Maintenir les connexions
Auteur : Bernard Richard
Date de publication : 2011
Éditeur : Le Bureau de l'Ombudsman et du Défenseur des enfants et de la jeunesse
Nombre de pages : 62
Résumé du livre
One of the Centre's roles will be to deliver training for parents, caregivers and professionals in the school, government and community who are involved with the child or youth so that everyone involved in the young person's life is provided with the tools to sustain the successes of the Centre's interventions. [...] While the responsibility for the recommendations set out below is ours alone as Co-Chairs of this Task Force, we are grateful for the advice and feedback received from many quarters and for the research and logistical support from the Office of the Child and Youth Advocate and from the New Brunswick Health Council. [...] Before we turn to the recommendations themselves, we offer some brief contextual analysis: 1) A historical overview of the treatment of children and youth with complex needs in New Brunswick; 2) An explanation of how the idea for the Centre of Excellence came about; 3) A description of how the province is in the midst of an important paradigm shift of which the Centre of Excellence can form part; [...] The strategy was created in response to the Ombudsman and Child and Youth Advocate's recommendations as outlined in the reports Connecting the Dots and The Ashley Smith Report; the Department of Education's MacKay Report; and the Department of Health's McKee Report. [...] For this reason, we have asked the program leads to share a fuller program description which is included in Appendix I. 17 The Centre of Excellence for Children and Youth with Complex Needs The Centre of Excellence for Children and Youth with Complex Needs is closely tied to the ISD Framework, since it would be the capstone tertiary care centre for youth with the most complex needs in the province.