E. INTENSIVE IN HOME CHILDREN AND ADOLESCENT PSYCHIATRIC SERVICES

 

Definition

Intensive In-Home Child and Adolescent Psychiatric Services (IICAPS) is a manualized treatment model designed to prevent children and adolescents from psychiatric hospitalization or institutionalization or to support discharge from inpatient levels of care. While children with psychiatric symptoms are the focus of intervention, the model address and intervenes with the domains that impact the child most directly: family, school, community resources and service systems.

IICAPS is an intensive, home-based service designed to address specific psychiatric disorders in the identified child, while remediating problematic parenting practices and/or addressing other family challenges that effect the child and family’s ability to function. Efforts are also made within the service to improve the child’s educational programming and to ameliorate any environmental factors that may contribute to the child’s psychosocial adversity. IICAPS teams are expected to spend a minimum of five hours per week working directly with children and their families and managing their care. Children receiving IICAPS services are likely to be recipients of concurrent services from other mental health providers. These providers are expected to work in collaboration with the IICAPS team during the IICAPS intervention. Their involvement with the child and family often extends beyond the IICAPS episode of Care.

Authorization Process and Time Frame for Service

This level of care requires prior authorization and can only be provided by a treatment provider who is certified by the Department of Children and Families as an IICAPS provider.

Authorization is typically provided on a monthly basis in bundles of eighty-eight (88) (to reflect 5 hrs per week for 4.3 weeks in each month) units per authorization. Authorization of up to 20 hours per week may be required for some cases based on the model. In these cases, more frequent review with a care manager will be required. Services may last up to six months or beyond with special review.

This level of care may be concurrently authorized with other levels of care such as outpatient, intensive outpatient or extended day based on the individual needs of the child and family.

Level of Care Guidelines

5.1.0 Admission Criteria

(Recommend the items in this section be re-ordered as follows: )

5.2.0 Exclusionary Criteria

5.3.0 Continued Care Criteria