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Current as of January 01, 2022 | Updated by FindLaw Staff
(a) The Rhode Island department of health shall coordinate the system of early childhood home-visiting services in Rhode Island and shall work with the department of human services and department of children, youth and families to identify effective, evidence-based, home-visiting models that meet the needs of vulnerable families with young children.
(b) The Rhode Island department of health shall implement a statewide home-visiting system that uses evidence-based models proven to improve child and family outcomes. Evidence-based, home-visiting programs must follow with fidelity a program model with comprehensive standards that ensure high-quality service delivery, use research-based curricula, and have demonstrated significant positive outcomes in at least two (2) of the following areas:
(1) Improved prenatal, maternal, infant, or child health outcomes;
(2) Improved safety and reduced child maltreatment and injury;
(3) Improved family economic security and self-sufficiency;
(4) Enhanced early childhood development (social-emotional, language, cognitive, physical) to improve children's readiness to succeed in school.
(c) The Rhode Island department of health shall implement a system to identify and refer families prenatally, or as early after the birth of a child as possible, to voluntary, evidence-based, home-visiting programs. The referral system shall prioritize families for services based on risk factors known to impair child development, including:
(1) Adolescent parent(s);
(2) History of prenatal drug or alcohol abuse;
(3) History of child maltreatment, domestic abuse, or other types of violence;
(4) Incarcerated parent(s);
(5) Reduced parental cognitive functioning or significant disability;
(6) Insufficient financial resources to meet family needs;
(7) History of homelessness; or
(8) Other risk factors as determined by the department.
(d) Beginning on or before October 1, 2016, and annually thereafter, the Rhode Island department of health shall issue a state home-visiting report that outlines the components of the state's family home-visiting system that shall be made publicly available on the department's website. The report shall include:
(1) The number of families served by each evidence-based model; and
(2) Demographic data on families served; and
(3) Duration of participation of families; and
(4) Cross-departmental coordination; and
(5) Outcomes related to prenatal, maternal, infant and child health, child maltreatment, family economic security, and child development and school readiness; and
(6) An annual estimate of the number of children born to Rhode Island families who face significant risk factors known to impair child development, and a plan including the fiscal costs and benefits to gradually expand access to the existing evidence-based, family home-visiting programs in Rhode Island to all vulnerable families.
(e) State appropriations for this purpose shall be combined with federal dollars to fund the expansion of evidence-based, home-visiting programs, with the goal of offering the program to all the state's pregnant and parenting teens; families with a history of involvement with the child welfare system; and other vulnerable families.
Cite this article: FindLaw.com - Rhode Island General Laws Title 23. Health and Safety § 23-13.7-2. Home-visiting system components - last updated January 01, 2022 | https://codes.findlaw.com/ri/title-23-health-and-safety/ri-gen-laws-sect-23-13-7-2/
FindLaw Codes may not reflect the most recent version of the law in your jurisdiction. Please verify the status of the code you are researching with the state legislature or via Westlaw before relying on it for your legal needs.
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