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Policy Updates
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Latest News
Child Welfare & Mental Health "Advancing Kinship Care" Washington Times, July 2, 2008
"Raise foster care age-eligibility to 21" The Hill, July 15, 2008
Child Health "Midwife Delivery Can Lead to Passport Denial" Washington Post, September 9, 2008
NPR compares health care for pregnant women in the U.S. and France National Public Radio, July 10, 2008
Education "Report Cites Chronic Absenteeism in City Schools" New York Times, October 20, 2008
"U.S Education Budget Roiled by Financial Crisis" Education Week, October 1, 2008
"Hispanic Elected Officials Discuss Strengthening Educational Pipeline" Diverse Education, September 25, 2008
CDF signs "A Bolder, Broader Approach" Statement
Child Poverty "Edelman Renews Call to Help Poor Children" Toledo Blade, April 17, 2008
CDF Report Finds Low-Income Families Lose Billions to Predatory Commercial Tax Preparers March 26, 2008
Juvenile Justice "Missouri Leads the Nation in Juvenile Justice Reform" STL Today, September 13, 2008
"Investing In Our Nation's Youth" Louisiana Weekly, July 28, 2008
"Mass Incarceration of Children Must End" Huffington Post, July 3, 2008 |
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Home > About Us > Policy Areas > Child Welfare and Mental Health Division > Healing the Whole Family
Healing the Whole Family: A Look at Family Care Programs
Healing the Whole Family: A Look at Family Care Programs is a CDF® report on innovative programs for families struggling with substance abuse, domestic violence, homelessness and teen parenting.
Download the Executive Summary (PDF, 38K)
Purchase the full report from our webstore.
The report features 50 family-care programs that offer families supervised living arrangements and intensive services to promote child safety and family stability.
A Hite Foundation grant supported CDF’s research for this report.
To order the report, visit the Publications in the Family Income, Welfare, and Poverty section of our online catalog.
The publication is designed for:
- child and family advocates
- public and private child-serving agencies
- legislators and other policy makers
Given recent changes in child protection and welfare laws, it is more urgent than ever that families get services that incorporate the core elements of family care.
If you have any questions about the report or would like to share information about other models to heal entire families, contact the CDF Child Welfare and Mental Health Division at 202-662-3568.
Join CDF's movement for children.
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