ID Services
What ID services are provided?
Residential Support Services
Training, assistance and specialized supervision, provided primarily in an individuals home to help the person learn or maintain skills in activities of daily living, safety in the use of community resources, and behavior appropriate for home and the community.
Day Support
Training, assistance and specialized supervision to enable the individual to acquire, retain or improve his/her self-help, social and adaptive skills. These services typically take place away from the home in which the individual resides and may be located in a center or in community locations.
Supported Employment
Supports to enable individuals with disabilities to work in settings in which persons without disabilities are typically employed. It may be provided to one person in one job or to several people at a time when those individuals are working together as a team to complete a job.
Prevocational Services
Training and assistance to prepare an individual for paid or unpaid employment. These services are not job task-oriented. These are for individuals who need to learn skills fundamental to employment such as accepting supervision, getting along with co-workers, using a time clock, etc.
Personal Assistance
Direct support with activities of daily living (e.g., bathing, toileting, personal hygiene skills, dressing, transferring, etc.), instrumental activities of daily living (e.g., assistance with housekeeping activities, preparation of meals, etc.), accessing the community, taking medication or other medical needs, and monitoring the individuals health status and physical condition. These services may be agency-directed or consumer-directed.
Respite
Services designed to provide temporary, substitute care for that which is normally provided by the family or other unpaid, primary caregiver of an individual. These short-term services may be provided because of the primary caregivers absence in an emergency or on-going need for relief. These services may be agency-directed or consumer-directed.
Companion
Provide non-medical care, socialization or support to adults in an individuals home or at various locations in the community. These services may be agency-directed or consumer-directed. These services are available in a traditional agency-directed model as well as a consumer-directed delivery model that offers the individual/family the option of hiring workers directly, rather than using agency staff. (agency-directed or consumer-directed)
Assistive Technology
Specialized medical equipment, supplies, devices, controls and appliances, which enable the individual to better perform activities of daily living, to perceive, control or communicate with his/her environment, or which are necessary to his/her proper functioning.
Environmental Modifications
Physical adaptations to an individuals home or vehicle needed by the individual to ensure his/her health, welfare and safety or enable him/her to experience greater independence in the home and around the community.
Skilled Nursing Services
Nursing services ordered by a physician for individuals with serious medical conditions and complex health care needs. This service is available only for individuals for whom these services cannot be accessed through another means. These services may be provided in an individuals home, community setting, or both.
Therapeutic Consultation
Expert training and technical assistance in any of the following specialty areas to enable family members, caregivers, and other service providers to better support the individual. The specialty areas are: Psychology, Behavior, Speech and Language Pathology, Occupational Therapy, Physical Therapy, Therapeutic Recreation and Rehabilitation Engineering.
Crisis Stabilization
Direct intervention (and may include one-to-one supervision) to a person with mental retardation who is experiencing serious psychiatric or behavioral problems which jeopardize his/her current community living situation. The goal is to avoid emergency psychiatric hospitalization or institutional admission or other out-of-home placement, as well as to stabilize the individual and strengthen the current living situation so the individual can be maintained during and beyond the crisis period.
Personal Emergency Response Systems (PERS)
An electronic device that enables the individual who is alone to access a centralized, staffed emergency center in the event of an emergency.
Money Follows the Person (MFP) Transition Service
Money Follows the Person (MFP) Demonstration project is designed to create a system of long-term services and supports that better enable individuals to transition from certain long-term care institutions into the community. This project supports Virginias Olmstead initiative and complements the efforts of the recently awarded Systems Transformation Grant that aims to improve the infrastructure for community-based long-term supports.