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CHILDREN AND FAMILIES (NOT EDUCATION)

  • Attention Deficit Disorder Association

    "The World's Leading Adult AD/HD organization."

     

  • Bridges4Kids

    Building partnerships between families, schools, and communities.

     

  • Cerebral Palsy Guide

    Cerebral Palsy Guide helps children and families in need, by extending medical options, educational information financially and emotionally supportive tools to those affected by cerebral palsy.

     

  • Child and Youth Advocacy Center

    The mission of the Child and Youth Advocacy Center (CYAC) is to develop a community-wide response that builds on existing resources to empower families, youth, professionals, and others in breaking the cycle of maltreatment and abuse.

     

  • Children and Adults with ADD/ADHD

    Children and Adults with Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (CHADD), provides education, advocacy and support for individuals with AD/HD.

     

  • Children with Special Health Care Needs Program

    The Children with Special Health Care Needs (CSHCN) Program, in the Office of Maternal, Child and Family Health (OMCFH) advances the health and well-being of children and youth with certain chronic, debilitating conditions by providing specialized medical care and care coordination services to children under 21 years of age who meet financial and medical eligibility criteria.

     

  • Children's Therapy Clinic

    We provide free comprehensive therapy to children with disabilities. Children's Therapy Clinic offers a team approach to focus on each child's needs and abilities by including parents, caregivers, family members, and other professionals involved with the child. Our therapists help each child to reach his or her full potential and help create the little miracles of a child's first step or word. We're located in Cross Lanes, just off the I-64 exit.

     

  • Coalfield Community Action Partnership

    Coalfield Community Action Partnership, Inc. is a private non-profit 501(c)3 corporation that serves residents of Southern West Virginia and Eastern Kentucky. Coalfield CAP offers a variety of services and programs including Head Start, Community Services Block Grant, Weatherization, Personal Care, Seniors, and more.

     

  • Easter Seals

    Easter Seals provides exceptional services, education, outreach, and advocacy so that people living with autism and other disabilities can live, learn, work and play in our communities.

     

  • Family Voices

    Keeping Families at the center of children's health care.

     

  • Foster Care Ombudsman

    During the 2019 and 2020 Legislative Sessions House Bills 2010 and 4094, relating to Foster Care, enabled an independent Foster Care Ombudsman. The Ombudsman is required to have experience as a former foster parent or in the area of child welfare.

     

  • HealthCheck – West Virginia's Early and Periodic Screening, Diagnosis and Treatment Program

    HealthCheck is the name of West Virginia's Early and Periodic Screening, Diagnosis and Treatment Program (E.P.S.D.T.). It is a mandated Medicaid Program enacted in 1967 to ensure that Medicaid-eligible children under age 21 receive a comprehensive range of preventive and primary health services. This program provides periodic, comprehensive health examinations; vision, dental and hearing assessments; immunizations; and treatment follow-up of conditions found through the health examination.

     

  • Help Me Grow

    Help Me Grow is a FREE referral service that connects families with critical developmental resources for their children birth through five years.

     

  • Learning Disabilities Online

    "The world's leading website on learning disabilities and ADHD."

     

  • Legal Aid of West Virginia's Family, Advocacy, Support, and Training (FAST) Program

    The goal of the Family, Advocacy, Support, and Training (FAST) program is to develop a statewide parent-to-parent and youth support network that will empower families to participate in planning, management, and evaluation of their child's treatment.

     

  • Make a Wish Foundation

    Since 1980, the Make-A-Wish Foundation has given hope, strength and joy to children with life-threatening medical conditions.

     

  • MODIFY (formerly Chafee Community Support Services)

    MODIFY with the WVUCED provides on-going services to youth who are transitioning out of the foster care system.

     

  • Mountain State Parents Child and Adolescent Network (MSP-CAN)

    Promotes reforms in the service delivery system through a continuum of interrelated activities that educate and support parent, inform practitioners, and administrators and policy makers.

     

  • National Resource Center for ADHD

    The nation's clearinghouse for science-based information about all aspects of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). Funded by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the NRC provides information on this disorder which affects how millions of children and adults function on a daily basis.

     

  • Parents with Disabilities – Through the Looking Glass

    Provides direct services, information, and referral to a diverse group of parents with disabilities and their families.

     

  • Pride Community Services

    PRIDE offers a multitude of programs geared at assisting low income individuals and families to move out of poverty and toward self sufficiency. Currently the agency operates Senior nutrition sites in Logan, Chapmanville and Millcreek; Head Start Centers in Logan, Chapmanville, Dehue, Lorado and Buffalo; and in conjunction with the Logan County Board of Education we operate specialized collaborative classrooms in several schools; Weatherization Program; CSBG Program; Child and Adult Food Care Program; Case Management and In-Home Care Programs.

     

  • Quiet Minds

    Our goal is to facilitate early identification and treatment of psychosis in a collaborative, recovery-oriented approach involving individuals experiencing first episode psychosis, therefore reduce the disruption to the young person’s functioning and psychosocial development.

     

  • Right from the Start

    RFTS provides in-home care coordination services to high risk, low income pregnant women through the second postpartum month and Medicaid eligible high risk infants through one year of age.

     

  • Sensory Processing Disorder Resource Center

    Information and resources about sensory processing disorders.

     

  • Special Needs Grants

    Provides a list of available special needs grants.

     

  • U.S. Department of Education 'ADHD Resources for Home & School'

    A publication from the United States Department of Education called 'Identifying and Treating Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder: A Resource for School and Home'.

     

  • West Virginia Birth to Three

    WV Birth to Three is a statewide system of services and supports for children under age three who have a delay in their development, or may be at risk of having a delay, and their family.

     

  • West Virginia Bureau for Children and Families

    Meeting the needs of today's children and families: Children and Families Services Directory.

     

  • West Virginia Court System Self-Help Center

    This on-line self-help center has been designed to provide valuable information to those persons wishing to represent themselves in court.

     

  • West Virginia Early Childhood Training Connections and Resources

    A statewide program designed to provide professional development opportunities for the early care and education community.

     

  • West Virginia Family Grief Center

    To provide caring support to grieving children between the ages of 3 and 18 and their families.

     

  • West Virginia Office of Epidemiology and Prevention Services

    The mission of the West Virginia Office of Epidemiology and Prevention Services is to improve the health, well-being and quality of life for all West Virginians through disease surveillance, investigation, analysis, education and prevention services.

     

  • WV Early Intervention Interagency Coordinating Council

    The ICC was established in 1987 in compliance with the federal regulations governing state early intervention systems that address the needs of infants and toddlers, ages birth to three, eligible under Part C of the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA).



     

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