1 / 14

Statewide Head Injury Program (SHIP)

Statewide Head Injury Program (SHIP). MA Rehabilitation Commission. SHIP History. Established in 1985 via grassroots advocacy Centralized point of expertise across EOHHS agencies First national model of publicly-funded services for individuals with TBI

yen
Télécharger la présentation

Statewide Head Injury Program (SHIP)

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Statewide Head Injury Program (SHIP) MA Rehabilitation Commission

  2. SHIP History • Established in 1985 via grassroots advocacy • Centralized point of expertise across EOHHS agencies • First national model of publicly-funded services for individuals with TBI • Long standing collaboration with the BIA of MA • Creation of the first Advisory Board

  3. SHIP Purpose Assist individuals with TBI to develop skills and maintain or increase independence within their home, community or at work

  4. SHIP Eligibility SHIP serves over 1,250 individuals and family members annually Eligibility includes: • Individuals of any age with an externally-caused TBI; • who have related cognitive, physical and/or behavioral impairments; and, • Are able to participate in community-based services

  5. Funding Streams • State Appropriations • SHIP account • Turning 22 transition funds • Head Injury Trust Fund • Medicaid Funding • Federal Grant Funds

  6. Head Injury Trust Fund • Fees collected on DUI’s and OUI’s: Established in 1991, accessed in 1997 • Fines assessed for speeding violations: Established in 2000 • Funds were combined and became the Head Injury Treatment Trust Fund

  7. SHIP PROGRAM COMPONENTS • Information, Referral, and Linkages • Technical Assistance & Training • Service Coordination • Advocacy • Program Development • Service Delivery via community providers • Multicultural Outreach & Service Delivery • Outreach to returning OIF/OEF Veterans with TBI

  8. SHIP CORE SERVICES • Social & Recreation programs • Residential Services (24/7) • Multi-Service Centers • Day programs • Substance Abuse services • Respite Care • Assistive Technology • Transportation

  9. SHIP CORE SERVICES (cont’d) • Community Supports including case management, support workers, individual aides, and cultural facilitators • Clinical services • Employment supports • Adaptive Housing • Homecare

  10. SHIP CORE SERVICES (cont’d) • Family Assistance program • Homeless Services • Translation/Interpreters • T22

  11. Sources for Information on Gaps in Services • 1988 Needs Assessment Submitted to the Legislature (blueprint) • 2006 Consumer Focus Group Report • MA Brain Injury Advisory Board’s State Action Plan • SHIP Waiting List

  12. Top Nine Needs Identified Through Focus Group Participation • Vocational Options • Information on Existing Resources • Recreational Activities • Case Management or Related Support • Diverse Housing Options • Education for Medical Professionals & General Public • Support Groups • Facilitated Psychotherapy Groups • Rehabilitation Services (OT, PT and Speech)

  13. Gaps & Challenges Identified by Professionals • Lack of access to trained medical and rehabilitation professionals • Lack of community-based activities that are meaningful and peer appropriate • Lack of trained and/or experienced direct care and program staff • Program staff salaries are too low • Need to address the needs of those with dual diagnosis

  14. Gaps & Challenges Identified by Professionals (cont’d) • SHIP Eligibility requires documentation of a TBI (e.g., immigrants, victims of domestic violence) • Limited access to vocational opportunities • Limited access to community-based services/supports • Lack of services for those with other ABI’s • Need for cross-agency program development

More Related