doi.org/10.1017/S1035077200003898

Article type: Original Research

PUBLISHED 1 January 1994

Volume 19 Issue 2

The Families First Pilot Program in Victoria: Cuckoo or contribution?

Lynda Campbell

name here
Lynda Campbell

CITATION: Campbell L. (1994). The Families First Pilot Program in Victoria: Cuckoo or contribution? Children Australia, 19(2), 966. doi.org/10.1017/S1035077200003898

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Abstract

The Families First Pilot Program in the then Outer East metropolitan region of Melbourne began in mid-1991 as an intensive family preservation and reunification service for children on the verge of state care. The service offered was brief (4-6 week), intensive (up to 20 hours per week), home-based and flexible (24 hour a day, 7 day a week availability) and all members of the household or family were the focus of service even though the goals were clearly grounded in the protection of the child. This paper begins with some of the apprehension expressed both in the field and in Children Australia in 1993, and reports upon the now completed evaluation of the pilot, which covered the first 18 months of operation. The evaluation examined implementation and program development issues and considered the client population of the service against comparative data about those children at risk who were not included. The paper concludes that there is room for Families First in the Victorian system of protective and family services and points to several developmental issues.

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