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Tuesday, May 21, 2024

UConn Study Finds Interprofessional Communication May Aid Family Reunification in Child Welfare Cases

Jon Phillips has not forgotten the communication roadblocks he often  faced when, as a child welfare caseworker in Colorado, he wanted to  schedule a family visit for a child in foster care to assess whether it  was safe to return a child home.

“If I wanted them to be able to go home on a weekend, I needed to get  the approval of other people involved, specifically the guardian ad  litem,” he says, referring to a court-appointed official, often an  attorney, who is engaged in a child welfare case to represent the best  interests of the child. “I’d also want to talk any therapists that were  involved to know if there were any concerns I needed to be aware of  before I allowed a visit. And sometimes it was really hard to get  information from them.”

If the professionals involved in the case weren’t effectively sharing  information with one another, sometimes those family visits just  wouldn’t happen, regardless of what the impact of that missed  opportunity might be on the child or their caregivers.

“There’s a lot of expectations that we put on families to do certain  things, and to follow their case plans,” says Phillips, who is now an assistant professor and researcher with the UConn School of Social Work,  “and sometimes I thought that we needed to focus a little more on what  the professionals could do to better support families and to help them  achieve a positive outcome, whatever that might be.”

The dynamics of interprofessional collaboration in child welfare are a primary focus of Phillips’s research, and according to a study he recently published in the Journal of Public Child Welfare, more  frequent communication between caseworkers and the other professionals  involved in child welfare cases is associated with an increased  likelihood that a child will be reunified with their family in a timely  manner.

His study findings highlight the importance of communication between  professionals involved in child welfare, while suggesting areas for  future study that may help improve outcomes for children and families  who enter the child welfare system.

The data analysis showed that, when caseworkers  communicated with both the guardian ad litem and the therapist or  counselor working with the family, foster children were more likely to  be reunified with their families.  

“There are a lot of hypotheses as to why interprofessional  communication is important in child welfare, but it hasn’t really been  studied directly very much,” Phillips says. “You can probably find 100  different definitions of interprofessional collaboration, and probably  30 different ideas of what it means, but in order to promote it and  support it, we need to understand what it is.”

In his study, Phillips looked at administrative data from one large,  urban child welfare system to assess whether communication between the  professionals involved in child welfare cases – including caseworkers,  therapists, substance use counselors, and court-appointed guardians ad  litem – was significantly associated with timely reunification, defined  as reunification within 12 months of the child being placed in foster  care. Caseworkers in the system are required to document each  communication with the other professionals involved in the case in a  centralized database.

The data analysis showed that, when caseworkers communicated with  both the guardian ad litem and the therapist or counselor working with  the family, foster children were more likely to be reunified with their  families.

However, when they communicated with only one of those professionals –  just the guardian ad litem or just the therapists and counselors – this  likelihood not only disappeared, but in some cases was associated with a  reduced likelihood of timely reunification.

“Frequent interprofessional communication had what we might call an  additive effect,” says Phillips. “It suggested that caseworkers really  need to be communicating frequently with both professionals in order to  facilitate timely reunification, that communicating frequently with just  one of those professionals does not necessarily increase the likelihood  of timely reunification.”

As part of the study, Phillips also conducted qualitative interviews  with some of the caseworkers, guardians ad litem, substance use  counselors, and therapists involved in child welfare cases in the county  system in order to further explore how interprofessional communication  might contribute to timely reunification.

“In the qualitative phase, three themes emerged that suggest why  interprofessional communication may facilitate timely reunification,”  Phillips says. “One is that, when these professionals are communicating,  they’re better able to identify and address any barriers to  reunification. Maybe the family needs a bus pass. Maybe the parents  aren’t attending their substance use treatment regularly and the  professionals need to address that. If you think about it, each  professional has one piece of the puzzle they’re seeking to fit, and so  only by sharing information are they getting the complete picture of  what needs to happen.”

A second theme was that frequent communication helped the team of  professional stay on the same page in terms of expectations about what  they needed to see happening in order to reunify a child, and a third  theme was that, when professionals are communicating, they’re enabled to  make decisions in a timely manner. If they’re simply not hearing  information, decisions may be delayed.

“One study participant was a guardian ad litem, and they weren’t  getting information from the caseworker about how the family had  progressed,” Phillips says, “so they weren’t in a position where they  could advocate for the child to return home. And they actually said, had  I known this, had I had this information, I could have recommended  reunification two months earlier. And that really resonated with me  personally, just thinking of a kid lingering in foster care for two  months for no reason.”

While the study was limited to data from one county, and was  dependent on caseworkers recording their own data into the centralized  database, the findings, Phillips says, help to fill an existing gap in  our understanding of how improving communication between child welfare  professionals might positively impact family outcomes.

He hopes that additional research will help develop a better  understanding of interprofessional collaboration that can help to guide  policymakers and child welfare administrators in developing policies,  guidance, and protocols that encourage interprofessional collaboration  as a means of improving child and family wellbeing.

“What I’m trying to do with my research is determine if  interprofessional collaboration is related to various outcomes in the  child welfare system – whether it may be outcomes for families, like  timely reunification, or outcomes for professionals,” he says, “and then  once I understand that better, shifting to say, OK, we know this is  important. How can we promote it? How can we facilitate it? A related  goal of my research is to identify the key components of  interprofessional collaboration—or what it looks like when professionals  collaborate well. We need to understand that more so that we can know  what we need to target with our interventions. If you’re going to design  a training on interprofessional collaboration, what is it that you  should be talking about?” 

This study was supported by grant funding from the National Association of Social Workers.

Creative team sitting at table and putting together puzzle pieces.

Original source can be found here.

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