Tag: Jackson County Multi-Disciplinary Team

  • The Many Faces of Healing: Cody

    The Many Faces of Healing: Cody

     

    Cody is a 6 year old boy who loves to play with toy cars. He is curious to the world around him and always greets you with a smile.

    When Cody came to the Children’s Advocacy Center, he was extremely underweight and showed signs of nutritional neglect. He was a very small, frail child. The Children’s Advocacy Center Medical Team performed a comprehensive assessment and were able to identify the cause of his failure to thrive.

    Following the exam, he was placed in a safe, nurturing home where he is receiving all the love and support he could ask for. Prior to CAC involvement, Cody had received very little medical care, but with the help of the Children’s Advocacy Center and the Multi-Disciplinary approach to care he has all the support and services he needs to make a full recovery. (The picture used in this post is of a child model – not the actual child described herein or a client of CACJC.)

    #FacesOfHealingCAC

  • Community “Farmers” Planting Seeds of Hope

    By Tammi Pitzen, Executive Director of the Children’s Advocacy Center of Jackson County — from her speech at our October, 2017 Cherish a Child Luncheon

     

    A wise man looked at the response in place in Jackson County for victims of child abuse and thought there was opportunity to improve this response.

    That wise man was Mark Huddleston, or as we like to refer to him, Our Founding Father.

    I am so thankful for his vision. His vision became the Jackson County Child Abuse Task Force.

    In March 1991 the Children’s Advocacy Center was opened. The Center had two employees. The only statistic that we kept was that 229 cases were staffed by the multi-disciplinary team. In 1991 our budget was $56,000. The next year the budget increased slightly and we staffed 236 cases and there were 167 interviews completed.

    In the 1993-94 fiscal year, the state of Oregon decided to get serious about how it handled child abuse cases and passed HB 5061. This bill established the Child Abuse Multidisciplinary Intervention program and provided MDT’s across the state with funding. This funding has continued and provides sustainability to services provided in our community to victims of child abuse.

    That same year, the CAC of Jackson County began offering therapy on-site under a contract. In 1994 the CAC of Jackson County became one of the very first centers in the country to become an accredited member of the National Children’s Alliance. We also purchased the building that we still reside in at 816 W. Tenth Street.

    Along the way we added services. We increased the number of children served. We increased the budget. Growing. Stretching. To serve the abused children in our community.

    In 1997 we began doing medical exams utilizing local pediatricians. The next year we added a nurse and an interviewer to staff and hired the first office manager. At that time the position was called an administrative secretary. Some people may not know this, but that first office manager was Laura Horton, who is now our Board President.

    In 1999 we entered into our first partnership with Asante Health System. They provided a full time pediatrician to provide medical evaluations to abused children.

    In the years to come, we added on to our space. We even expanded across the parking lot.

    Today the CAC has 15 employees. We have three full time therapists. We have two medical providers and, for the first time in a long time, our medical clinic is providing services for 40 hours a week. We have one and a half forensic interviewers. One of them is bilingual. Jennifer is the first bilingual forensic interviewer on the Jackson County MDT.

    We have a Family Support Team that provides support and advocacy services to abused children and their non-offending caregivers in Jackson County. There are 5 members of this team. Four employed by the CAC, and one is part of a special project with Community Works.

    We have an outreach team made up of a development director, an outreach coordinator and two contractors working on prevention and community education.

    We have an executive director and an office manager.

    We have a board made up of 18 extraordinary community members and an advisory council made up of ten very wise advisors.

    Stay tuned. We need to grow a little more to meet the increasing needs of the abused children we serve.

    Our theme this year is “Planting a Seed”. I decided to do some research using my top advisor, Google. Here is what I learned:

    • Plants cannot grow strong without proper care.
    • Plants can’t take care of themselves.
    • Some plants are thorny and seem to lash out at anyone who comes near, but these same plants grow into some of the prettiest, sturdiest, and sweetest smelling flowers.
    • Plants cannot find their own water or their own light or their own environment in which to grow.
    • If you want tulips in the spring, you have to get your hands dirty in the fall.
    • Sometimes you need to clear weeds away so that the plant can thrive.

    With those concepts in mind, let’s think about abused children and how this theme might fit:

    • A child cannot grow strong without proper care.
    • A child can’t take care of themselves without some help.
    • Sometimes the child who needs the most love asks for it in the most unlovable ways…but just like that thorny plant…if we nurture and care for that child and give that child love, he can grow into this amazing functioning adult.
    • Sometimes you need to clear the hurts away so a child can thrive.

    In last year we served 695 children and 414 non-offending caregivers with nearly 5,000 services. Amazing. 1,109 seeds planted.

    We are here because of support from the community. We are here because there are people who want to help abused children recover from their trauma.

    I will be honest. It has been a hard month for children in Jackson County. There are many seeds that need to be sowed. Many hurts that need to be cleared away.

    I am so thankful that our staff and our MDT–our partners here–are able to show incredible strength and love for the tender souls of the children suffering from trauma from abuse.

    Child Abuse happens. It happens here. It happens way too frequently. When I am still…when it is quiet…and I am alone with my thoughts…I am thankful, not discouraged. I am thankful that I live my life in a community where children are priority.

    I am thankful that I live my life surrounded by “farmers” planting seeds of hope for the future.

    Child Abuse is a community problem and requires a community response.

    My promise to you—as a community partner, a MDT member, a staff member, a CAC volunteer— is that every single day I will meet you in the garden. Ready to get my hands dirty. Ready to clear away the hurts.

    If you would like to make a donation to Cherish a Child and support the CAC’s work of healing and preventing child abuse, please make a donation of any amount below.

     

  • I am thankful for the generosity of this community

    By Tammi Pitzen, Executive Director of the Children’s Advocacy Center of Jackson County

    Thanksgiving

    It is one of my favorite times of the year.  I love fall.  I love all that it represents.  I think about fall being the time to go into our cocoon and come out in spring transformed.  For me, it is also a time to be reflective of the blessings I have in my life.

    I have just celebrated my three year anniversary at the CAC. Together we have done so much in those three years. 

    In this work, the average “life span” of an Executive Director in a CAC is about three years.  At that point, people either move on to other work or they decide they will stay.  I think that is because in the first year, you are learning the territory.  You are learning your community.  You are learning the nuances of the way the CAC operates in this community, with this team.  While I have done this work for a really long time, it is never the same in any two communities.

    In year two, you know what impact you want to make but are still trying to figure out a way to assimilate what you would like to do into a functioning team of professionals.

    In year three you begin to execute your vision.  Or you become so overwhelmed by the mountains of work required to keep all the cogs moving that you decide to move on instead of moving mountains.

    I want to move mountains!

    When I turned 21 and began this work, I had no idea that it would become my passion.  When I say passion, I mean PASSION!  It is hard to explain.  Many people think about the children who are abused in our community and think…that is horrible. I, and those I work with, think about those same abused children and our reaction is to work to change their world.

    I am not alone in my passion.  I see it every Wednesday afternoon when I attend our Multi-disciplinary team meeting. 

    I look at the faces of the professionals assembled in that room and know that I am with “my people”.  I spend very little, if any time with these people outside of the small room upstairs in the Children’s Advocacy Center.  I know most by name.

    But here today, in this moment, during this time of thankfulness I count that team as one of the top ten things I am most thankful for.

    In the spirit of naming my blessings here are the things I am most thankful for this year:

    1)     I am so thankful for my family.  The one I was born into, the one I married into and the one I have created along the way since my childhood.  My husband is so supportive and has joined me in my concern for children who are abused, unwanted, or otherwise uncared for.  We are teaching our son to take care of those more vulnerable.

    2)     I am thankful for the mentors who have guided and helped me learn the skills I need to work in this wonderful movement (the CAC movement) and in the field of child abuse.  There have been many along the way.  Some are no longer living.  Most are separated from me by miles.

    3)     I am thankful for the search committee who saw something in me that led them to believe that I could be the leader of the Children’s Advocacy Center of Jackson County.

    4)     I am thankful for the multi-disciplinary team members that I get to work with every day.  These people are fantastic.  Literally, every day, quietly they are saving lives and changing the world.  I am so lucky to be able to see these things happening.  Most people take it for granted.

    5)     I am thankful for the staff and contract professionals that I have the honor of working with every day.  They are absolutely some of the best people in this field and I cannot imagine taking this journey without them on my team.   They are brilliant and compassionate. They make me look good every day! Who wouldn’t want that in their life?

    6)     I am thankful for the most impressive Board of Directors that I have ever had the privilege of working with and for.  This community is so lucky to have them.

    7)     I am thankful for the generosity of this community and the support they have always given the Children’s Advocacy Center.

    8)     I am thankful for the network of Executive Directors that I get to work with and learn from.  This would be so hard without all of you!!!  It is so fun to be able to share with you, collaborate with you, and make Jackson County an incredible place to live.

    9)     I am thankful for the opportunity to witness strength, courage, and bravery that the young victims we serve at the CAC show every single day.  It is an amazing thing.

    10) I am thankful for a couple of women who many years ago allowed me to work outside of the box and empowered me to step into a leadership position in a CAC.  They taught me a lot about grants, a lot about running programs, a lot about facilitating a team, working with Boards, and a bunch of other nonprofit “stuff”.  My first Executive Director, Janet Buss and my second Executive Director, Teresa Huizar, taught me everything I know about CAC’s and nonprofit management.  I am uncertain what you both saw in me that made you want to invest in me but I am so thankful you did.

    I challenge each of you to come up with your own list of thankfulness! 

    My wish for each of you is that you will know your value, know your strengths, and find peace and serenity that will carry you through.

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    Tammi Pitzen