Home » Newsletter

Plans of Safe Care: New Learning Brief and Planned Expansion

/
a reunifiied family pictured with their representation team

Partners at a kick-off event to officially launch the POSC Framework in Pueblo County.

A new Colorado Lab brief summarizes findings from the first year of serving families under The Plans of Safe Care Pilot in the San Luis Valley. Plans of Safe Care (POSC) improve cross-system care coordination by rapidly connecting families experiencing prenatal substance use to trusted resources (e.g., Family Resource Centers, recovery groups, faith based organizations, etc.) to help keep infants safely with their caregiver when possible. The 4-year POSC Pilot is resourced by the Colorado Department of Human Services’ Division of Child Welfare and aims to develop a data-informed strategic framework for POSC that can be scaled and replicated across Colorado.

The POSC Pilot began serving families in August 2024 and early evidence shows promising results for wrapping care around families in the six-county region of the San Luis Valley as they navigate pregnancy, early parenting, and substance use recovery. Findings include:

  • More than three-quarters of program referrals (77%) resulted in a completed POSC, providing families with tailored roadmaps for care, services, and support; and
  • 78% of referrals to specialized supports resulted in successful connections, ensuring services are matched to each family’s unique needs.

Early success of the POSC Framework in the San Luis Valley has inspired its first replication into a new community. Through Safe Babies in Pueblo County, a timely opportunity for expansion was identified.

“The POSC Framework offers a data-driven approach for communities to leverage existing strengths and fill in gaps toward more coordinated care for families,” explained Dr. Courtney Everson, Senior Project Director for the Colorado Lab. “Early replication of the POSC Framework in Pueblo County will accelerate evidence building, inform continued opportunities for statewide scaling, and help us better assess adaptations for different geographies.” The funding for this project is associated with an award by the Health Resources and Services Administration of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services as part of an award to Illuminate Colorado.

For more information about the POSC Framework, please contact Dr. Courtney Everson.