May 20, 2026

Michelle Zabel, MSS University of Connecticut

Michelle Zabel, MSS

Executive Director of Innovations Institute

  • Hartford CT UNITED STATES

Michelle Zabel and her team advance research-based, culturally responsive solutions for child, youth, and family-serving public systems.

Contact More Open options

Biography

Michelle Zabel, MSS, is the Executive Director at Innovations Institute and an Associate Extension Professor at the University of Connecticut School of Social Work. She has over 30 years of experience working in and advising child- and family-serving systems, public and private sectors, at agency, local, and state levels across the nation. She has expertise in implementation science, service system design and sustainable financing, evidence-based and promising practices, tiered care coordination, residential redesign, and crisis response systems. Michelle was the founding director of Innovations Institute in 2005 and, today manages a team of more than 50 faculty and staff with 50 contracts, worth over $15 million annually, with the federal government, multiple state and county governments, foundations, and private organizations that span multiple years. She has been Principal Investigator (PI) for multiple state and federal contracts including two CMS-funded demonstration grants. She participated in multiple state contracts that included evaluation and CQI centered around system redesign, service array development, and sustainable public financing. She has served as Principal Investigator and Project Director for SAMHSA’s National Training and Technical Assistance Center for Children, Youth, and Family Mental Health; as subject matter expert to the National Association of State Mental Health Program Directors; and as a member of SAMHSA’s Child, Adolescent, and Family Branch Council. Under Michelle’s leadership, Innovations has developed expert capacities in health and human services systems, crisis response systems, LGBTQ+ and early childhood populations, policy and financing, systems design research and evaluation, and workforce development, all to improve outcomes for children, youth, young adults, and their families. Michelle’s work, and that of the Institute she leads, advances research-based, inclusive, culturally responsive, and transformative solutions for child-, youth-and family-serving public systems, and supports the workforce within these systems.

Areas of Expertise

Care Coordination
Crisis Response Systems
Implementation Science
Sustainable Financing
Continuous Quality Improvement (CQI)

Education

Eastern University

B.A.

Sociology

1990

Bryn Mawr College

MSS

Social Service & Clinical Social Work

1994

Accomplishments

Family Partnership Award, Maryland Coalition of Families for Children’s Mental Health

2011

Honorable Mention – Extraordinary Public Service to the University or to the Greater Community, University System of Maryland

2011

Paula Hamburger Child Advocacy Award, Mental Health Association of Maryland

2022

Links

Social

Media

Media Appearances

Red Lake Nation's Ombimindwaa Gidanawemaaganinaadog Intergenerational Family Wellness Program awarded a 4-year grant for $1.5 million

Red Lake Nation News  online

2022-04-11

"The Children's Bureau Quality Improvement Center (QIC) model is the kind of work the Institute wants to be involved with on behalf of children and their families," said Michelle Zabel, assistant dean and director of the Institute.

View More

Articles

Developing an Evidence-Based Technical Assistance Model: a Process Evaluation of the National Training and Technical Assistance Center for Child, Youth, and Family Mental Health

The Journal of Behavioral Health Services & Research

2020 The National Training and Technical Assistance Center for Child, Youth, and Family Mental Health (NTTAC) supports the development and implementation of systems of care (SOC) for youth with serious emotional disorders (SED) and their families. This article presents results from a process evaluation of NTTAC, conducted to support the Center's quality improvement and contribute to the knowledge base around provision of technical assistance (TA). The evaluation used a mixed methods approach with data collection focused on a defined subset of NTTAC TA recipients-recipients of federal Comprehensive Community Mental Health Services for Children SOC grants. Data sources included coded administrative records from SOC grant sites, administrative data from NTTAC, standardized measures of SOC development, and stakeholder survey data. Results indicate that TA dosage matched needs and goals of TA recipients (SOC sites), overall levels of satisfaction with TA were high, and TA content was generally aligned with need. TA recipients reported significant progress on indicators of SOC development over time. Together, these findings suggest that it is possible to develop TA methods that reflect the level and type of TA recipients' goals and needs, and, in turn, positively impact SOC development and behavioral health service delivery.

view more

Manuscript: Defining Quality Standards for Intensive Home Based Treatment Programs for Youth with Serious Emotional Disorders

Administration and Policy in Mental Health and Mental Health Services Research

2021 Intensive Home Based Treatment (IHBT) is a critical component of the continuum of community-based behavioral healthcare for youth with serious emotional disorder (SED) and their families. Yet despite being used nationwide at costs of over $100 million annually in some states, a well-vetted, research-based set of quality standards for IHBT has yet to be developed. The current project aimed to define program and practice standards for IHBT, drawing upon literature review, expert interviews, and a systematic Delphi process engaging over 80 participants, including IHBT developers, experts in evidence-based youth mental health, youth and family advocates, IHBT providers, and state policymakers. After two rounds of quantitative and qualitative input, adequate consensus was achieved on 32 IHBT Program Standards and 43 IHBT Practice Standards. These standards hold potential for informing efforts such as development of state regulations, provider contracts, memoranda of agreement, and training and workforce development initiatives. Translation of the quality standards into measurement strategies holds potential for providing a method of continuous quality improvement across multiple levels as well as use in research on IBHT.

view more

Evaluation of a systems-level technical assistance program to support youth with complex behavioral health needs

Evaluation and Program Planning

2022 The National Technical Assistance Network for Children's Behavioral Health (TA Network) supports the development and implementation of Systems of Care (SOC) for youth with serious emotional disorders and their families in states, tribes, territories, and communities throughout the United States. The purpose of the current research was to conduct an evaluation of the TA Network to assess: The degree to which it has deployed research-based elements of TA; levels of participant satisfaction; types and scope of TA services provided; and systems-level outcomes. Study participants were drawn from a stratified random sample of SOC grant recipients who received technical support from the TA Network between 2013 and 2017. Results suggest that the TA Network has encompassed research-based elements of effective TA. Participants rated their interactions with the network very highly, and they accessed a wide variety of resources from the network. Finally, participants reported a variety of systems-level outcomes associated with TA Network support. Together, these findings underscore the importance of structuring TA systems to tailor support to fit with recipients' needs, build positive, proactive relationships, and offer services of sufficient dosage. Given the lack of rigorous evaluations on provision of TA, future studies can confirm the degree to which such tailored approaches to TA result in increased satisfaction, more effective implementation of SOC principles, and ultimately improved outcomes for youth and families.

view more

Powered By

Discover more about what’s happening at UConn

Our websites may use cookies to personalize and enhance your experience. By continuing without changing your cookie settings, you agree to this collection. For more information, please see our University Websites Privacy Notice.

What are cookies?

Web cookies (also called HTTP cookies, browser cookies, or simply cookies) are small pieces of data that websites store on your device (computer, phone, etc.) through your web browser. They are used to remember information about you and your interactions with the site.

Purpose of Cookies:

  1. Session Management:

    • Keeping you logged in
    • Remembering items in a shopping cart
    • Saving language or theme preferences
  2. Personalization:

    • Tailoring content or ads based on your previous activity
  3. Tracking & Analytics:

    • Monitoring browsing behavior for analytics or marketing purposes

Types of Cookies:

  1. Session Cookies:

    • Temporary; deleted when you close your browser
    • Used for things like keeping you logged in during a single session
  2. Persistent Cookies:

    • Stored on your device until they expire or are manually deleted
    • Used for remembering login credentials, settings, etc.
  3. First-Party Cookies:

    • Set by the website you’re visiting directly
  4. Third-Party Cookies:

    • Set by other domains (usually advertisers) embedded in the website
    • Commonly used for tracking across multiple sites
Authentication Cookies

Authentication cookies are a special type of web cookie used to identify and verify a user after they log in to a website or web application.


What They Do:

Once you log in to a site, the server creates an authentication cookie and sends it to your browser. This cookie:

  • Proves to the website that you’re logged in
  • Prevents you from having to log in again on every page you visit
  • Can persist across sessions if you select “Remember me”

What’s Inside an Authentication cookie?

Typically, it contains:

  • A unique session ID (not your actual password)
  • Optional metadata (e.g., expiration time, security flags)
Analytics Cookies

Analytics cookies are cookies used to collect data about how visitors interact with a website. Their primary purpose is to help website owners understand and improve user experience by analyzing things like:

  • How users navigate the site
  • Which pages are most/least visited
  • How long users stay on each page
  • What device, browser, or location the user is from

What They Track:

Some examples of data analytics cookies may collect:

  • Page views and time spent on pages
  • Click paths (how users move from page to page)
  • Bounce rate (users who leave without interacting)
  • User demographics (location, language, device)
  • Referring websites (how users arrived at the site)
Opt Out

Here’s how you can disable cookies in common browsers:

1. Google Chrome

  • Open Chrome and click the three vertical dots in the top-right corner.
  • Go to Settings > Privacy and security > cookies and other site data.
  • Choose your preferred option:
    • Block all cookies (not recommended, can break most websites).
    • Block third-party cookies (can block ads and tracking cookies).

2. Mozilla Firefox

  • Open Firefox and click the three horizontal lines in the top-right corner.
  • Go to Settings > Privacy & Security.
  • Under the Enhanced Tracking Protection section, choose Strict to block most cookies or Custom to manually choose which cookies to block.

3. Safari

  • Open Safari and click Safari in the top-left corner of the screen.
  • Go to Preferences > Privacy.
  • Check Block all cookies to stop all cookies, or select options to block third-party cookies.

4. Microsoft Edge

  • Open Edge and click the three horizontal dots in the top-right corner.
  • Go to Settings > Privacy, search, and services > cookies and site permissions.
  • Select your cookie settings from there, including blocking all cookies or blocking third-party cookies.

5. On Mobile (iOS/Android)

  • For Safari on iOS: Go to Settings > Safari > Privacy & Security > Block All cookies.
  • For Chrome on Android: Open the app, tap the three dots, go to Settings > Privacy and security > cookies.

Be Aware:

Disabling cookies can make your online experience more difficult. Some websites may not load properly, or you may be logged out frequently. Also, certain features may not work as expected.