SECOND QUARTER AGENCY PROGRESS REPORT FY 2018/2019 http://www.rccfc.org/
Children, birth through age 5, benefit from highquality early education, early intervention, family engagement, and support that prepares all children to reach their optimal potential in school and life.
GOAL 1 QUALITY EARLY LEARNING Funded Agencies
Riverside County Office of Education: Riverside Hybrid Alternative Payment Program (RHAP)
July
RHAP Scholarships & Provider Quality Incentives (PQI) for Enrolled Children
Aug
821
607
377
942
690
Sept Oct
901
716
409
920
680
466
Nov
PQI RHAP PQI CAPP
327
878
593
Dec
2
100
867
OUR WORK
688
141
0
RHAP Scholarships
200
300
400
500
600
700
800
900
1000
QSRC Site Comparison 600 136 131
n=502
128
n=430
n=325
400
n=138
500
299
366
300 197 200 100 0
116
22 FY 15/16
FY 16/17 Access & Quality
See Story Map for Distribution of Quality Early Learning Services
FY 17/18 IMPACT Sites
Qtr 2 FY 18/19
CSPP Sites
First 5 Riverside Agency Progress Report Q2 FY 2018/2019
Children, birth through age 5, benefit from highquality early education, early intervention, family engagement, and support that prepares all children to reach their optimal potential in school and life.
GOAL 1 QUALITY EARLY LEARNING Funded Agencies
Consortium for Early Learning Services
Early Learning Providers Trained (n=366) 66
265
OUR WORK 35
FCCH Teachers/Owners (18.03%)
ECE Centers Teachers/Admin (72.40%)
Alternative Site Staff (9.56%)
During Quarter 2 FY 18/19,
58
14
142
Jump Start to Quality Packages distributed to QSRC sites ranking Tier 3 or lower
QSRC Stipend Program Orientations provided to QSRC providers
QSRC providers attended Stipend Program Orientations
First 5 Riverside Agency Progress Report Q2 FY 2018/2019
Children, birth through age 5, benefit from highquality early education, early intervention, family engagement, and support that prepares all children to reach their optimal potential in school and life.
GOAL 1 QUALITY EARLY LEARNING Funded Agencies United Way of the Desert
Raising a Reader Program began implementation on November 1, 2018.
1,287 children received the Raising a Reader program at targeted school sites, on a monthly basis (95% accomplishment)
OUR WORK
First 5 Riverside Agency Progress Report Q2 FY 2018/2019
GOAL 2 COMPREHENSIVE GOAL 1.2 HEALTH & CHILD HEALTH DEVELOPMENT
Children, prenatal through age 5, and their families access the full spectrum of health and behavioral health services needed to support their healthy physical and social-emotional development and overall health.
Funded Agencies Riverside University Health System-Behavioral Health
Early Identification and Early Intervention - Integrated System of Care 2,000 1,149
Projected # Actual #
500
94
58% Children Receiving an Initial Assessment Children received a behavioral health screening (DECA)
19% Children received a behavioral health screening (ASQ-3)
500 353
240
71%
70%
Children served with pro-social groups
167
Children reviewed via the Child Study Team
1,005
148
15% Children served with classroom observations & consultations
242 of 210 Children served with with full treatment intervention PCIT has exceeded the projected target 115% of accomplishment
First 5 Riverside Agency Progress Report Q2 FY 2018/2019
GOAL 2 COMPREHENSIVE GOAL 1.2 HEALTH & CHILD HEALTH DEVELOPMENT
Children, prenatal through age 5, and their families access the full spectrum of health and behavioral health services needed to support their healthy physical and social-emotional development and overall health.
Funded Agencies Desert Healthcare Foundation
SoCal Water Babies, LLC
Riverside University Health System Public Health-Nutrition & Physical Activity Self-Assessment for Child Care (NAP SACC)
Drowning Prevention 470 children received water safety classes (53% accomplishment) 411 children increased water safety skills (54% accomplishment) 663 parents, caregivers and community members participated in water safety workshops
NAP SACC 201 of 200 projected QSRC child care providers trained in NAP SACC (101% accomplishment) 25 of 50 projected QSRC child care sites enrolled in NAP SACC (50% accomplishment) 12 of 35 projected QSRC child care sites are NAP SACC certified (34% accomplishment) First 5 Riverside Agency Progress Report Q2 FY 2018/2019
GOAL 2 COMPREHENSIVE GOAL 1.2 HEALTH & CHILD HEALTH DEVELOPMENT
Children, prenatal through age 5, and their families access the full spectrum of health and behavioral health services needed to support their healthy physical and social-emotional development and overall health.
Loma Linda University Children's Health
HMG-IE Summit I was convened to introduce the community to HMG, and
to convene stakeholder and partner engagement in the design of the strategic plan over 100 community stakeholders participated Three committees were identified child health provider outreach family and community outreach systems and sustainabililty focusing on outreach, screening, referral and follow-up to define local context considerations
First 5 Riverside Agency Progress Report Q2 FY 2018/2019
GOAL 2 COMPREHENSIVE GOAL 1.2 HEALTH & CHILD HEALTH DEVELOPMENT
Children, prenatal through age 5, and their families access the full spectrum of health and behavioral health services needed to support their healthy physical and social-emotional development and overall health.
DTI/LDPP-IE funds 10 agencies regionally across San Bernardino and Riverside Counties
University of California, Riverside School of Medicine
DTI/LDPP-IE Virtual Dental Home (VDH) Strategy 8 Community Health Centers in Riverside and San Bernardino Counties are fully equipped with VDH equipment Over 100 children have received VDH services
Early Childhood Oral Health Assessment (ECOHA) Strategy The first iteration of the mobile application went live midDecember.
Over 450 children have received the assessment.
Work is underway to implement Reach Out and Read Program in pediatric clinics 4 F5R mission scholarship recipients
Building New Capacity to Expand Healthcare
remained enrolled First 5 Riverside Agency Progress Report Q2 FY 2018/2019
GOAL 3 RESILIENT FAMILIES
Families and communities are engaged, supported, and strengthened through culturally effective resources and opportunities that assist them in nurturing, caring, and providing for their children's success and well-being.
Funded Agencies
Jurupa Unified School District
Blindness Support Services Family Services Association
Parentz@Work
John F Kennedy Memorial Foundation
Riverside University Health System Public Health
Home Visitation Expansion
302
Parents served with home visitation
Children served with home visitation
33
177
Children provided with an initial assessment
Number of initial screenings provided
71
97
Parents provided with an initial assessment
See Story Map for Distribution of Home Visitation Services
First 5 Riverside Agency Progress Report Q2 FY 2018/2019
SUCCESS STORY Jurupa Unified School District As a home visitation program PCHP has a unique opportunity to see the needs of the families in their home. And as a department we can connect families to a variety of resources such as behavioral health, food distributions, clothing, and health services. While sharing this information with a PCHP family the parent expressed a mental health concern for an older child. Because we support the whole family unit, this family completed a referral and is now connected to counseling services for their older child. One common goal of our department is to inform families of all the different services we provide so that in times of need they have services centralized in one place that they already have community relationship with. PICOÂ was able to collaborate with the School Readiness Center and recruited HIPPY families from the Head Start and State Preschool Waitlist. This is a success not only for the program HIPPY to be able to capture a target audience so conveniently, but also for the children and families of Jurupa who would have been on a waitlist of over 300 children receiving no early childhood service at all. These families are now connected to early childhood education, parenting skills, developmental screenings, and other wrap around services provided at PICO. This collaboration was key in serving families in Jurupa with children of preschool age. First 5 Riverside Agency Progress Report Q2 FY 2018/2019
LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS CELS Consortium for Early Learning Services CAPP California Alternative Payment Program CLASS Classroom Assessment Scoring System CSPP California State Preschool Program C2AP CALWORKS Stage 2 C3AP CALWORKS Stage 3 DECA Devereux Early Childhood Assessment DTI/LDPP-IE Dental Transformation Initiative/Local Dental Pilot Project Inland Empire ECE Early Childhood Education ECOHA Early Childhood Oral Health Assessment EIEI Early Identification and Early Intervention ERS Environmental Rating Scale F5R First 5 Riverside FCCH Family Child Care Homes HIPPY Home Instruction for Parents of Preschool Youngsters HMG Help Me Grow IMPACT Improve and Maximize Programs so All Children Thrive NAP SACC Nutrition and Physical Activity Self-Assessment for Child Care NFP Nurse-Family Partnership PICO Parent Involvement & Outreach PCHP Parent-Child Home Program PCIT Parent-Child Interaction Therapy PQI Provider Quality Incentives QSRC Quality Start Riverside County RHAP Riverside Hybrid Alternative Payment Program RUHS Riverside University Health System VDH Virtual Dental Home Website links are provided when available
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First 5 Riverside Agency Progress Report Q2 FY 2018/2019