Footnotes

1 Federation of Protestant Welfare Agencies, Permanency Planning in the Age of Advanced Treatment for HIV/AIDS. Is the Crisis Over? New York: Author, 1999. Back to Text

2 Linda S. Coon and Jane Ascroft, Draft Best Practices: Helping Families Make Decisions About Their Children's Futures, Part 1: Voluntary Permanency Planning for HIV-Affected Families, unpublished, September 29, 2000 found this to be common in AIA projects. Back to Text

3 Attorney involved with 88 of the 114 cases. Attorney present at 77 of the 88 conferences. Back to Text

4 Kinship case manager involved with 40 of the 114 cases and present at all 40 of the conferences. Back to Text

5 Art therapist involved with 31 of the 114 cases and present at all 31 of the conferences. Back to Text

6 Conversation with project director, December 21, 2001. Back to Text

7 The total number of participants was not recorded. Back to Text

8 Significance not determined. Back to Text

9 See The Loop, Family Ties Project Newsletter, Vol.5 No.8 May 7, 2001. Back to Text

10 400,000 Not Getting Treatment for HIV, CDC Says One-Fourth of Americans With HIV Infection May Not Know They're Sick, Maggie Fox, Reuters, February 25, 2002. Back to Text

11 HRSA Care Action, July 2001, www.hab.hrsa.gov, accessed February 8, 2002. Back to Text

 

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THE FAMILY TIES PROJECT, a project of the Consortium for Child Welfare, is funded by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Administration for Children, Youth and Families, Administration on Children, Youth and Families, Abandoned Infants Program, Grant No. 90-CB-0100/02. Foundation Support is provided by the Washington AIDS Partnership and Broadway Cares/Equity Fights AIDS. For fiscal year 2001 the federal grant award totals $450,000, representing 82% of the total project budget; non-federal sources represent 16% of the total project budget, providing $96,002.