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A Free Toolkit for Child Welfare Agencies to Help Young People Heal

This Toolkit is for child welfare staff, supervisors, and administrators who work with and on behalf of children, youth, and families who experience a natural disaster.

The information and resources included in the Toolkit provide evidence- and trauma-informed guidance for promoting positive outcomes for children and youth who experience natural disasters.

This evidence-informed Toolkit was developed by Child Trends with support from The Annie E. Casey Foundation and in partnership with the National Child Traumatic Stress Network. The information and resources contained in the Toolkit aim to support child welfare staff and administrators in their efforts to enhance state, tribal, territory, and county-led efforts to promote healing and resilience among system-involved children and youth who are exposed to a natural disaster. The materials in the Toolkit have not been tested with children and youth during pandemics, which occur only rarely (e.g., every 25-30 years for influenza pandemics), but they may nonetheless be useful during and after pandemics given that natural disasters and pandemics have a number of similar challenges.

A Toolkit for Child Welfare Agencies to Help Young People Heal and Thrive During and After Natural Disasters is a collection of tools and resources for child welfare frontline staff and administrators and their community partners. Many children and youth are involved in the child welfare system, but this Toolkit presents separate information and recommendations for the child welfare system to ensure that the resources are as relevant as possible to each service setting.

Aims

The aims of this Toolkit are to:

A Toolkit for Child Welfare Agencies to Help Young People Heal and Thrive During and After Natural Disasters is a collection of tools and resources for child welfare frontline staff and administrators and their community partners. Many children and youth are involved in both the child welfare and juvenile justice systems, but this Toolkit presents separate information and recommendations for the child welfare system to ensure that the resources are as relevant as possible to each service setting.

Sections

This Toolkit has three sections:

You can download this toolkit for free here.

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