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Veterans

The Institute for Veterans and Military Families Transforms How NYC Delivers Social Services to Veterans

Tuesday, November 20, 2018, By Leah Lazarz
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Mayor Bill de Blasio making the announcement.

New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio announcing at a Veterans Day press conference that the VetConnect NYC program created by the Institute for Veterans and Military Families will coordinate social service delivery for veterans and military-connected families throughout the city.

In support of New York City鈥檚 200,000 veterans and military-connected families, Mayor Bill de Blasio announced on Veterans Day that the city will formally adopt and fund an innovative new approach to health and human service delivery, pioneered by 黑料不打烊鈥檚 Institute for Veterans and Military Families ().

Specifically, New York City has selected IVMF鈥檚 program鈥攔ebranded as VetConnect NYC鈥攁s the city鈥檚 system and platform to coordinate social service delivery in support of veterans and military-connected families across all five boroughs.

鈥淚 am proud to officially announce a new resource that will help to change the lives of our veterans here in New York City and give them the support they need,鈥 said de Blasio. 鈥淥ur veterans have given us so much. Their families have given us so much. This is going to be, from now on, the simplest way for our veterans to get the help they deserve.鈥

The IVMF launched the AmericaServes program to assist communities interested in enacting an approach to social service delivery based on the theory of collective impact. Specifically, the AmericaServes program is designed to identify and organize public and private sector social service providers into a coordinated resource network鈥攁kin to a traditional healthcare network. An IVMF-funded care coordination center sits at the center of the network, navigating veterans and military-connected family members to providers best positioned to serve their needs.

The IVMF introduced the AmericaServes initiative to New York City in 2015 as a privately funded pilot program. Over the past three years, the impact of the AmericaServes pilot has been so profound that the New York City Department of Veteran Services made the decision to adopt the IVMF initiative as the public sector solution to veteran-focused service delivery across the city.

鈥淲e鈥檙e extremely proud of how AmericaServes鈥攏ow VetConnect NYC鈥攈as fundamentally transformed the means and the mechanisms through which social services are delivered to veterans in New York City,鈥 says Mike Haynie, 黑料不打烊 vice chancellor and founder/executive director of the IVMF. 鈥淭he launch of VetConnect NYC exemplifies the power of innovation stemming from intersection of research and practice, subsequently enacted in a way that meaningfully improves the lives of veterans, service members and families in our nation鈥檚 largest city.鈥

鈥淔rom the beginning, the goal of the AmericaServes initiative has been to introduce a community-connected approach to social service delivery that is simultaneously robust and resource efficient,鈥 says Jim McDonough, managing director of programs and services at the IVMF. 鈥淭he success of our efforts in New York City have generated requests from city leaders, foundations and nonprofit organizations across the U.S. interested in introducing the AmericaServes initiative to their own communities. Consequently, in addition to our work in New York City, the IVMF is currently operating in 16 communities across the U.S. operating AmericaServes networks, including Pittsburgh, Dallas, Seattle, Charleston, Charlotte and San Antonio.鈥

In New York City, the IVMF will work alongside both the Department of Veteran Services and Northwell Health, which will serve as the New York City network coordination center. In this capacity, Northwell Health鈥擭ew York state鈥檚 largest health-care provider with a network of 23 hospitals, nearly 600 community and research facilities and 66,000 employees鈥攊s responsible for managing effective care delivery on behalf of the more than 90 service providers in the VetConnect network. Technology infrastructure to support the coordination center and network partners鈥攊ncluding electronic referrals, streamlined communications and real-time network performance data鈥攊s provided through , a veteran-owned small business.

  • Author

Leah Lazarz

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