.1
3.41.1
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
45
Stronglyagree
Agree Undecided Don't agree Stongly don'tagree
Take Two helped the child/young person with their life
Per
cen
tag
e o
f re
spo
nse
Comments in feedback
• There was no difference between clients, parents and carers in terms of overall rating of T2, with 81, 80 and 80 percent respectively reporting that the service was excellent or good. Workers provided an even higher positive rating, with 92 percent or workers describing the service as excellent or good.
• Eighty-nine percent of both clients and parents agreed (this refers to both those who responded ‘agree’ and ‘strongly agree’) with the statement “I liked the help Take Two gave me”. An even higher percentage of carers (94%) and workers (92%) agreed with the slightly differently worded statement, “I liked the service received from Take Two”.
Ok, we know you like it; but does it help?
• Whether T2 helped the child with their life was the area that showed the most variation.
• 83% of workers agreed with this statement. • The results among clients and carers were similar with 76
percent of clients and 73 percent of carers agreeing that T2 had helped.
• However, among parents this figure was 55%. • Importantly though, this lower figure was due to a much
larger percentage of parents responding that they were undecided (35%) compared with other respondents rather than a larger percentage who disagreed. Only 10%of parents disagreed, indicating that they found the service had not ‘helped’.