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Positioning SWD for Greater Challenges

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Title: Positioning SWD for Greater Challenges


1
Positioning SWD for Greater Challenges Recent
Welfare Services Development
Presented by Mrs Eliza Leung, J.P.Deputy
Director of Social Welfare (Services) e-mail
dds_at_swd.gov.hk 8 March 2002
2
Content
  • Major Challenges Ahead
  • Positioning SWD for Greater Challenges
  • Recent Welfare Services Development
  • Way Forward

3
Major Challenges Ahead
  • Socio-economic changes
  • Negative equity of property, income disparity
  • Rising unemployment, job instability
  • Social problems-weakened family solidarity
  • Single parents
  • Domestic violence
  • Abuse suicide
  • Youth at risk
  • Elders in need of care

4
Marriage Rate
Major Challenges Ahead
Source Hong Kong Annual/Monthly Digest of
Statistics, CSD
5
Divorce Rate
Major Challenges Ahead
No. of divorce decrees General divorce rate (No.
of divorcee decrees per 1000 population aged 15
and over)
Source Hong Kong Annual/Monthly Digest of
Statistics, CSD
6
Single Parents on CSSA
Major Challenges Ahead
(11.9 of all CSSA cases)
(6.4 of all CSSA cases)
7
Child Abuse
Major Challenges Ahead
8
Battered Spouse
Major Challenges Ahead
9
Suicide
Major Challenges Ahead
Source of information Coroners Reports 2001
figures are preliminary there may be minor
adjustments in the formal Coroners Report to be
published in mid of 2002.
10
Youth at Risk
Major Challenges Ahead
  • No. of young people (age below 16) reported of
    substance abuse
  • full-year 1st half
  • 1999 242 108
  • 2000 614 ( ? 154 ) 265 ( ? 145 )
  • 2001 N.A. 347 ( ? 31 )

11
Major Challenges Ahead
Youth at Risk (contd)
  • No. of young people (age below 16) arrested due
    to criminal offence
  • 1999 5,486
  • 2000 6,299 ( ? 15 )
  • 2001 5,909 ( ? 6 )
  • estimated 18 of Form I encountered problems
    during development
  • estimated 15,000 young people loave the street at
    night

12
Ageing Population
Major Challenges Ahead
Source Hong Kong Population Projections 2000 -
2029, Census and Statistics Department
13
Positioning SWD forGreater Challenges
14
Objectives
Positioning SWD for Greater Challenges
  • To position the Department to meet new challenges
    in the planning of social welfare services
  • To increase our responsiveness to users' needs
  • To enhance efficiency and productivity

15
Key DriversMeeting Changing Needs in Social
Welfare
Positioning SWD for Greater Challenges
  • District Level
  • Changing roles and functions of the Regional
    Offices
  • District as focal point in planning and delivery
    of welfare services in face of growing demand for
    a better and more co-ordinated planning strategy
    and greater integration of service delivered in
    districts
  • Emphasis on enhanced outreaching services as
    reflected in the 2000 Policy Address and 2001
    Budget Speech

16
Key Drivers (contd)
Positioning SWD for Greater Challenges
  • District Level (contd)
  • Increasing emphasis on close consultation between
    Government departments and the District Councils
  • Increasing demand for inter-sectoral
    collaboration at both policy and implementation
    level

17
Key Drivers (contd)
Positioning SWD for Greater Challenges
  • HQs Level
  • Growing demand for more strategic and
    evidence-based planning, service review and
    development of new approaches and methods to cope
    with rapid social changes
  • Subvention reformLump Sum Grant and Service
    performance monitoring

18
Key Drivers (contd)
Positioning SWD for Greater Challenges
  • HQs Level (contd)
  • Emergence of new demands
  • Information technology
  • Human resources management
  • Planning and research

19
Two Strands of ChangesChanges at District Level
Positioning SWD for Greater Challenges
  • Eliminate 5 ROs
  • Maintain 13 DOs (DSWO upgraded to PSWO level) and
    enhance them to deal with
  • planning of welfare services on a district basis
  • collaborate with DCs, other departments and local
    organisations on implementation of welfare
    policies
  • co-ordinate with NGO service providers to meet
    local welfare needs
  • establish proactive outreaching network
  • administer centralised operational units

20
A typical DSWO set-up
Positioning SWD for Greater Challenges
DSWO (PSWO)
ADSWO (SSWO) (1-3)
SSWO
SSSO
Regional Specialised Professional Teams of FCPSU
and CCSU / COVS /SCNAMO (SWOs)
Social Security Field Units (SSOIs)
Planning and Co-ordinating Team (PCT) (SWO
ASWO)
District Secretary (EOII)
Departmental Services Units
Family Support Resource Centre (FSRC) Family
Support Networking Team (FSNT) in CC / ECC (SWO /
ASWO/ SWA/ SWW/ WW)
District Registry
A total of 7 SSSOs to oversee FUs in 13
Districts
Clerical Support
21
Positioning SWD for Greater Challenges
Two Strands of ChangesChanges at HQs Level
  • Re-organise Subventions, Finance and Project
    Planning Branches into two Branches of Finance
    and Service Performance Monitoring
  • Strengthen Service Branches to focus on service
    rationalisation and setting service
    standards/benchmarks
  • Establish new set-ups on HRM and Planning
    Research

22
Positioning SWD for Greater Challenges
Changes at At HQs Level (contd)
  • Merge all licensing functions under a new
    Licensing Office
  • LORCHE
  • CCCAI
  • Drugs Treatment Centres
  • Develop professional service specialty in
    domestic violence
  • Set up a small Corporate Affairs Office

23
Re-organised Structure
Positioning SWD for Greater Challenges
DSW
DD(A)
DD(S)
  • Each branch headed or to be headed by either
  • AD or PSWO/CSWO or PEO
  • Finance
  • Service Performance
  • Monitoring / Project
  • Management
  • HRM
  • IST
  • Social Security
  • General Administration
  • Each branch headed by either AD or CCP or CSWO
  • Elderly
  • Family Child Welfare
  • Rehab Medical Social
  • Service
  • Youth Corrections
  • Licensing Office
  • Specialty Services
  • - Clinical Psychology
  • - Domestic Violence
  • Corporate Affairs Office (CAO)
  • Strategic Planning
  • Research Statistics
  • IPRU
  • Customer Services
  • (external)

13 DSWOs (PSWO)
SSWOs
SSSOs
ADSWOs
24
Recent WelfareServices Development
25
Enhancing Care for Elders with Emphasis on Ageing
in Place
  • Develop integrated care facilities for elders.
  • From 2001/02 to 2002/03 Around 16 integrated
    services projects will be launched
  • Including 4 District Elderly Community Centre
    (DECC) (??????) and 4 Neighbourhood Elderly
    Centre (NEC) (??????).
  • Flexible use of resources by service
    re-engineering/ resource redeployment
  • Provide One-stop services

26
Enhancing Care for Elders with Emphasis on Ageing
in Place (contd)
  • EHCCS (????????????)
  • Introduce the new Enhanced Home and Community
    Care Service since March 2001
  • Serving 1,453 elders in 18 districts (15 over
    planned volume of 1,260).
  • Will be further strengthened according to need
  • Award Contract of RCHE through Competitive
    Bidding
  • 1st RCHE by this mode Caritas Evergeen Home at
    Sai Ying Pun Community Complex.
  • Achieving efficiency gain of over 20.

27
Fostering Integration of the Disabled into the
Community
  • Promotion of employment opportunities.
  • On-the-job Training Programme for People with
    disabilities (benefiting 1080 persons in three
    years)
  • 50 million to assist NGOs setting up small
    business to employ people with disabilities

28
Fostering Integration of the Disabled into the
Community (contd)
  • Strengthening of community support service (30
    mil. additional annually recurrent expenditure)
  • Financial support to 38 self-help groups
  • Funding 24 NGOs to provide parent resource
    centres, social and recreational centres
  • A 28 million 3-year programme to provide day
    care, occasional day care, respite care to help
    families look after the disabled
  • Setting up of a 50 million Hong Kong Paralympian
    Fund to help disabled athletes pursue excellence

29
Helping the Young People
  • fully implement one school social worker per
    secondary school in 2000/01 academic year
  • implement Understanding Adolescent Programme
    (UAP) in 150 secondary schools in 2001/02
    academic year for early identification of
    development needs of students and early
    intervention
  • collaborate with Education Department on
    parenting education and extend UAP to primary
    schools on a pilot basis, starting from 2001/02
    school year

30
Helping the Young People (contd)
  • expedite formation of Integrated Teams (from 34
    in 1999-2000 to 64 in 2001-02) with phased
    increase in funding of 70 million over three
    years from 2001-02
  • strengthen 18 ITs to undertake outreaching work
    to young night drifters

31
Helping the Young People (contd)
  • increase number of Community Support Services
    Centre for young people cautioned under the
    Police Superintendent Discretion Scheme from two
    to five ( EK, WK and NTE) in September 2001
  • strengthen referral mechanism between Department
    of Healths Student Health Service and NGOs
    youth services

32
Helping the Young People (contd)
  • enhance Polices School Liaison Teams to support
    schools with 33 additional police sergeant posts
  • plan to set up the first all-night youth drop-in
    centre to support outreaching work to young night
    drifters

33
Supporting the Families
  • Review and Re-engineering of Family Services
  • "Patch-work" introduction of new services or
    projects whenever a need arises, resulting in
    services duplication
  • Changing family needs
  • Remedial services absorbed most resources
  • Important preventive services neglected

34
Supporting the Families (contd)
  • A three-tiered model to support families

35
Supporting the Families (contd)
? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ?
? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ?
? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ?
? ? ? ?
  • Integrated Family Services Centres (????????) (15
    projects)
  • A Continuum of Preventive, Supportive and
    Remedial Services

Treatmentoriented
Family Counselling Unit
Supporting families at risk (practical,
emotional training support)
Family Support Unit
Family Resource Unit
Open, developmental and preventive
36
Supporting the Families (contd)
  • Integrated Family Services Centres (contd)
  • 15 two-year IFSC pilot projects through various
    approaches, commencing in April 2002
  • 1 new purpose-designed and developed IFSC (Tung
    Chung Area 30 31)
  • Transformation
  • Merging
  • Strategic alliance
  • One project in each of 13 SWD district, plus one
    in Tung Chung and an additional one in Sham Shui
    Po to try out merging of co-located SWD service
    units
  • Cost neutral

37
Supporting the Families (contd)
  • Family Support Networking Teams (???????) (14
    teams)
  • Early Identification and timely intervention of
    family problem
  • Outreaching and networking services for
    vulnerable families
  • Referral to appropriate services
  • Attached to Family Support and Resource Centres

38
Supporting the Families (contd)
  • Family Support and Resource Centres
  • (?????????) (20 centres)
  • Re-engineering of 19 SWD Group Work Units (GWUs)
    in Community Centres which used to provide social
    and recreational services to general public
  • Play the roles of Family Resource Unit and Family
    Support Unit under the IFSC model
  • Focus on a variety of informative, tangible,
    supportive and brief counselling services to
    vulnerable families and groups
  • support district-based service planning and
    delivery
  • redeployment of resources within SWD

39
Supporting the Families (contd)
  • Family Crisis Support Centre (????????)
  • (1 centre)
  • A time-out facility to help users under extreme
    stress or facing crisis
  • A resource and early intervention point to tackle
    family tensions at early stage and prevent
    problems from deteriorating into tragedy

40
Supporting the Families (contd)
  • Family Crisis Support Centre (contd)
  • Service Provision and Delivery Model
  • round-the-clock service for persons in crisis
  • Integrative services including
  • 24-hour hotline (18288)
  • outreaching and crisis intervention
  • short-term accommodation
  • group programmes
  • self-learning resources and facilities
  • referrals
  • training ex-residents as volunteers or peer
    counsellors
  • community education programmes

41
Supporting the Families (contd)
  • Development of a 4th Refuge for Women (??????)
  • 40 residential places
  • mens hotline
  • counselling groups for batterers
  • emergency fund
  • family resource corner
  • mutual help groups
  • community education
  • employment training

42
Supporting the Families (contd)
  • Suicidal Crisis Centre (????????) (1 centre)
  • a three-year pilot with a grant of 10.6M from
    the LF
  • to be run by the Samaritan Befrienders Hong Kong
  • provide round-the-clock outreaching service,
    crisis intervention and intensive counselling to
    those who are in crisis situation and at high
    suicidal risk
  • build up networks with related services and
    agencies in contact with those having suicidal
    intent or attempts in order to identify and reach
    the service targets as early as practicable

43
Supporting the Families (contd)
  • Suicidal Crisis Centre (contd)
  • Implementation by Three Phases
  • networking and publicity of services in the first
    three months
  • outreaching and counselling services from the
    fourth month
  • full implementation starting from the seventh
    month onwards

44
Supporting the Families (contd)
  • Live Life - Joint Project on Prevention of
    Elderly Suicide (???? ????????)
  • Joint operation with Hong Kong Council of Social
    Service and the Hong Kong Psycho-geriatric
    Association since mid-2001
  • funding support of 7.96M from the Hong Kong
    Jockey Club Charities Trust

45
Supporting the Families (contd)
  • Live Life - Joint Project on Prevention of
    Elderly Suicide (contd)
  • Three main components
  • community education programmes
  • a three-tier co-ordinated intervention model
    piloted in Sha Tin and Tai Po in Dec 2001
    (????????)
  • hotline service
  • volunteer visits
  • counselling and psychiatric consultation
  • an Asia-Pacific Regional Conference on Prevention
    of Elderly Suicide to be staged in May 2003

46
Supporting the Families (contd)
  • Enhanced roles of Departmental Clinical
    Psychologists
  • Operation Silver Lining
  • A proactive means through which CPs advocate
    positive thinking and quality-living through
    public education and media contacts to build up
    the societys resilience towards crises in life.
  • A re-focusing on primary intervention
  • Increased clinical consultation and training to
    support other service units
  • Specialty development in psychotherapy for severe
    cases

47
Supporting the Families (contd)
  • Specialised and Co-ordinated Effort in Combating
    Violence
  • Set up a dedicated team headed by a CSWO since
    September 2001
  • Integrated approach to tackle violence problem
  • Consolidating and developing expertise in
    handling abuse cases
  • Service coverage
  • Child abuse
  • Elderly abuse
  • Sexual violence
  • Domestic violence

48
Ending Exclusion Project (????)
  • To assist CSSA single parent recipients with
    young children
  • maximize their chances of participating in social
    and economic activities
  • Help them raise their self-esteem and sense of
    worthiness, integrate into society and improve
    their living through employment

49
Ending Exclusion Project (contd)
  • Package of services
  • Active Employment Assistance (AEA) Programme
  • Special Job Attachment Programmes (SJAP)
  • Intensive Employment Assistance Fund (IEAF)
  • Help with child care
  • After-school-care programme
  • Enhanced Supportive Services
  • Single-parent centres (5 centres)
  • Improved work incentives
  • Raise the level of disregarded earnings for
    single parent with young children from 1,805 to
    2,500

50
Way Forward -Shared Responsibility
  • The community can join the Government and the
    welfare sector in serving the needy through
    self-initiated mutual help projects
  • To support and promote mutual concern and aid and
    community participation, the Chief Executive has
    announced the setting up of a Community
    Investment and Inclusion Fund with an initial
    grant of 300M
  • The media has an important role to play

51
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