Title: Building Resiliency in Youth and Families
1Building Resiliency in Youth and Families
- ODMH Dialogue
- February 6, 2007
- ODMH Resiliency Workgroup
2Clinical Quality Agenda
3Presidents New Freedom Commission on Mental
Health
- Care must focus on increasing consumers ability
to successfully cope with lifes challenges, on
facilitating recovery, and on building
resilience, not just on managing symptoms. -
4Resiliency Definition
- Resiliency is an innate capacity that when
facilitated and nurtured empowers children,
youth, and families to successfully meet lifes
challenges with a sense of self-determination,
mastery, and hope. - Ohio Resiliency Workgroup (ODMH)
5Resiliency Mission Statement
- To empower youth and families to expect, define,
and experience a lifetime of hope, well being,
and achievement with full participation in their
communities. - Ohio Resiliency Workgroup (ODMH)
6- There is never anything wrong with us that
something right with us cant fix. - Mark
Katz
7Resiliency is an Ordinary Process
- Resiliency is an ordinary process available to
all youth. - Ann Masten
8Resiliency an Expectation
- Resiliency is an EXPECTATION and not an exception
for youth with significant emotional and/or
behavioral challenges
9Resiliency is Contextual
- Resiliency evolves and interacts within contexts
- Best conceptualized utilizing an ecosystemic
framework - Youth live and function in multiple worlds, each
with their own set of risk and protective factors
(family, community, schools, neighborhoods,
peers, culture, etc)
10Risk and Protective Factors
Outcome
Positive Resilience
Negative Vulnerability
D
11Resiliency in Context
School
Informal Supports
Family
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Youth
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Peers
Community
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Protective Factors
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- Risk Factors
Work
12Both the person and the context matter
- It is the interaction between individual traits
environmental resources that promotes resilience
and healthy development (Nancy Davis,
SAMHSA) - Person and context are mutually interactive by
increasing the developmental strengths of one
kind tends to increase the strengths of the other
(Benson et al. 2006, P. 5) - Avoid either only focusing on building young
peoples skills or only changing the environment
or contextual variables the best results occur
with simultaneous efforts to do both (Benson et
al. 2006, p. 6)
13Asset Building Literature
- 40 Developmental Assets The Search Institutes
Framework of Developmental Assets - External Assets Positive, structured growth
environments - Internal Assets the values, skills, and
self-perceptions needed for self-regulation - http//www.search-institute.org/
14Nurtured Resilience
- Internal qualities that can be developed and
fostered through relationships of those around us
(core people) - Ohio Resiliency Workgroup Member
15Facilitated Resilience
- Youth who present with unique challenges may need
additional assistance, in the form of services
and supports, to facilitate the development of
their resilience and well being. - Facilitated Resilience involves shaping the
natural environment to enhance each youths
success, and augmenting that with targeted
supports and services to maximize the youths
growth, functioning, and achievement. -
16Supported Resiliency
- Efforts embraced by the community to build and
sustain a foundation of supports and
opportunities necessary for the development of
resiliency for youth of all ages, abilities, and
needs
17Policy Implications
- Community-wide efforts to build developmental
nutrients are as important as those on the
organization, family, and individual levels. - Seek to bring about change in multiple systems
and environments - Increasing the number of developmental nutrients
across settings is what matters most, not
increasing specific strengths or combinations of
strengths in any single setting - Benson et al. 2006
18Resiliency A Shared Responsibility
- We all share the responsibility to ensure the
success of our children, regardless of ability or
disability.
19Components of Resiliency
- Validation and valuing
- Basic needs, safety, and services
- Sanctuary
- Supportive connections
- Hope
- Contribution participation
- Self wisdom
- Competencies
- Justice
- Expectations and accommodations that maximize
success - Courage
- Sense of meaning and joy
20(No Transcript)
21Validation and Valuing
- A resilience-based mental health system is
affirming of youth and family with unconditional
acceptance. - Supportive, emotionally safe environments are
created, where youth and families can share their
vulnerabilities and weaknesses safely and without
judgment. - The youth and family are validated for their
efforts and persistence, knowing that progress is
sometimes very difficult, and that hanging in
there is sometimes all that is possible at any
given point in a familys life. - Youth with mental health disabilities and their
families are doing the best they can, not only
maintaining, but surviving well.
22Family InsightValidation and Valuing
- Recognizing my expertise on my child family
- Honoring my tenacity love for my child
- Acknowledging my accomplishment (and grit) for
surviving the past 18 years. - To maintain (some semblance of life) and to be
able to stand is quite a feat, given the
stressors in my family - Verbalize to me my skills and commitment are
keeping my kid (and family) afloat
-
23Family InsightBasic Needs, Safety, Services
- Having children with special needs costs more all
aroundmoney, time, and energyforcing our own
resources to be fewer. - Nobody realizes that some people expend
tremendous energy merely to be normal. Camus
24Basic Needs, Safety, Services
- Children thrive in emotionally and physically
safe families, communities and neighborhoods. - Families and communities take an active role in
the protection, monitoring, and comfort of every
youth. - Families are supported in their efforts to secure
safe housing, and appropriate education for their
children - through graduation.
25Basic Needs, Safety, Services
- Services and supports address the complete mental
health needs across developmental ages and stages
and are delivered in the least restrictive, most
dignified environment. -
- Mental health care is affordable, available, and
accessible, where no family has to give up
custody, or experience extreme financial hardship
to receive any level of mental health care.
26Family InsightBasic Needs, Safety, Services
- Lost homes/housing
- Change (or risk loss) jobs because my childrens
needs required so much time and energy away from
work - Economic hardships came from limited working
hours - Safety is a constant concern
27Sanctuary
- Youth and families need safe and calming people
and places for refuge, respite, recovery, and
rejuvenation. - Both youth and parents need their own protected
space where they can feel and be calm. - Youth need multiple safe options for sanctuary in
different contexts, including home, school, and
the community. - Designated and predictable breaks are important
for coping with the ongoing challenges of mental
illness.
28Family InsightSanctuary
- My ability to maintain this 24/7 job depends on
being able to find respite and recharge my
batteries. Having a weekend here and there keeps
us healthy. - Having a mentor for a few hours helps enormously.
29Supportive Connections
- Resiliency is nurtured by family, facilitated
through helping relationships (formal and
informal), and supported and embraced by the
community. - Children, youth, and families thrive when they
feel understood and connected to positive and
supportive family members, adults, peers,
institutions, and culture. - Youth and families benefit from social support
systems that are responsive to their needs and
that offer tangible, emotional, educational, and
advocacy supports. - The community actively reaches out to develop
positive relationships with every youth and
family.
30Youth InsightSupportive Connections
- When my teachers encourage me when I am
challenged by our class work - My case manager comes and makes sure I am doing
OK when things have not been going well - When our providers support our efforts and listen
to me -
31Family InsightSupportive Connections
- School is working with us to get Michael to
complete his high school education by making
modifications for his mental health challenges
32Hope and Optimism
- In the depth of winter, I finally learned that
within me there lay an invincible summer - Albert Camus
33Hope and Optimism
- Resiliency is an ordinary process that is
available and expected for all youth. -
- All children have the right to hope and success
starting at birth and lasting a lifetime. - Communities, providers, and families foster
opportunities and possibilities so that youth
with emotional challenges have hope for a
positive future with a self-determined and
fulfilled life. - We believe that even the smallest victories are
significant, sustaining our hope, and giving us
the courage to persevere.
34Family InsightHope Optimism
- Every success, every victory gives more energy
and hope to move us into the future - Celebrating where weve been and how far weve
come - At this very moment, we are still standing (many
predicted our demise long before now- but weve
made it this far) - My son will have a good life, and meaningful
work. Not IF but WHEN.
35Contribution Participation
- Youth with emotional and behavioral challenges
thrive when given opportunities for contribution,
participation, and positive involvement. - Active involvement and meaningful belonging in
community activities and schools are fostered and
supported. - Youths viewpoints and opinions are valued and
meaningful leadership roles are created for them.
36Contribution Participation
- Community service and helping opportunities are
made available for all youth. - Communities actively seek out youth as community
partners. - Communities believe that youth CAN and DO make
significant contributions.
37Contribution Participation
- When any ones gifts and contributions are
rejected or not accepted, we are all poorer
38Policy Implication
- Make youth engagement and leadership normative
(Benson et al, 2006)
39Youth Insight Self Wisdom
- Resiliency is knowing when you are falling, and
knowing how to catch yourself - Mary Beth Haubert
40Self Wisdom
- Youth and families are experts in their own
experiences and develop practical knowledge about
coping with, and managing, behavioral and
emotional challenges. - Youth and families know what works best for them,
under what circumstances, and by whom. - They know the situations when they can handle a
problem by themselves and the conditions when
they need help. - They also recognize that not knowing the answer
or solution to a problem is OK. - Youth may have setbacks, but learn from each
experience, always growing emotionally stronger
and wiser.
41Youth Insight Self Wisdom
- I recognize when I need to ask for help
- I understand my disease well enough to know when
I need additional medications. - I can self determine my need for medication at
school, and by following the steps on my
emergency plan, the school gives me the
medication when I need it. - I know that I may not know what to do and that is
OK, because I can get help
42Family InsightCompetencies
- What we couldnt do last month, we can do today.
We build on what we are good at and practice what
we arent.
43Competencies
- All children, youth, and families have unique
strengths, abilities, and talents that when
nurtured can grow, develop, and flourish. - With the right supports, encouragement, and
active facilitation, youth with emotional or
behavioral challenges can achieve their full
potential. - Each community commits to creating positive
learning environments that enhance abilities,
teach skills, and offer sufficient opportunities
for expression of each youths unique talents.
44Family InsightCompetencies
- Look for my childs strong points of ability and
interest and then nurture those things. This is
what happens with typical children and it should
also apply to my child. - See his many good qualities and embrace them.
45- We may encounter many defeats but we must not be
defeated. - Maya Angelou
46Justice
- All child serving systems make a commitment to
provide safe and non-traumatizing care with all
children and families, and to, above all else, DO
NO HARM. - A resiliency-oriented mental health system is
sensitive to the culture, values, and situation
of every person, treating each with dignity and
respect regardless of the persons life
circumstances.
47Justice
- Providers advocate for the rights of all youth
and families and are proactive in facilitating
and developing meaningful accommodations so that
the youth can achieve success in all
environments. - Youth and families, of all cultures and life
situations, have a legitimate voice at all levels
of policy, services, and supports. - This voice is supported and elevated through
community champions and resiliency ambassadors.
48Youth Family InsightJustice
- Treat people the way you want to be treated
- Dont use my disability against me.
- Knowing my childs rights- and exercising them-
is a protective factor- it can help protect
him (or at least insulate) from stigma,
exclusion, and invisibility (ignoring or not
seeing him as if he isnt here)
49Expectations that Maximize Potential
- A resiliency-oriented mental health system
promotes the expectation that resiliency is
available to all youth. - Reasonable and achievable expectations that
maximize the functioning and potential of each
youth are promoted. - Youth with special needs succeed when they have
flexible and accommodating environments with
personal champions that support them in reaching
their potential.
50Family Insight Expectations that Maximize
Potential
- Who we are today is not who we will become.
- Our children are still growing and learning they
are not stuck as who they are today. It is our
duty to encourage them to become the very best
person that they can become. - Children are only be limited by what we limit
them to.
51Youth Insight Expectations that Maximize
Potential
- Set goals so that I can reach them, and once I
reach them, then you can raise them.
52Courage
- Maintaining mental health involves great personal
courage and bravery to deal with life stressors
and obstacles, especially for individuals with
emotional/behavior challenges. - The daily act of coping with mental illness is
itself a heroic act. - Youth and families have the courage to stand
their ground and say I can regardless of what
others tell them is possible, and to face
situations that appear insurmountable. - A resiliency-orientated mental health system
stands with youth and families and fights stigma
and stereotypes through comprehensive mental
health education that transforms the community.
53Family InsightCourage
- I am a warrior on a journey to ensure my childs
future.
54Sense of Meaning and Joy
- All children, youth, and families seek to find
their own personal happiness, meaning, and joy
that brings them satisfaction and quality into
their lives. - Having a sense of purpose and fun promotes
wellness and resiliency, and gives us something
to look forward to each day - Environments that foster creativity, playfulness,
and humor, allow youth and families to experience
lightheartedness and joy. - In resiliency-oriented systems youth are
supported in finding meaning and joy in their
lives.
55HELPING HANDS
56Resiliency-Oriented Mental Health Systems
- Build positive relationships with both youth and
families - Facilitate opportunities for positive
contributions and involvement - Foster hope
- Understand that youth have different resiliency
needs and trajectories
57Resiliency-Oriented Mental Health Systems
- Build functional competencies
- Build compensatory strengths (strengths in one
area may compensate for challenges in another,
Benson et al, 2006) - Develop expectations standards that maximize
potential and success - Engage formal and informal services supports to
promote multiple resiliencies
58Service Adaptations
- Service adaptations may be necessary to achieve
resilience for youth with unique challenges - Assertive outreach
- Increased intensity and availability of services
- Multiple resources and supports may be needed
- Supported connections (mentors)
- Advocacy that builds positive system
relationships - Creating supportive functional environments
59 Extreme Persistence
- Resiliency-oriented mental health systems
recognize that needs can be complex, that change
is sometimes very difficult to achieve and
promotes extreme persistence and creative
adaptations in the delivery of services,
changing the plan instead of rejecting the child
and family from services and supports. - (VanDenBerg,
2002)
60Resilience A Complementary Construct
- Resilience is a complementary construct to
current evidenced-based practices - Resilience can be integrated into and inform
other best practice models, serving to enhance
them
61Examples of best practice models complimentary
to resilience
- Multisystemic Therapy
- Wraparound
- The DECA program
- The Incredible Years
62Elements of resilience common to these models
- Strength based
- Skill development and competency-enhancement
- Focus on parenting skills that are high in
nurturance, supervision and monitoring - Linkage to prosocial activities, peers, and
mentors - Development of positive connections in schools
and in the community
63Common Elements of Effective Practice (Hubble,
Duncan, Miller, 1999)
- Client Factors (40) The largest single
contributor to change is the client and family.
Strengths Abilities Talents Social Supports
Beliefs Resources Motivation for Change. - Relationship (30) Use of empathic, supportive,
motivation-enhancing techniques to improve
alliance, engagement, and retention. - Expectancy and Hope (15) The extent that the
family believes that your prevention or treatment
programming will be beneficial to them. - Techniques (15)
64Resiliency and Culture
- Recognition of variability within cultures and
the need to understand how strengths emerge and
are nurtured within specific groups - Balance the general with the specific no single
strategy will work for each young person, even
though all kids need more strengths/assets
(Benson et al. 2006, P. 11) - Sesman, A., Roehlkepartain, E. C. (2003).
Unique strengths, shared strengths Developmental
assets among youth of color. Insights and
Evidence, 1 (2), 1-13.
65Policy Implications
- Recognize the need to support and align
strategies that actively address individual and
cultural differences (Sesman Roehlkepartain,2003
). - Policy is informed and developed by culturally
diverse representation of youth experiencing
mental health challenges and their families and
significant others
66Example Vision Statement
- Local mental health system that fosters
resilience at all levels of mental health care
and education, including mental health promotion,
prevention, and intervention, with the ultimate
outcome of resilient individuals, families, and
communities
67Challenges
- Applying resiliency across the age span (birth to
early adulthood) - Linking with other statewide and ODMH initiatives
- Statewide implementation
- Evaluation
68Summary
- Resiliency is a natural platform for creating an
overarching, strength-based framework for both
prevention and intervention with youth with
significant emotional and/or behavioral
challenges and their families - Resiliency is equally available to youth with
significant emotional and/or behavioral
challenges - Resiliency is an expectation and not an exception
for youth with significant emotional and/or
behavioral challenges - Efforts to implement a resiliency-oriented mental
health system need to be imbedded in a community
structure that supports them and sustains their
effects
69Quote from Dr. Ann Masten
- The great danger I see in the idea of
resilience is in expecting children to overcome
deprivation and danger on their ownThere is no
magic here resilient children have been
protected by the actions of adults, by good
nurturing, by their assets, and by opportunities
to succeed. We cannot stand by as the
infrastructure for child development collapses in
this nation, expecting miracles. -
70Bibliography/Resources
- Benard, B. (2004). Resiliency What We Have
Learned. West Ed, San Francisco, California. - Benson,P.L., Scales, P., Hamilton, S, Sesman, A.,
Hong, K., Roehlkepartain (November, 2006).
Positive Youth Development So Far Core
Hypotheses and Their Implication for Policy and
Practice, Insights and Evidence pp. 1-13, 3, 1. - Masten, A. (2003) Resilience in Development. In
Snyder and Lopez ed. The handbook of Positive
Psychology. Oxford University Press - Sesman, A., Roehlkepartain, E. C. (2003).
Unique strengths, shared strengths Developmental
assets among youth of color. Insights and
Evidence, 1 (2), 1-13. - The Presidents New Freedom Commission on Mental
Health - The Search Institute (1997) Search Institutes
Framework of Developmental Assets (Ages 12 to
18). Search-institute.org
71The Resiliency Workgroup
- Tova Black, Tracee Black, Ella Clayborn, Terre
Garner, Robin Gilbert, Pam Gulley, Carrol
Hernandez, Karen Hocker, Randall Hocker, Michael
Jamison, Rachel Lewis, André Martin, Pam Mattson,
Peter Mattson, Connie Truman, Susan Thompson,
Sandy Regula, Rick Shepler, Bill Stidham-Garner,
and Kathy Tenney, Charlotte Williams. The group
would also like to acknowledge contributions from
past workgroup members including Marci Dvorak,
Mary Beth Haubert, Mike Lemon, Bernie Schell and
Ed Schell.
72Contact Information
- Terre Garner
- Ohio Federation for Childrens Mental Health
- 513-948-3077
- Rick Shepler
- Center for Innovative Practices
- 330-455-3811
- ricks_at_cipohio.org
- Pam Gulley
- Ohio Department of Mental Health