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Evidence Based Service Planning for Child Welfare

Description: The American Professional Society on the Abuse of Children (APSAC) Task Force report on the evidence-based service planning (EBSP) approach to child welfare services (CWS) plans and recommendations for practice. The goal of EBSP is to construct service plans based on the general principles of evidence-based practice and prefer services with empirical support for clinical problems or needs associated with the causes or consequences of child abuse and neglect (CAN). EBSP aims to facilitate to overarching service approach that is collaborative, respectful, and includes services that are most likely to lead to outcomes on both family identified and child welfare mission goals. EBSP emphasizes a focused, assessment-driven, and science-informed approach that both favors plans that are sufficient and avoids overburdening families with compulsory services that address problems which are not directly related to the child welfare CAN referral. Published 2014.

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www.apsac.org www.nyfoundling.org @TheNYFoundling Practice GuidelinesEvidence-Based Service PlanningGuidelines for Child WelfareCopyright © 2014 All rights reserved by the American Professional Society on the Abuse ofChildren (APSAC) in Partnership with The New York Foundling. No part may be reproducedwithout a citation including the following:Author: APSAC Taskforce Title: Evidence-Based Service Planning Guidelines for ChildWelfare Publication Date: 2014 Publisher: The American Professional Society on theAbuse of Children (APSAC) Retrieved from: https://www.apsac.org/guidelinesAPSAC encourages broad distribution of the document in its entirety. No pages may be omittedwhen reproducing this document in electronic or print versions. Any questions regarding use ofthis document should be directed to [email protected]. Learn more about APSACat www.apsac.org.























About APSACThe American Professional Society on the Abuse of Children (APSAC) is the premiere,multidisciplinary professional association serving individuals in all fields concerned with childmaltreatment. The physicians, attorneys, social workers, psychologists, researchers, lawenforcement personnel and others who comprise our membership have all devoted their careersto ensuring the children at risk of abuse receive prevention services, and children and familieswho become involved with maltreatment receive the best possible services.APSAC meets our goal of ‘strengthening practice through knowledge’ by supporting,aggregating and sharing state-of-the-art knowledge though publications and educationalevents. Our publications include the peer-reviewed, professional journal Child Maltreatment;the widely distributed translational newsletter The APSAC Advisor; news blasts on currentresearch findings, The APSAC Alert; and Practice Guidelines like this document. Regulartraining events include our annual colloquia, attracting the top experts in the field to present topeers and colleagues at all stages of their careers; highly acclaimed forensic interviewing clinicsand advanced training institutes held at the International Conference on Child and FamilyMaltreatment. We regularly initiate and test new CEU eligible training courses, and arecurrently developing, and an online course for early career professionals.If you found these Practice Guidelines valuable and would like access to all of APSAC’spublications, resources, and training discounts, please consider becoming a member. Learnmore about becoming a member at apsac.org/membership.To make a donation to support the creation and updating of APSAC Practice Guidelines, go tobit.ly/Donate2APSAC.Thank you for supporting APSAC!


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