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Posted: Jan 17, 2017 15:21

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Alpine Academy
Erda, UT


NREPP Reconizes
Teaching-Family Model
As Evidence-based


Contact:
Jason Stout
Marketing Director
435-833-8090
jstout@alpineacademy.org
www.alpineacademy.org






As of December 5, 2016, the National Registry of Evidence-based Programs and Practices (NREPP) officially recognizes the Teaching-Family Model as a promising evidence-based practice for the treatment of "Non-specific Mental Health Disorders and Symptoms." NREPP is a highly selective registry of evidence-based practices in mental health services and part of the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA).

As a comprehensive model of care, the Teaching-Family Model (TFM) serves as the foundation for treatment at Alpine Academy. When the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) recently published the results from a research study it funded, NREPP responded by including the TFM as a promising evidence-based practice. Published in the Journal of Emotional and Behavioral Disorders, the study found the TFM to "produce significantly better outcomes" for youth post-discharge. "Short-term gains are relatively common, but for developing youth, shifts in long-term trajectories form the springboard for improved development, socialization, functioning and flourishing," write the study authors.

Alpine Academy is proud to provide that springboard for students as the only NATSAP program accredited to use the Teaching-Family Model. Having a long-lasting impact on the lives of students and their families is the driving force behind Alpine's efforts and the resources devoted to maintaining TFM accreditation.

The Teaching-Family Model has been recognized as a promising evidence-based practice since 2008 by the California Evidence-Based Clearinghouse for Child Welfare (CEBC), a similar and oft-cited registry of evidence-based programs. In addition, the American Psychological Association has recognized the Model as an evidence-based practice since 2003, prior to the creation of NREPP or CEBC.

The American Psychological Association's profile of the Teaching-Family Model suggests that the Model has "given hope" that youth "with even the most difficult problems or behaviors can improve the quality of their lives and make contributions to society."

"The Teaching-Family Model provides comprehensive care as a program model for children, youth and families focused on building relationships and services that are client-centered, strengths-based, trauma-informed and outcome-driven," reads a release from the Teaching-Family Association, an international community of care providers using the TFM in a wide range of contexts.

To learn more about Alpine Academy's use of the Teaching-Family Model, click here.

Alpine Academy offers family-based residential treatment that is uniquely successful at helping teenage girls learn the skills to succeed at home, in school, and with their own families. Alpine is a part of Utah Youth Village, one of Utah's oldest and largest charities providing treatment to children and families in crisis.








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