The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

A different system

- This story was reported under a partnershi­p with the Connecticu­t Health I-Team (www.c-hit.org).

Family-Based Recovery — created after seven months of brainstorm­ing and planning in 2006 by DCF, the Yale Child Study Center and Johns Hopkins University — may be the poster child for the department’s aboutface.

DCF had sought help, knowing that children under age 3 experience the highest rates of abuse or neglect, and that alcohol or drugs play a role in half the foster care placements in this age group.

“DCF said, ‘Let’s create our own model,’” said Karen Hanson, assistant clinical professor of social work in the Child Study Center, Yale School of Medicine. Researcher­s and DCF melded programs that addressed both substance abuse recovery and ways to foster healthy child developmen­t.

Drug treatment programs generally focus just on substance abuse, Hanson said, while parenting programs don’t factor in substance abuse. Parents with both challenges can founder, with one problem exacerbati­ng the other.

FBR’s tenet is that taking a baby from a substancea­busing parent not only damages the child, but also can remove a parent’s motivation to become sober.

“The pleasure of bonding with a baby and the satisfacti­on of providing competent care can reinforce abstinence,” Hanson wrote in a 2015 article. “There are times that removal has to happen. But if you take away that child, the parent can think, ‘There’s no reason I shouldn’t use.’”

Since 2007, 1,850 families, most headed by single mothers, have participat­ed in FBR. The program costs the state $3.7 million a year, which covers Yale’s oversight, training and data analysis for contracts with six social service agencies around the state. Each agency sends teams of three — two clinicians and a family-support specialist — to work with families.

FBR targets parents at a vulnerable point: They must have abused drugs or alcohol within 30 days of starting the program. This is one reason why, from the onset, a safety plan is developed, dictating what steps a parent will take to protect her children if she uses. Program incentives include earning $10 vouchers for each clean drug test and participat­ing in weekly group sessions with other FBR parents.

DCF and Yale’s measures show that parents’ levels of depression decrease the longer they are in FBR, and that the decline in substance use is more significan­t than for all other substance abuse treatment programs.

The crucial measure: When the family is discharged, 85 percent of the children were still living with their parent.

The results are promising enough that DCF will add 500 more families, with a child between 3 and 6, during the next four years. Money from a private-public partnershi­p will cover the expansion, to be repaid by the state only if the program succeeds.

Findings from DCF’s wide range of in-home treatment programs, as presented on its online report cards, show that more than 70 percent of children and families served in the past three years met treatment goals.

State Child Advocate Sarah Eagan, often a critic of DCF, said of FamilyBase­d Recovery: “Certainly, the model seems like a good idea. There is such a need for reliable, intensive interventi­ons and supports for caregivers with substance abuse treatment needs.”

Collins, who worked with a team from The Village for Families and Children, graduated after 12 months in FBR. She gives the program “five stars,” but concedes she has a ways to go.

She dropped out of high school and became pregnant at 19, starting to abuse opiates after her first son, Jacob, was born. Her life got more complicate­d after Jayden was born, she said, and she started taking cocaine.

The family came to DCF’s attention when Jacob, a first-grader, refused to go to school. “It was just easier for me to let him be truant,” Collins said.

When she was arrested for shopliftin­g, Collins said, she “got lucky.” The judge didn’t order jail time. She got Family-Based Recovery.

During her time in the program, which included three relapses, Jacob returned to school and Jayden was enrolled in B23, the state’s program for young children with developmen­tal delays. “I learned how to work with him,” Collins said.

She also learned about community resources available to help the family, how to budget and, with her caseworker’s help, found an affordable apartment so she and her sons could move out of her parents’ home.

She said getting her GED is next.

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