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ChristineTappan

is the direc-

tor of Strategic

Management at

APHSA and liaison

to the APHSA Local

Council.

Kelly Harder

is the

director of Dakota

County Human

Services and chair

of the APHSA Local

Council.

Policy&Practice

August 2016

16

that contribute to well-being, it can

be hard to picture all of this at once.

Many people are familiar with only a

small fraction of what exists in their

community—and sometimes the dif-

ferent services and systems do not

know each other as well as they should

and do not interact, making coordi-

nation extremely difficult. In recent

years, leaders in the fields of human

services and health have begun talking

about ways to ensure that the separate

services are effective, but also that they

work together—as a “system of care.”

Local member agencies are in

varying stages of designing and

implementing integrated systems.

Some have fully defined intercon-

nected systems with moderately

sophisticated assessment and service

delivery approaches, while others

are just beginning to conceptualize

their primary entry points or “front

doors.” All agree on this ideal set of

four elements for a Practice Model for

Well-Being:

1.

“Every (or Any) Door is Open”

entry into the system (EDO),

including health, housing, economic

assistance, child care or welfare,

disability services, corrections, law

enforcement, or community-based

organizations

2.

“Ease of access”

strategies, such

as self-assessment of need (indi-

viduals knowwhere they need to

go), real-time and robust referral

protocols to services (to help people

find the best route), streamlined

approaches to eligibility determina-

tion and compliance with multiple

program requirements, including

documentation and monitoring

3.

Shared screening and decision

protocols

for all health and human

services, which should include,

where possible, a collaborative risk

and opportunity assessment that

uses individual assessment, coupled

with predictive analytics framed

by social determinants of health,

and focuses on core outcomes of

safety, health and well-being, and

self-sufficiency

4.

Casework and service planning

that is collaboratively developed,

delivered, and able to measure

outcomes and impact

Assessment as the Keystone

of Well-Being: The Self-

Sufficiency Matrix

When constructing a building, a

stone sits at the center of an archway—

the keystone that locks all of the

building’s pieces together and stabi-

lizes its structure. Its role, while not

obvious, is critical. One might describe

assessments in health and human

services as the keystone to building

well-being. Over the last decade,

substantial evidence indicates a

relationship between assessment, case

planning, and the promotion of well-

being. Successful health and human

service delivery depends on that

keystone—comprehensive, holistic,

and prevention-oriented assessments

of individual, child, and family needs.

Like a keystone, much of what makes

an assessment process powerful and

effective is invisible. Hidden within a

well-designed assessment is a thorough

understanding of family strengths and

resources, which makes it possible to

co-create and implement solutions with

the family and community providers.

Person-centered planning, combined

with ongoing monitoring of changes in

family needs and capacities, and shared

common client data to the degree

possible among multiple community

providers, promotes optimal targeting

of interventions, enhances the EDO

approach, and saves both time and

cost by avoiding service duplication.

When agencies use these approaches

with all families—including those with

an array of needs and risk factors—it

is possible to maximize successful

growth in individual and family self-

sufficiency, and to use system resources

more efficiently.

To create substantive change, many

local members are shifting their prac-

tices and system infrastructure to use

assessment as the keystone within a

Practice Model for Well-Being. These

agencies are redesigning programs

toward an integrated approach,

coordinated across systems, with a

universal assessment process and

holistic casework practice at its center

that aims to ensure collaborative case

planning and promote self-sufficiency.

Local members call this process the

Self-Sufficiency Matrix (SSM). Using

common, non-clinical language, the

SSM allows both the family and the

case manager to understand, talk

about, and plan around the pillars of

family stability and well-being within

the Social Determinants of Health

context. In order to thrive, all families

move through their lives navigating

their health, financial well-being,

network of relationships, neighbor-

hoods (the types of food available in

local stores, even the quality of the

air and water, and the relative safety

of their streets). The SSM provides a

A set of principles, informed

by a body of research and best

practices, guide these elements.

These principles include:

Solid prevention- and strengths-

based orientation

Two-generation and multi-

generation approaches

Holistic, person-centered, and

customized service planning

Both pre-trauma and trauma-

informed strategies

Sustained attention on

fatherhood engagement

Commitment to defining and

tracking of a set of common

indicators across all well-being

and health domains