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State Agencies Announce Effort to Support Children with High Acuity Needs

Gov. Eric Holcomb unveiled a new project with four state agencies to improve support to children with high acuity needs.

Indiana Gov. Eric Holcomb at a May 2024 event. (Leslie Bonilla Mu帽iz/Indiana Capital Chronicle)

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Indiana Gov. Eric Holcomb announced a cross-agency initiative Monday to provide more support to children with high acuity mental and behavioral health needs and keep youth in crisis in the least restrictive setting possible.

鈥淥ur agencies are working with a growing number of families who have children with significant and complex mental and behavioral needs,鈥 Holcomb said in a release. 鈥淭hese families need help navigating the supports available to them so children receive the right services in their individual communities, and we are committed to helping them.鈥

The Family and Social Services Administration will be one of the four state agencies participating alongside the governor鈥檚 office in the Children with High Acuity Needs Project, as well as the Department of Correction, the Department of Child Services and the Department of Education. The four-point plan is geared toward a child鈥檚 overall well-being, according to the release.

A multi-agency rapid response team has assisted more than 20 children and their families, state officials shared, by 鈥渇inding an appropriate placement and connecting to needed services, helping to stabilize crisis situations.鈥

The four pillars of the project include:

  • Cross-agency navigators that can coordinate care across state agencies and local services, whether education, mental health needs, intellectual or development disabilities, child welfare, juvenile justice or physical health needs. This pilot program will focus on using schools to avoid more restrictive settings, such as institutionalization, and helping those children leaving residential settings adjust to home life.
  • and kinship caregivers, who will receive additional support to care for children with high acuity needs and be eligible for respite care. The state issued the request for proposals earlier this year and serving different parts of the state.
  • A Gatekeeper process review for children in the state鈥檚 psychiatric hospital network to keep children in the least restrictive setting possible and allow youth to leave when ready, rather than staying longer than medically necessary.
  • Youth transitional homes and caregiver coaching that will be an 鈥渋ntermediary鈥 level of support for youth returning to the community following residential care. As opposed to traditional group homes, these residences aren鈥檛 designed to be long-term, but rather 鈥渢o help youth reconnect with their daily routines and communities.鈥 Families will also receive caregiver coaching.

The ongoing initiative, which will have upcoming stakeholder meetings with more information, will be receive some support from the state鈥檚 allotment of the .

is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Indiana Capital Chronicle maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Niki Kelly for questions: [email protected]. Follow Indiana Capital Chronicle on and .

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