- NOFOs
- Awards
- Awards by State
(Initial)
(Initial)
(Modified)
(Modified)
(Initial)
(Initial)
(Modified)
Displaying 276 - 300 out of 413
| Award Number | Organization | City | State | Amount | Award FY | NOFO | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SM061759-02 | Oregon Health Authority Directors Office Finacial Services | Salem | OR | $736,000 | 2015 | SM-14-008 | ||||
|
Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention
Project Period: 2014/09/30 - 2019/09/29
Short Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention Cooperative Agreements Oregon Public Health Division's (PHD) Caring Connections Youth Suicide Prevention Initiative capitalizes on a long history of successful public/private collaboration and Oregon's dynamic health care delivery system to reduce the burden of suicide among youth ages 10-24 by implementing comprehensive suicide prevention and early identification best practices. The Initiative targets 468,809 youth aged 10-24, with special focus on at-risk youth, which includes those that live in seven Oregon counties with a higher than national rate of youth suicide, military families, youth involved in the foster care and juvenile justice systems, Native American youth, Latino youth, and sexual minority youth. PHD's multifaceted approach for comprehensive suicide prevention and early identification includes implementation of evidence-based and best practice strategies at both the state level, and intensely at the community level. Oregon's proposal mobilizes 28 key partners, including the community mental health programs, public health, hospitals and health centers, schools, addictions and mental health clinicians, universities, juvenile justice, veteran's organizations, Tribes, and the Coordinated Care Organizations in seven counties in the Willamette Valley, Southern Oregon, Central Oregon, Northeastern Oregon, and the Portland area.
|
||||||||||
| SM061759-03 | Oregon Health Authority Directors Office Finacial Services | Salem | OR | $736,000 | 2016 | SM-14-008 | ||||
|
Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention
Project Period: 2014/09/30 - 2019/09/29
Short Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention Cooperative Agreements Oregon Public Health Division's (PHD) Caring Connections Youth Suicide Prevention Initiative capitalizes on a long history of successful public/private collaboration and Oregon's dynamic health care delivery system to reduce the burden of suicide among youth ages 10-24 by implementing comprehensive suicide prevention and early identification best practices. The Initiative targets 468,809 youth aged 10-24, with special focus on at-risk youth, which includes those that live in seven Oregon counties with a higher than national rate of youth suicide, military families, youth involved in the foster care and juvenile justice systems, Native American youth, Latino youth, and sexual minority youth. PHD's multifaceted approach for comprehensive suicide prevention and early identification includes implementation of evidence-based and best practice strategies at both the state level, and intensely at the community level. Oregon's proposal mobilizes 28 key partners, including the community mental health programs, public health, hospitals and health centers, schools, addictions and mental health clinicians, universities, juvenile justice, veteran's organizations, Tribes, and the Coordinated Care Organizations in seven counties in the Willamette Valley, Southern Oregon, Central Oregon, Northeastern Oregon, and the Portland area.
|
||||||||||
| SM061759-04 | Oregon Health Authority Directors Office Finacial Services | Salem | OR | $736,000 | 2017 | SM-14-008 | ||||
|
Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention
Project Period: 2014/09/30 - 2019/09/29
Short Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention Cooperative Agreements Oregon Public Health Division's (PHD) Caring Connections Youth Suicide Prevention Initiative capitalizes on a long history of successful public/private collaboration and Oregon's dynamic health care delivery system to reduce the burden of suicide among youth ages 10-24 by implementing comprehensive suicide prevention and early identification best practices. The Initiative targets 468,809 youth aged 10-24, with special focus on at-risk youth, which includes those that live in seven Oregon counties with a higher than national rate of youth suicide, military families, youth involved in the foster care and juvenile justice systems, Native American youth, Latino youth, and sexual minority youth. PHD's multifaceted approach for comprehensive suicide prevention and early identification includes implementation of evidence-based and best practice strategies at both the state level, and intensely at the community level. Oregon's proposal mobilizes 28 key partners, including the community mental health programs, public health, hospitals and health centers, schools, addictions and mental health clinicians, universities, juvenile justice, veteran's organizations, Tribes, and the Coordinated Care Organizations in seven counties in the Willamette Valley, Southern Oregon, Central Oregon, Northeastern Oregon, and the Portland area.
|
||||||||||
| SM061764-01 | Tennessee State Department of Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services | Nashville | TN | $736,000 | 2014 | SM-14-008 | ||||
|
Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention
Short Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention Cooperative Agreements Tennessee Lives Count (TLC) Connect
|
||||||||||
| SM061764-02 | Tennessee State Department of Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services | Nashville | TN | $736,000 | 2015 | SM-14-008 | ||||
|
Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention
Project Period: 2014/09/30 - 2019/09/29
Short Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention Cooperative Agreements The Tennessee Department of Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services (TDMHSAS) proposes Tennessee Lives Count-Connect (Connect) to reduce suicidal ideation, suicide attempts, and deaths among youth and young adults ages 10-24 by developing and implementing statewide suicide prevention and early intervention strategies, risk screening/assessment, and enhanced follow-up for 6,250 unduplicated (Year 1: 1,000; Years 2-5: 1,250/year). The focus area is the State of Tennessee, comprising urban and rural populations with multiple socioeconomic disparities (e.g., high poverty, unemployment) that contribute to high risk for suicidal ideation/behaviors among youth/young adults. Tennessee's suicide rate for the focus population (8.83) exceeds the national rate (7.57) and 111 young Tennesseans died by suicide in 2010. Among the focus population, 20% experience serious psychological distress; 8% of adolescents ages 12-17 and 11% of 18-25 year olds have had a major depressive episode; and 7% of adolescents, 4% of 18-20 year olds, and 16% of 21-25 year olds have been admitted for substance abuse treatment - all risk factors closely associated with youth suicide. Risk factors are exacerbated among subpopulations (children in state custody, juvenile justice involvement, veterans, and LGBTQ2S youth), with 50% having mental health and/or substance use disorders. Locally, suicide prevention, intervention, and follow-up resources are sparse and disjointed, and accessibility creates key service gaps for youth/young adults and their families. TDMHSAS will partner with Tennessee Suicide Prevention Network and Centerstone of Tennessee to provide suicide prevention and postvention trainings for gatekeepers (schools, law enforcement, foster care, etc.) and training for primary/behavioral health professionals.
|
||||||||||
| SM061764-03 | Tennessee State Department of Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services | Nashville | TN | $736,000 | 2016 | SM-14-008 | ||||
|
Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention
Project Period: 2014/09/30 - 2019/09/29
Short Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention Cooperative Agreements The Tennessee Department of Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services (TDMHSAS) proposes Tennessee Lives Count-Connect (Connect) to reduce suicidal ideation, suicide attempts, and deaths among youth and young adults ages 10-24 by developing and implementing statewide suicide prevention and early intervention strategies, risk screening/assessment, and enhanced follow-up for 6,250 unduplicated (Year 1: 1,000; Years 2-5: 1,250/year). The focus area is the State of Tennessee, comprising urban and rural populations with multiple socioeconomic disparities (e.g., high poverty, unemployment) that contribute to high risk for suicidal ideation/behaviors among youth/young adults. Tennessee's suicide rate for the focus population (8.83) exceeds the national rate (7.57) and 111 young Tennesseans died by suicide in 2010. Among the focus population, 20% experience serious psychological distress; 8% of adolescents ages 12-17 and 11% of 18-25 year olds have had a major depressive episode; and 7% of adolescents, 4% of 18-20 year olds, and 16% of 21-25 year olds have been admitted for substance abuse treatment - all risk factors closely associated with youth suicide. Risk factors are exacerbated among subpopulations (children in state custody, juvenile justice involvement, veterans, and LGBTQ2S youth), with 50% having mental health and/or substance use disorders. Locally, suicide prevention, intervention, and follow-up resources are sparse and disjointed, and accessibility creates key service gaps for youth/young adults and their families. TDMHSAS will partner with Tennessee Suicide Prevention Network and Centerstone of Tennessee to provide suicide prevention and postvention trainings for gatekeepers (schools, law enforcement, foster care, etc.) and training for primary/behavioral health professionals.
|
||||||||||
| SM061764-04 | Tennessee State Department of Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services | Nashville | TN | $510,163 | 2017 | SM-14-008 | ||||
|
Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention
Project Period: 2014/09/30 - 2019/09/29
Short Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention Cooperative Agreements The Tennessee Department of Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services (TDMHSAS) proposes Tennessee Lives Count-Connect (Connect) to reduce suicidal ideation, suicide attempts, and deaths among youth and young adults ages 10-24 by developing and implementing statewide suicide prevention and early intervention strategies, risk screening/assessment, and enhanced follow-up for 6,250 unduplicated (Year 1: 1,000; Years 2-5: 1,250/year). The focus area is the State of Tennessee, comprising urban and rural populations with multiple socioeconomic disparities (e.g., high poverty, unemployment) that contribute to high risk for suicidal ideation/behaviors among youth/young adults. Tennessee's suicide rate for the focus population (8.83) exceeds the national rate (7.57) and 111 young Tennesseans died by suicide in 2010. Among the focus population, 20% experience serious psychological distress; 8% of adolescents ages 12-17 and 11% of 18-25 year olds have had a major depressive episode; and 7% of adolescents, 4% of 18-20 year olds, and 16% of 21-25 year olds have been admitted for substance abuse treatment - all risk factors closely associated with youth suicide. Risk factors are exacerbated among subpopulations (children in state custody, juvenile justice involvement, veterans, and LGBTQ2S youth), with 50% having mental health and/or substance use disorders. Locally, suicide prevention, intervention, and follow-up resources are sparse and disjointed, and accessibility creates key service gaps for youth/young adults and their families. TDMHSAS will partner with Tennessee Suicide Prevention Network and Centerstone of Tennessee to provide suicide prevention and postvention trainings for gatekeepers (schools, law enforcement, foster care, etc.) and training for primary/behavioral health professionals.
|
||||||||||
| SM061767-01 | Michigan State Dept of Community Health | Lansing | MI | $736,000 | 2014 | SM-14-008 | ||||
|
Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention
Short Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention Cooperative Agreements Transforming Youth Suicide Prevention in Michigan-2
|
||||||||||
| SM061767-02 | Michigan State Dept of Community Health | Lansing | MI | $736,000 | 2015 | SM-14-008 | ||||
|
Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention
Project Period: 2014/09/30 - 2019/09/29
Short Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention Cooperative Agreements Goal I: Generate state-level systems change that advances and sustains youth and young adult suicide prevention as a core priority in statewide systems and ensures that these systems employ best practices for suicide prevention. Goal2: Develop urban and rural "Youth Suicide Prevention (YSP) Model Communities" as replicable prototypes that move beyond community awareness to implementation of sustainable best practice approaches that span the continuum of suicide prevention and intervention. Goal 3: Ensure a well-educated cadre of gatekeepers and clinical service providers within Michigan's youth serving workforce that consistently uses evidence-based approaches for suicide prevention. Goal 4: Support local community development across the state around youth suicide prevention. Goal 5: Develop a comprehensive statewide surveillance system for non-lethal suicide behaviors and deaths by suicide in order to characterize youth and young adult suicide in Michigan, identify risk factors and potential points of early intervention, track trends over time, ascertain potential clusters, and contribute to the evaluation of program impacts.
|
||||||||||
| SM061767-03 | Michigan State Dept of Community Health | Lansing | MI | $736,000 | 2016 | SM-14-008 | ||||
|
Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention
Project Period: 2014/09/30 - 2019/09/29
Short Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention Cooperative Agreements Goal I: Generate state-level systems change that advances and sustains youth and young adult suicide prevention as a core priority in statewide systems and ensures that these systems employ best practices for suicide prevention. Goal2: Develop urban and rural "Youth Suicide Prevention (YSP) Model Communities" as replicable prototypes that move beyond community awareness to implementation of sustainable best practice approaches that span the continuum of suicide prevention and intervention. Goal 3: Ensure a well-educated cadre of gatekeepers and clinical service providers within Michigan's youth serving workforce that consistently uses evidence-based approaches for suicide prevention. Goal 4: Support local community development across the state around youth suicide prevention. Goal 5: Develop a comprehensive statewide surveillance system for non-lethal suicide behaviors and deaths by suicide in order to characterize youth and young adult suicide in Michigan, identify risk factors and potential points of early intervention, track trends over time, ascertain potential clusters, and contribute to the evaluation of program impacts.
|
||||||||||
| SM061767-04 | Michigan State Dept of Community Health | Lansing | MI | $736,000 | 2017 | SM-14-008 | ||||
|
Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention
Project Period: 2014/09/30 - 2019/09/29
Short Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention Cooperative Agreements Goal I: Generate state-level systems change that advances and sustains youth and young adult suicide prevention as a core priority in statewide systems and ensures that these systems employ best practices for suicide prevention. Goal2: Develop urban and rural "Youth Suicide Prevention (YSP) Model Communities" as replicable prototypes that move beyond community awareness to implementation of sustainable best practice approaches that span the continuum of suicide prevention and intervention. Goal 3: Ensure a well-educated cadre of gatekeepers and clinical service providers within Michigan's youth serving workforce that consistently uses evidence-based approaches for suicide prevention. Goal 4: Support local community development across the state around youth suicide prevention. Goal 5: Develop a comprehensive statewide surveillance system for non-lethal suicide behaviors and deaths by suicide in order to characterize youth and young adult suicide in Michigan, identify risk factors and potential points of early intervention, track trends over time, ascertain potential clusters, and contribute to the evaluation of program impacts.
|
||||||||||
| SM061768-01 | Community Health Network Foundation, Inc | Indianapolis | IN | $735,962 | 2014 | SM-14-008 | ||||
|
Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention
Short Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention Cooperative Agreements Zero Suicides for Indiana Youth
|
||||||||||
| SM061768-02 | Community Health Network Foundation, Inc | Indianapolis | IN | $735,927 | 2015 | SM-14-008 | ||||
|
Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention
Project Period: 2014/09/30 - 2019/09/29
Short Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention Cooperative Agreements The Indiana Division of Mental Health and Addiction designated Community Health Network as the lead entity because it has the most comprehensive youth services in the state and it was already working to become the 1st large health system in the country to fully implement the Zero Suicides model. The Zero Suicides for Indiana Youth project will leverage the best practice toolkit developed by the National Action Alliance for Suicide Prevention. Youth, families, survivors, youth serving organizations, policy makers, emergency departments, medical-surgical units, primary care, general medical providers, behavioral health entities and crisis services will: Promote systems-level change among youth-serving agencies and health care providers. Improve the preparedness of youth-serving organizations (schools, foster care systems and juvenile justice programs) to identify risk and provide timely intervention and referrals. Improve the preparedness of clinical service providers (primary and behavioral) to assess, manage, and treat youth at risk for suicide and provide timely intervention and referrals, while adopting an institution-wide cultural adoption of the Zero Suicides in Healthcare model. Improve access to timely care for youth in suicidal crisis. Strengthen care coordination and continuity of care for youth at risk of suicide. Evaluate the impact of the project, disseminate lessons learned, and replicate the model.
|
||||||||||
| SM061768-03 | Community Health Network Foundation, Inc | Indianapolis | IN | $735,926 | 2016 | SM-14-008 | ||||
|
Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention
Project Period: 2014/09/30 - 2019/09/29
Short Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention Cooperative Agreements The Indiana Division of Mental Health and Addiction designated Community Health Network as the lead entity because it has the most comprehensive youth services in the state and it was already working to become the 1st large health system in the country to fully implement the Zero Suicides model. The Zero Suicides for Indiana Youth project will leverage the best practice toolkit developed by the National Action Alliance for Suicide Prevention. Youth, families, survivors, youth serving organizations, policy makers, emergency departments, medical-surgical units, primary care, general medical providers, behavioral health entities and crisis services will: Promote systems-level change among youth-serving agencies and health care providers. Improve the preparedness of youth-serving organizations (schools, foster care systems and juvenile justice programs) to identify risk and provide timely intervention and referrals. Improve the preparedness of clinical service providers (primary and behavioral) to assess, manage, and treat youth at risk for suicide and provide timely intervention and referrals, while adopting an institution-wide cultural adoption of the Zero Suicides in Healthcare model. Improve access to timely care for youth in suicidal crisis. Strengthen care coordination and continuity of care for youth at risk of suicide. Evaluate the impact of the project, disseminate lessons learned, and replicate the model.
|
||||||||||
| SM061768-04 | Community Health Network Foundation, Inc | Indianapolis | IN | $707,882 | 2017 | SM-14-008 | ||||
|
Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention
Project Period: 2014/09/30 - 2019/09/29
Short Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention Cooperative Agreements The Indiana Division of Mental Health and Addiction designated Community Health Network as the lead entity because it has the most comprehensive youth services in the state and it was already working to become the 1st large health system in the country to fully implement the Zero Suicides model. The Zero Suicides for Indiana Youth project will leverage the best practice toolkit developed by the National Action Alliance for Suicide Prevention. Youth, families, survivors, youth serving organizations, policy makers, emergency departments, medical-surgical units, primary care, general medical providers, behavioral health entities and crisis services will: Promote systems-level change among youth-serving agencies and health care providers. Improve the preparedness of youth-serving organizations (schools, foster care systems and juvenile justice programs) to identify risk and provide timely intervention and referrals. Improve the preparedness of clinical service providers (primary and behavioral) to assess, manage, and treat youth at risk for suicide and provide timely intervention and referrals, while adopting an institution-wide cultural adoption of the Zero Suicides in Healthcare model. Improve access to timely care for youth in suicidal crisis. Strengthen care coordination and continuity of care for youth at risk of suicide. Evaluate the impact of the project, disseminate lessons learned, and replicate the model.
|
||||||||||
| SM061769-01 | Southcentral Foundation | Anchorage | AK | $736,000 | 2014 | SM-14-008 | ||||
|
Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention
Short Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention Cooperative Agreements Preserving the Future
|
||||||||||
| SM061769-02 | Southcentral Foundation | Anchorage | AK | $736,000 | 2015 | SM-14-008 | ||||
|
Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention
Project Period: 2014/09/30 - 2019/09/29
Short Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention Cooperative Agreements The major outcomes of the project include: Immediately increase the number of AI/AN youth identified as at risk for suicide; increase the number of youth referred for services; increase the number of youth who receive services; increase the number of youth-serving individuals trained to identify, refer, assess, manage, and treat youth; systems change; and further promote the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline and implement the National Suicide Prevention Strategy. Goal 1: To increase the capacity, effectiveness, and efficiency of suicide prevention services for Alaska Native/American Indian youth age 10-24 who reside within the area served by the Southcentral Foundation. Goal 2: To reduce the prevalence suicide and suicidal behaviors among at risk youth populations (10-24) in the area served by Southcentral Foundation. Goal 3: To promote systems change at the organizational / institutional level to embrace suicide prevention as a core strategy.
|
||||||||||
| SM061769-03 | Southcentral Foundation | Anchorage | AK | $736,000 | 2016 | SM-14-008 | ||||
|
Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention
Project Period: 2014/09/30 - 2019/09/29
Short Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention Cooperative Agreements The major outcomes of the project include: Immediately increase the number of AI/AN youth identified as at risk for suicide; increase the number of youth referred for services; increase the number of youth who receive services; increase the number of youth-serving individuals trained to identify, refer, assess, manage, and treat youth; systems change; and further promote the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline and implement the National Suicide Prevention Strategy. Goal 1: To increase the capacity, effectiveness, and efficiency of suicide prevention services for Alaska Native/American Indian youth age 10-24 who reside within the area served by the Southcentral Foundation. Goal 2: To reduce the prevalence suicide and suicidal behaviors among at risk youth populations (10-24) in the area served by Southcentral Foundation. Goal 3: To promote systems change at the organizational / institutional level to embrace suicide prevention as a core strategy.
|
||||||||||
| SM061723-04 | National Board for Certified Counselors, Inc. | Greensboro | NC | $532,200 | 2017 | SM-14-015 | ||||
|
Title: NITT-MFP-Y
Project Period: 2014/09/30 - 2018/09/29
Short Title: NITT-MFP-Y NBCC MFP-Y Program aims to expand access to culturally and clinically appropriate behavioral health care for underserved youth. The NBCC MFP-Y will award 40 master's level fellowships per year, and provide additional training to these and other professional counselors on culturally competent treatment for youth. These strategies will reduce health disparities by increasing the pool of culturally competent professional counselors who are available to underserved children, adolescent, and transitioning youth populations in public and private nonprofit sectors.
|
||||||||||
| SM061724-01 | Council on Social Work Education | Alexandria | VA | $532,200 | 2014 | SM-14-015 | ||||
|
Title: NITT-MFP-Y
Short Title: NITT-MFP-Y Council on Social Work Education NITT: MFP-Y
|
||||||||||
| SM061724-02 | Council on Social Work Education | Alexandria | VA | $586,055 | 2015 | SM-14-015 | ||||
|
Title: NITT-MFP-Y
Project Period: 2014/09/30 - 2018/09/29
Short Title: NITT-MFP-Y The Council on Social Work Education's MFP-Y Program is designed to help reduce the health disparities and improve behavioral health care outcomes for racially and ethnically diverse populations by increasing the number of culturally competent master's level behavioral health professionals serving children, adolescents, and populations in transition to adulthood (aged 16-25). The Program seeks to accomplish this goal by providing a monetary stipend, specialized training, mentoring, and other supports to racial and ethnic minority master's level social work students.
|
||||||||||
| SM061724-03 | Council on Social Work Education | Alexandria | VA | $532,200 | 2016 | SM-14-015 | ||||
|
Title: NITT-MFP-Y
Project Period: 2014/09/30 - 2018/09/29
Short Title: NITT-MFP-Y The Council on Social Work Education's MFP-Y Program is designed to help reduce the health disparities and improve behavioral health care outcomes for racially and ethnically diverse populations by increasing the number of culturally competent master's level behavioral health professionals serving children, adolescents, and populations in transition to adulthood (aged 16-25). The Program seeks to accomplish this goal by providing a monetary stipend, specialized training, mentoring, and other supports to racial and ethnic minority master's level social work students.
|
||||||||||
| SM061724-04 | Council on Social Work Education | Alexandria | VA | $524,296 | 2017 | SM-14-015 | ||||
|
Title: NITT-MFP-Y
Project Period: 2014/09/30 - 2018/09/29
Short Title: NITT-MFP-Y The Council on Social Work Education's MFP-Y Program is designed to help reduce the health disparities and improve behavioral health care outcomes for racially and ethnically diverse populations by increasing the number of culturally competent master's level behavioral health professionals serving children, adolescents, and populations in transition to adulthood (aged 16-25). The Program seeks to accomplish this goal by providing a monetary stipend, specialized training, mentoring, and other supports to racial and ethnic minority master's level social work students.
|
||||||||||
| SM061725-01 | American Nurses Association | Silver Spring | MD | $532,200 | 2014 | SM-14-015 | ||||
|
Title: NITT-MFP-Y
Short Title: NITT-MFP-Y Now Is The Time: Minority Fellowship Program-Youth
|
||||||||||
| SM061725-02 | American Nurses Association | Silver Spring | MD | $586,055 | 2015 | SM-14-015 | ||||
|
Title: NITT-MFP-Y
Project Period: 2014/09/30 - 2018/09/29
Short Title: NITT-MFP-Y The American Nurses Association MFP-Y Program is designed to reduce health disparities and improve behavioral health care outcomes for racially and ethnically diverse populations by increasing the number of culturally competent master's level behavioral health professionals. Thirty master's level nurses will be recruited into the program during year one. The primary focus will be on recruiting Alaska Native, Native Hawaiian, and Pacific Islander nurses. Other minority groups, American Indian, Afrian American, Asian American, and Hispanic will also be vigorously recruited.
|
||||||||||
Short Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention Cooperative Agreements
Short Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention Cooperative Agreements
Short Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention Cooperative Agreements
Short Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention Cooperative Agreements
Short Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention Cooperative Agreements
Short Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention Cooperative Agreements
Short Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention Cooperative Agreements
Short Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention Cooperative Agreements
Short Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention Cooperative Agreements
Short Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention Cooperative Agreements
Short Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention Cooperative Agreements
Short Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention Cooperative Agreements
Short Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention Cooperative Agreements
Short Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention Cooperative Agreements
Short Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention Cooperative Agreements
Short Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention Cooperative Agreements
Short Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention Cooperative Agreements
Short Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention Cooperative Agreements
Short Title: NITT-MFP-Y
Short Title: NITT-MFP-Y
Short Title: NITT-MFP-Y
Short Title: NITT-MFP-Y
Short Title: NITT-MFP-Y
Short Title: NITT-MFP-Y
Short Title: NITT-MFP-Y
Displaying 36576 - 36600 out of 39293
This site provides information on grants issued by SAMHSA for mental health and substance abuse services by State. The summaries include Drug Free Communities grants issued by SAMHSA on behalf of the Office of National Drug Control Policy.
Please ensure that you select filters exclusively from the options provided under 'Award Fiscal Year' or 'Funding Type', and subsequently choose a State to proceed with viewing the displayed data.
The dollar amounts for the grants should not be used for SAMHSA budgetary purposes.
Funding Summary
Non-Discretionary Funding
| Substance Use Prevention and Treatment Block Grant | $0 |
|---|---|
| Community Mental Health Services Block Grant | $0 |
| Projects for Assistance in Transition from Homelessness (PATH) | $0 |
| Protection and Advocacy for Individuals with Mental Illness (PAIMI) | $0 |
| Subtotal of Non-Discretionary Funding | $0 |
Discretionary Funding
| Mental Health | $0 |
|---|---|
| Substance Use Prevention | $0 |
| Substance Use Treatment | $0 |
| Flex Grants | $0 |
| Subtotal of Discretionary Funding | $0 |
Total Funding
| Total Mental Health Funds | $0 |
|---|---|
| Total Substance Use Funds | $0 |
| Flex Grant Funds | $0 |
| Total Funds | $0 |