| Wisconsin Department
of Health and Family Services/
Division of Supportive Living / Bureau of Aging and Long Term
Care Resources
February 2002
Reviewed by Loree
Cook-Daniels
A comprehensive manual designed to encourage and guide the
establishment of interdisciplinary (multidisciplinary) teams
has been produced and generously made available via email
by the Wisconsin Department of Health and Family Services/Division
of Supportive Living/Bureau of Aging and Long Term Care Resources.
The manual, “Wisconsin Elder Abuse Interdisciplinary
Team (I-Team) Manual,” was written specifically to help
Wisconsin communities meet a new legislative requirement that
each lead elder abuse agency create and maintain an interdisciplinary
team. It therefore includes some Wisconsin-specific information.
However, the vast majority of the 100+ page document would
be relevant in any jurisdiction.
The body of the manual includes the following topics:
-
Purpose of an I-Team
-
Benefits of an I-Team
-
Description of the I-Team Process
-
Obstacles/Problems to Avoid with an I-Team
-
Role of the I-Team Coordinator
-
Suggested Composition of the I-Team
-
Elements to be Covered in an I-Team Membership Agreement
-
Membership Requirements/Rules for an I-Team
-
Training/Orienting New I-Team Members
-
Case Selection Criteria
-
Final Thoughts.
All of this material is concise (14 pages total) and clearly
written, and should provide policy-makers with a clear understanding
of the “hows and whys” of I-Teams. In some ways
the more interesting and potentially useful part of the manual
are the appendices. Here is where you’ll find sample
I-Team mission statements, recruitment materials, agreements
and confidentiality statements, agendas, case presentation
worksheet, and much more. For this reviewer, some of the most
fascinating appendices are two-page position descriptions
for the following “types” of I-Team members: law
enforcement, medical, legal, domestic violence program advocate,
clergy, financial, and mental health. These descriptions,
originally developed by the Illinois Department of Aging’s
Elder Abuse and Neglect Program, outline the major responsibilities
of each type of professional, what information resources she
or he is expected to share; what his or her education, experience,
and training requirements should be; and the knowledge, skills,
and abilities she or he should have.
Although some of the appendices are not available via this
format, the majority of the manual can be emailed to you.
Address an e-mail to abramson@mailbag.com
and put “Wisconsin I-Team Manual please” in the
subject line. The body of your message should contain your
email address, nothing more. Please don’t send other
email, even thank-yous! In the event your email is returned
as undeliverable, you can call Betsy Abramson, the manual’s
author, at 608-663-3599.
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