Title: Charles Wilson
1- Charles Wilson
- Chadwick Center-Rady Childrens Hospital-San
Diego - Donna Pence
- Retired Special Agent-Tennessee Bureau of
Investigation - Academy of Professional Excellence SDSU
Foundation
2DEFINITION OF A TEAM
- A group of people who are necessary to
accomplish a task that requires the continuous
integration of the expertise (along with
resources and authority distributed among them).
3- In October 2006, 94 representatives from 41
child protection teams in 36 California counties
gathered to share the ways they kept their teams
energized over the years. - Some of these teams had
- been active for 30 years.
4Think back
- To a case when the team really worked.
- Describe the attributes of that success
- To a period of time that things with the team
were really clicking. - Describe the attributes of that success
5Traits of Members that Contribute to Success
- Professional competency
- Passion for the work
- The ability to be ego-less and to be team
players - Availability
- Communication
- Accountability
- REAL commitment
- A desire to make the team work better
- Social relationships with teammates
- Trust based on respect for teammates
- Understanding of each others goals
- Understanding that other people and agencies
may have resources helpful to their your work
6Successful Teams Have
- Clear leadership
- Clear role definitions
- Personnel assigned to specialized units
- Acknowledgement of successes
- Transparency on how decisions are made
- Positive reinforcements, both internal and
external - Buy-in from the top
- Agency validation for the work
- Multiple agency commitment
- Decisions based on need, not funding
- A paradigm focused on child protection
- High visibility in the media
- Knowledge of why they started down this path
- Knowledge of the history of the team
- Knowledge of what is driving the MDT process
7Role Confusion The Cop as a Bleeding Heart
8SUCESSFUL TEAMS HAVE
- TASK SKILLS
- TEAM INDENTITY
- INTERDEPENDENCE
- TRUST
9TEAM CULTURE
- Culture is those things you know and that
everybody else in the culture knows.
10CULTURE IS DEFINED BY
- Shared experience (often historical)
- Traditions
- Values and belief system
- The meaning of behavior
- Language
- Dress
- Food
11Institute for Healthcare Improvement Model
Community/ Funders
Participating Organizations
Unit/Squad Within Organizations And The Team
Social Workers, Investigators, DAs, Therapists,
Medical Professionals, etc (interaction with the
families)
12Complexity of Change in a CAC Environment
13Strategies
- What have you tried that has really worked to
revitalize the team? - What other strategies do you think should be
considered?
14Addressing the Top Ten Barriers to Sustained
Success
- Team Building/Team Cohesion
- Communication
- Lack of Standardization
- Team Management
- Orientation of New Team Members
- Feedback for Improvement.
- Quality Improvement
- Building Political Support.
- Rural Special Strategies
- Urban Special Strategies
15Recommendationsfor Organizational and Community
Leaders
- Choose people to serve on the team based on a
combination of skills, knowledge, experience and
willingness to work on a team. - Be knowledgeable about the team, expect to be
kept informed about team performance, and the
challenges the team is facing. - The nature of this work and the importance of
personal relations and trust among team members
makes frequent team personnel changes
counterproductive. Agency policies about routine
rotation should be reevaluated.
16Recommendationsfor the CAC Director/Board/Team
Facilitators
- Formal orientation processes for new team members
- Annual reports
- Newsletter that keeps the team informed of
emerging issues, case and statutory law changes,
as well as, more personal and professional news. - Measurable outcome goals
- Formal plan to stay in the face of political
leaders and the public - Cross agency peer review and/or quality assurance
efforts that examine the team as a whole as well
as the contribution of each agency.
17Recommendationsfor Team Members
- 1. Read the protocol, know the protocol, and
follow the protocol unless it does not make
sense in a unique case. - 2. Be willing to hear the perspective of another
agency or discipline and to accept constructive
criticisms. - 3. Take it upon yourself to bridge the gaps
between agencies and disciplines. - 4. Reach out to new team members, introducing
them to the team and its work. It is really the
individual team members informal responsibility
to acculturate the new members.
18Recommendations for All
- 1. One of the most powerful tools of building
quality and team respect is effective peer
review. Teams should be sure interviewers and
medical providers are able to participate in peer
review. Teams should also consider periodic peer
review with another county team to learn from
each others processes, protocols, and practices.
- 2. Teams should have interagency training plans
to keep teams effective and skills sharp as well
as building the skills and knowledge of new team
members.
19RESOURCES
- King, David N. (2006) Multidisciplinary Teams
Collaboration in Child Abuse Intervention A
Selected, Annotated Bibliography National
Childrens Advocacy Center Research Library - www.nationalcac.org/professionals/library/biblio.
html - McGarry, Peggy Ney, Becki, (2006) Getting It
Right Collaborative Problem Solving for Criminal
Justice. National Institute of Corrections NIC
Accession 019834
20Resources
- Gray, Barbara, Collaborating Finding Common
Ground for Multiparty Problems. Jossey-Bass,
Inc. San Francisco, CA ISBN1-55542-159-8 - Breaking the Cycle of Violence Recommendations
to Improve the Criminal Justice Response to Child
Victims and Witnesses OVC Monograph (1999) - www.ojp.usdoj.gov/ovc/publications/factshts/monog
raph.htm - Packard, T., et al. (2006) Using the Image
Exchange to Enhance Interdisciplinary Team
Building in Child Welfare Child and Adolescent
Social Work Journal - DOI 10.1007/s10560-005-0035-4