What Is Family Support?
Family Support is not a single service, but rather a flexible constellation of services
and supports which are customized to meet the varied and changing needs of each individual
and family. A family support program recognizes and values the contribution of natural
or informal supports such as extended family members, friends, neighbors, church
congregations, and community organizations. In addition to utilizing natural supports,
a family support program helps families to access existing formalized services such
as the Child Care Assistance Program, Children's Miracle Network, Energy Assistance,
Children's Special Health Services, Home-Based Services, etc.
A family support coordinator assists families to identify and access a broad range of
natural and formalized services to meet their family's identified needs. One of the "hats"
frequently worn by the family support coordinator is that of advocate on behalf of the
family. The role of advocacy is best accomplished by someone independent of any agency
or entity that might also be providing services for a family. Otherwise a family support
coordinator might be placed in the precarious position of advocating for the desires of
a family that are in direct conflict with the desires of one's employer.
Another very essential tenet of a family support program is a pool of flexible funds that
can be utilized to purchase services or supports not otherwise available and to assist
families with extraordinary expenses. For example, rather than establishing a formal program
to provide for home modifications, the flexible funds might be utilized to purchase the
needed modifications from private contractors. Another example would be assistance with
extraordinary expenses such as the purchase of diapers or nutritional supplements. These
are items that would be covered by funding mechanisms, i.e. Title XIX, if the child were
in a residential placement but are not covered when the child lives with his/her family.
In lay terms family support is often conveyed in the phrase "whatever it takes" to maintain
and strengthen the family's ability to provide care at home. Families receiving family
support services often comment that it allows them to "just be a family".