February
26, 2016, Tucson, Arizona — The Association of Children’s Residential Centers (ACRC),
the National Association for Children’s Behavioral Health (NACBH), and Youth
M.O.V.E. (Motivating Others through
Voices of Experience) National have accepted seats on CARF’s International
Advisory Council (IAC). CARF International provides accreditation services,
including child and youth services, worldwide.
The
IAC comprises organizational and individual members representing the spectrum
of CARF’s accreditation services. Members provide guidance on the development
of the CARF standards and input on issues affecting fields in which CARF offers
accreditation. The addition of these three new members to the IAC increases the
total member count to 41 organizational and 5 individual members. A list of IAC
members can be found at www.carf.org/IAC.
CARF’s
managing director of child and youth services, Leslie Ellis-Lang, said of the
additions, “Adding ACRC, NACBH, and Youth M.O.V.E. National to the IAC will
assist us in ensuring that the voice and interests of children, youth, and
their families have a strong presence in all CARF activities. In particular, it
strengthens CARF’s continued effort to unify behavioral health and child
welfare needs and practices within the standards, and supplies direct input
from youth themselves.”
CARF’s
child and youth services accreditation area has standards that focus primarily
on services to children and youth, along with their families, in the fields of
behavioral health and child welfare. For more information about CARF
accreditation of child and youth services, please write [email protected] or call
toll free (888) 281-6531.
ACRC
ACRC
believes that children and adolescents and their families are entitled to
treatment which offers the maximum opportunity for growth and change. Its
website states, “Children and adolescents with behavioral health disorders
present unique treatment challenges. The complexity of their clinical
conditions and their developmental needs demand that many children and
adolescents be served in settings that are constructed to ensure experiential
learning of healthy and productive life skills.”
Kari
Sisson, executive director of ACRC, said, after being named to the IAC, “We are
excited to join CARF’s IAC. ACRC respects the hard work and dedication of
CARF’s staff and accredited organizations, working to improve services to
children and families. This focus is directly in line with ACRC’s emphasis on
best practices, innovation, and clinical excellence.”
NACBH
NACBH’s
mission is to enhance the availability and delivery of services for children
and families dealing with mental or substance use disorders. Its activities
include advocating children’s behavioral healthcare with Congress and federal
agencies, educating its membership on key issues for the field, and convening
biannual leadership conferences. Its main focus is to advance both practice and
public policies that support state-of-the-art services and responsive systems
of care.
Upon
being named to the IAC, the executive director of NACBH, Patricia Johnston,
stated, “NACBH is pleased to join industry leaders in human services as a
member of CARF’s IAC. For more than 30 years, NACBH has been a force for change
in the provision of high quality behavioral health services for children and
families. A seat on the IAC provides an opportunity to continue our pursuit of
excellence and offer our members’ experience to influence standards that are
critical in today’s human services environment.”
Youth
M.O.V.E. National
Youth
M.O.V.E. National is a youth-led, national organization that unites the voices
of individuals who have experienced various systems, including mental health,
juvenile justice, education, and child welfare. It advocates strongly for the
empowerment and equal participation of youth in the process of improving these
systems.
“Youth M.O.V.E. National is proud to join the diverse array of stakeholders on the CARF IAC to ensure that meaningful participation of youth voice is included in the work,” says Johanna Bergan, executive director of Youth M.O.V.E. National. “As advocates and leaders in the behavioral health field, working in partnership with CARF offers us the opportunity to ensure that youth voice and choice is included in quality services.”
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