Office of Children, Families and Prevention
The mission of the Ohio Department of Mental Health (ODMH) Office of Children, Families and Prevention is the statewide improvement and expansion of comprehensive community systems of mental health care for children and youth that is based upon a four-element philosophy:
- Mental health service systems are driven by the needs and preferences of the child and family, to be addressed through a strength-based approach.
- The focus and provision of services occur within an interagency collaborative environment and is grounded in a strong community base.
- The services and supports offered, the agencies participating and the programs developed and/or promoted are responsive to the cultural context and characteristics of the populations served.
- Families are partners in the planning, implementing and evaluating of the system of care.
This mission is operationalized through staff leadership in family advocacy, interdepartmental policy-making and collaborative funding strategies. We promote the implementation of best practices, adherence to fidelity and monitoring of outcomes to achieve the best results for children, youth and family members.
Featured Event
Rise Sister Rise
Evaluating African American Girls' Experience of Trauma and Resiliency in Ohio's Communities
Rise Sister Rise is a research project exploring the ways urban adolescent African American girls experience their world and the ways in which they are affected by those experiences. Read more about the project and the event.
Areas of Focus
Integrated System of Care
A system of care is a coordinated network of community-based services and supports that are organized to meet the challenges of children and youth with serious mental health needs and their families. In collaboration with the interagency Ohio Family and Children First Cabinet Council and its regional and local infrastructure, we are working with families and across systems to identify behavioral health needs in natural settings offering early identification, intervention and treatment to promote a system of care. Here are the identified areas where this work is occurring:
- In primary care settings: Interagency efforts include promotion of social/emotional screening and referral to services as indicated.
- In educational settings: Family, school and community partnerships enable the provision of school-based mental health services and supports for students with emotional and behavioral non-academic barriers to learning. In addition, training and consultation is available for teachers and administrators.
- In juvenile justice settings: Targeted behavioral health/ juvenile justice (BH/JJ) projects are designed to meet the treatment and support needs of youth who are serious juvenile offenders (and their families) with serious emotional disturbances and/or substance abuse issues. These projects collaborate with the child welfare system.
Transition Age Youth (TAY)
TAY are adolescents and young adults (ages 14-25) who have a diagnosable mental illness that has led to impaired functioning in one or more life domains, including housing, education and employment, functioning and life skills, quality of life and others. Developmentally, TAY are interdependent, seek their own identity and independence while still partially dependent on the support of family members, care givers and service providers. TAY-focused work is developing with internal and external collaborative partners to improve the transition between child and adult mental health systems and to improve access to care to TAY. It is essential that all planning, policy decisions and programmatic activities be inclusive of and driven by TAY and their families.
Early Intervention/Early Childhood
The Early Childhood Mental Health (ECHM) Program is aimed at promoting healthy social and emotional development (i.e. good mental health) of young children from birth to age six. The goal is to provide skills to increase children’s readiness for school and support school success by addressing their behavioral health care needs at an early age. The primary focus has been increasing the quality of Ohio's existing early childhood programs, including Help Me Grow, Early Head Start and Head Start; other child care programs (both family child care homes and center-based services) and public and private pre-schools-by providing mental health consultation services. As the program has evolved, additional services have been added that include the Incredible Years Programs, assessment/screening, treatment and focus on both screening and treatment for maternal depression.
Family Advocacy
The Office of Children, Families and Prevention oversees dual purpose family
advocacy activities. Since 2005, it has initiated the creation of
and ongoing supervision of the Parent Advocacy Connection (PAC). Administered
by NAMI Ohio, PAC links parents with peer mentors to support their voices and
choices into service planning and monitoring for their children's needs. Additionally,
the office utilizes the guidance of families and consumer associations in
statewide children's mental health policy-making and program development.
Evidence-Based Treatment
Through direct staff consultation and with the guidance and training resources
of the Center
for Innovative Practices,
the Office of Children, Families and Prevention works with clinicians, agencies
and boards to disseminate therapeutic best practices. These best practices are guided
by theory, research and practice in the areas of family support, early childhood
intervention and children's mental health treatment. These practices promote
and enhance resiliency, improve outcomes and functioning levels and promote the
behavioral health and well being of children, parents and families.
