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Implementing a Post-Care Service System in Child Welfare: The Catawba County Child Wellbeing Project

Phil Redmond, Rhett Mabry, Heather Ball, Dawn Wilson, Beth Brandes, Allison Metz, & Karin Malm
July
2012

This is the first brief in a series, Building a Post-Care Service System in Child Welfare: Lessons Learned from the Frontlines of Implementation Science in Catawba County. This brief sets the stage for a three-part series on the Catawba County Child Wellbeing Project by describing the projects origins and historical context. Topics include: 1) the purpose of building a post-care service system; 2) the needs of post-care children and families; and 3) the guiding theory of change for the development, implementation, and evaluation of the project. Additionally, the brief discusses the roles of various organizations involved with the Project The Duke Endowment, the Catawba County (North Carolina) Department of Social Services (usually called Catawba County Social Services), the National Implementation Research Network, and Independent Living Resources, Inc.

Citation

Redmond, P., Mabry, R., Ball, H., Wilson, D., Brandes, B., Metz, A., & Malm, K. (2012). Implementing a post-care service system in child welfare: The Catawba County Child Wellbeing Project. Washington, DC: Child Trends.