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Displaying 276 - 300 out of 413
| Award Number | Organization | City | State | Amount | Award FY | NOFO | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SM061296-05 | Huron Potawatomi, Inc. | Fulton | MI | $582,155 | 2016 | |||||
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Title: Project Launch
Project Period: 2012/09/30 - 2017/09/29
The Gun Lake, Nottawaseppi Huron and Pokagon Bands-all federally recognized Potawatomi tribes located in their ancestral homeland in southwest Michigan and/or north central Indiana--have formed a Consortium to promote the wellbeing of Potawatomi children from birth to 8 years living in its service area by addressing the physical, social, emotional, cognitive, behavioral and cultural aspects of their development using evidence-based practices. The Consortium's Project will build on existing tribal programs, especially those provided through the four Tribal Health Clinics and three Tribal Head Start Programs that already reach the targeted children and families. A variety of evidence-based practices will be implemented, including Incredible Years and Positive Indian Parenting. Various trainings will increase skill levels of a host of caregivers and providers, including parents, foster care and child care providers, Head Start staff, medical providers, and social workers. Trainings will focus on screening and assessment, mental health consultation, enhanced home visitation, family strengthening, parent skills training and cultural competency.
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| SM061297-03 | Florida State Department of Children and Families | Tallahassee | FL | $825,323 | 2014 | |||||
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Title: Project Launch
Project Period: 2012/09/30 - 2017/09/29
The purpose of Florida's Project LAUNCH is to promote the wellness of young children from birth to 8 years by addressing the gaps in existing prevention and targeted intervention services in 5 high need zip codes in Pinellas County and to strengthen the partnership between state and local agencies serving young children and their families. Florida's Project LAUNCH is a partnership between the Department of Children and Families, Department of Health, and Pinellas County, Florida. The project is aimed at preventing youth substance abuse and mental, emotional, and behavioral disorders by improving family function and the quality of the parent-child relationship through parent training and skill building; and selective interventions for young children.
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| SM061297-04 | Florida State Department of Children and Families | Tallahassee | FL | $829,162 | 2015 | |||||
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Title: Project Launch
Project Period: 2012/09/30 - 2017/09/29
The purpose of Florida's Project LAUNCH is to promote the wellness of young children from birth to 8 years by addressing the gaps in existing prevention and targeted intervention services in 5 high need zip codes in Pinellas County and to strengthen the partnership between state and local agencies serving young children and their families. Florida's Project LAUNCH is a partnership between the Department of Children and Families, Department of Health, and Pinellas County, Florida. The project is aimed at preventing youth substance abuse and mental, emotional, and behavioral disorders by improving family function and the quality of the parent-child relationship through parent training and skill building; and selective interventions for young children.
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| SM061297-05 | Florida State Department of Children and Families | Tallahassee | FL | $829,116 | 2016 | |||||
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Title: Project Launch
Project Period: 2012/09/30 - 2018/09/29
The purpose of Florida's Project LAUNCH is to promote the wellness of young children from birth to 8 years by addressing the gaps in existing prevention and targeted intervention services in 5 high need zip codes in Pinellas County and to strengthen the partnership between state and local agencies serving young children and their families. Florida's Project LAUNCH is a partnership between the Department of Children and Families, Department of Health, and Pinellas County, Florida. The project is aimed at preventing youth substance abuse and mental, emotional, and behavioral disorders by improving family function and the quality of the parent-child relationship through parent training and skill building; and selective interventions for young children.
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| SM061298-02 | Standing Rock Sioux Tribe | Fort Yates | ND | $800,000 | 2014 | |||||
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Title: Project Launch
Project Period: 2013/09/01 - 2018/08/31
The purpose of the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe Project LAUNCH initiative will be to expand and enhance their local system of care by implementing a variety of evidence based, promising practices, culture based and effective practices for early childhood and Native American populations, to increase resiliency and positive outcomes for young children, birth - 8 years old, and their families. Further, the SR Project LAUNCH believes the best conceptual framework to meet this challenge is that which is articulated and set forth by Bright Futures in Practice Mental Health Practice Guide - that the foundation for mentally healthy children and adolescents begins in their formative years and nurtured through positive, loving, stable, and trusting relationships from family, friends, community. This conceptual framework is congruent with the Lakota cultural belief of Mitakuye Oyasin, "We are all related" and the indigenous concept that wellness is a state of balance of mind, body, spirit and emotion.
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| SM061298-03 | Standing Rock Sioux Tribe | Fort Yates | ND | $800,000 | 2015 | |||||
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Title: Project Launch
Project Period: 2013/09/01 - 2018/08/31
The purpose of the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe Project LAUNCH initiative will be to expand and enhance their local system of care by implementing a variety of evidence based, promising practices, culture based and effective practices for early childhood and Native American populations, to increase resiliency and positive outcomes for young children, birth - 8 years old, and their families. Further, the SR Project LAUNCH believes the best conceptual framework to meet this challenge is that which is articulated and set forth by Bright Futures in Practice Mental Health Practice Guide - that the foundation for mentally healthy children and adolescents begins in their formative years and nurtured through positive, loving, stable, and trusting relationships from family, friends, community. This conceptual framework is congruent with the Lakota cultural belief of Mitakuye Oyasin, "We are all related" and the indigenous concept that wellness is a state of balance of mind, body, spirit and emotion.
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| SM061298-04 | Standing Rock Sioux Tribe | Fort Yates | ND | $800,000 | 2016 | |||||
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Title: Project Launch
Project Period: 2013/09/01 - 2018/08/31
The purpose of the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe Project LAUNCH initiative will be to expand and enhance their local system of care by implementing a variety of evidence based, promising practices, culture based and effective practices for early childhood and Native American populations, to increase resiliency and positive outcomes for young children, birth - 8 years old, and their families. Further, the SR Project LAUNCH believes the best conceptual framework to meet this challenge is that which is articulated and set forth by Bright Futures in Practice Mental Health Practice Guide - that the foundation for mentally healthy children and adolescents begins in their formative years and nurtured through positive, loving, stable, and trusting relationships from family, friends, community. This conceptual framework is congruent with the Lakota cultural belief of Mitakuye Oyasin, "We are all related" and the indigenous concept that wellness is a state of balance of mind, body, spirit and emotion.
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| SM061298-05 | Standing Rock Sioux Tribe | Fort Yates | ND | $800,000 | 2017 | |||||
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Title: Project Launch
Project Period: 2013/09/01 - 2018/08/31
The purpose of the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe Project LAUNCH initiative will be to expand and enhance their local system of care by implementing a variety of evidence based, promising practices, culture based and effective practices for early childhood and Native American populations, to increase resiliency and positive outcomes for young children, birth - 8 years old, and their families. Further, the SR Project LAUNCH believes the best conceptual framework to meet this challenge is that which is articulated and set forth by Bright Futures in Practice Mental Health Practice Guide - that the foundation for mentally healthy children and adolescents begins in their formative years and nurtured through positive, loving, stable, and trusting relationships from family, friends, community. This conceptual framework is congruent with the Lakota cultural belief of Mitakuye Oyasin, "We are all related" and the indigenous concept that wellness is a state of balance of mind, body, spirit and emotion.
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| SM061299-03 | Missouri State Dept of Mental Health | Jefferson City | MO | $839,650 | 2014 | |||||
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Title: Project Launch
Project Period: 2012/09/30 - 2017/09/29
Through the Missouri Project LAUNCH, the Missouri Department of Mental Health (MODMH), in partnership with the Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services (MODHSS), other state agency and community partners, and families, will come together in a comprehensive system approach to promote the healthy development of the state's youngest citizens. The project's purpose is to create a coordinated system to support children, age 0-8 to thrive in safe, supportive environments and enter school ready to learn and able to succeed. Two inner city areas of St. Louis City (ZIP Codes 63106 and 63107) have been selected as a local pilot to capitalize on the city's existing strong focus on the young child and rich cultural diversity. The population of focus is children 0-8 and pregnant women living and/or receiving services in the selected ZIP Codes. Special subpopulations with access or service use disparities include: military families and children of parents with mental illness, substance abuse or who are incarcerated. It is estimated that 1,335 young children and their families will be served throughout the life of the project with 55 served in year one, 160 in year two, 320 in year three and 400 annually in years four and five. The applicant, the MODMH, as the state mental health authority, will provide leadership for the project. The Missouri Institute of Mental Health (MIMH) will oversee the evaluation efforts.
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| SM061299-04 | Missouri State Dept of Mental Health | Jefferson City | MO | $839,650 | 2015 | |||||
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Title: Project Launch
Project Period: 2012/09/30 - 2017/09/29
Through the Missouri Project LAUNCH, the Missouri Department of Mental Health (MODMH), in partnership with the Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services (MODHSS), other state agency and community partners, and families, will come together in a comprehensive system approach to promote the healthy development of the state's youngest citizens. The project's purpose is to create a coordinated system to support children, age 0-8 to thrive in safe, supportive environments and enter school ready to learn and able to succeed. Two inner city areas of St. Louis City (ZIP Codes 63106 and 63107) have been selected as a local pilot to capitalize on the city's existing strong focus on the young child and rich cultural diversity. The population of focus is children 0-8 and pregnant women living and/or receiving services in the selected ZIP Codes. Special subpopulations with access or service use disparities include: military families and children of parents with mental illness, substance abuse or who are incarcerated. It is estimated that 1,335 young children and their families will be served throughout the life of the project with 55 served in year one, 160 in year two, 320 in year three and 400 annually in years four and five. The applicant, the MODMH, as the state mental health authority, will provide leadership for the project. The Missouri Institute of Mental Health (MIMH) will oversee the evaluation efforts.
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| SM061299-05 | Missouri State Dept of Mental Health | Jefferson City | MO | $839,650 | 2016 | |||||
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Title: Project Launch
Project Period: 2012/09/30 - 2018/09/29
Through the Missouri Project LAUNCH, the Missouri Department of Mental Health (MODMH), in partnership with the Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services (MODHSS), other state agency and community partners, and families, will come together in a comprehensive system approach to promote the healthy development of the state's youngest citizens. The project's purpose is to create a coordinated system to support children, age 0-8 to thrive in safe, supportive environments and enter school ready to learn and able to succeed. Two inner city areas of St. Louis City (ZIP Codes 63106 and 63107) have been selected as a local pilot to capitalize on the city's existing strong focus on the young child and rich cultural diversity. The population of focus is children 0-8 and pregnant women living and/or receiving services in the selected ZIP Codes. Special subpopulations with access or service use disparities include: military families and children of parents with mental illness, substance abuse or who are incarcerated. It is estimated that 1,335 young children and their families will be served throughout the life of the project with 55 served in year one, 160 in year two, 320 in year three and 400 annually in years four and five. The applicant, the MODMH, as the state mental health authority, will provide leadership for the project. The Missouri Institute of Mental Health (MIMH) will oversee the evaluation efforts.
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| SM061300-03 | Muscogee Creek Nation | Okmulgee | OK | $839,650 | 2014 | |||||
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Title: Project Launch
Project Period: 2012/09/30 - 2017/09/29
The Muscogee (Creek) Nation seeks to forge a comprehensive and integrated system of care to advance the delivery of those services, practices, and cultural experiences that promote the wellness of young American Indian children and their families within selected areas of the 11- county area of northeastern Oklahoma served by the tribe. This shared vision shall both expand and enhance current efforts and shall provide the foundation for delivering and sustaining effective, efficient, and culturally appropriate services. The Creek Nation Project LAUNCH project shall identify and define the need or services, the gaps between needed and available services, barriers to services, and other problems related to the need to implement wellness activities and services for American Indian children from birth to eight years of age. The project will serve 1,500 American Indian children over the course of the project. The target population is rural non-reservation American Indian children. Goal 1: To structure an endeavor that will ultimately serve to advance the delivery of those services, practices, and cultural experiences that assure the wellness of young American Indian children and their families in six Creek Nation counties. Goal 2: To increase child wellness, promote responsible parenting, and ensure that children are thriving in safe, supportive, and healthy environments within Creek Nation.
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| SM061300-04 | Muscogee Creek Nation | Okmulgee | OK | $839,650 | 2015 | |||||
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Title: Project Launch
Project Period: 2012/09/30 - 2017/09/29
The Muscogee (Creek) Nation seeks to forge a comprehensive and integrated system of care to advance the delivery of those services, practices, and cultural experiences that promote the wellness of young American Indian children and their families within selected areas of the 11- county area of northeastern Oklahoma served by the tribe. This shared vision shall both expand and enhance current efforts and shall provide the foundation for delivering and sustaining effective, efficient, and culturally appropriate services. The Creek Nation Project LAUNCH project shall identify and define the need or services, the gaps between needed and available services, barriers to services, and other problems related to the need to implement wellness activities and services for American Indian children from birth to eight years of age. The project will serve 1,500 American Indian children over the course of the project. The target population is rural non-reservation American Indian children. Goal 1: To structure an endeavor that will ultimately serve to advance the delivery of those services, practices, and cultural experiences that assure the wellness of young American Indian children and their families in six Creek Nation counties. Goal 2: To increase child wellness, promote responsible parenting, and ensure that children are thriving in safe, supportive, and healthy environments within Creek Nation.
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| SM061300-05 | Muscogee Creek Nation | Okmulgee | OK | $839,650 | 2016 | |||||
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Title: Project Launch
Project Period: 2012/09/30 - 2018/09/29
The Muscogee (Creek) Nation seeks to forge a comprehensive and integrated system of care to advance the delivery of those services, practices, and cultural experiences that promote the wellness of young American Indian children and their families within selected areas of the 11- county area of northeastern Oklahoma served by the tribe. This shared vision shall both expand and enhance current efforts and shall provide the foundation for delivering and sustaining effective, efficient, and culturally appropriate services. The Creek Nation Project LAUNCH project shall identify and define the need or services, the gaps between needed and available services, barriers to services, and other problems related to the need to implement wellness activities and services for American Indian children from birth to eight years of age. The project will serve 1,500 American Indian children over the course of the project. The target population is rural non-reservation American Indian children. Goal 1: To structure an endeavor that will ultimately serve to advance the delivery of those services, practices, and cultural experiences that assure the wellness of young American Indian children and their families in six Creek Nation counties. Goal 2: To increase child wellness, promote responsible parenting, and ensure that children are thriving in safe, supportive, and healthy environments within Creek Nation.
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| SM061301-03 | Cherokee Nation | Tahlequah | OK | $839,650 | 2014 | |||||
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Title: Project Launch
Project Period: 2012/09/30 - 2017/09/29
The Cherokee Nation, acting through the tribal Department of Behavioral Health Services, seeks to forge a comprehensive and integrated system of care to advance the delivery of those services, practices, and cultural experiences that promote the wellness of young American Indian children and their families within selected areas (four counties) of the 14-county area of northeastern Oklahoma served by the tribe. This shared vision shall both expand and enhance current efforts and shall provide the foundation for delivering and sustaining effective, efficient, and culturally appropriate services. The Cherokee Nation Finding Hope project shall identify and define the need for services, the gaps between needed and available services, barriers to services, and other problems related to the need to implement wellness activities and services for American Indian children from birth to eight years of age. The project will serve 1,600 American Indian children over the course of the project. The target population is rural non-reservation American Indian children. Goal 1: Improve and expand the existing infrastructure for child wellness services for young American Indian children and their families in four Cherokee Nation counties. Goal 2: Develop a continuum of holistic services.
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| SM061301-04 | Cherokee Nation | Tahlequah | OK | $839,650 | 2015 | |||||
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Title: Project Launch
Project Period: 2012/09/30 - 2017/09/29
The Cherokee Nation, acting through the tribal Department of Behavioral Health Services, seeks to forge a comprehensive and integrated system of care to advance the delivery of those services, practices, and cultural experiences that promote the wellness of young American Indian children and their families within selected areas (four counties) of the 14-county area of northeastern Oklahoma served by the tribe. This shared vision shall both expand and enhance current efforts and shall provide the foundation for delivering and sustaining effective, efficient, and culturally appropriate services. The Cherokee Nation Finding Hope project shall identify and define the need for services, the gaps between needed and available services, barriers to services, and other problems related to the need to implement wellness activities and services for American Indian children from birth to eight years of age. The project will serve 1,600 American Indian children over the course of the project. The target population is rural non-reservation American Indian children. Goal 1: Improve and expand the existing infrastructure for child wellness services for young American Indian children and their families in four Cherokee Nation counties. Goal 2: Develop a continuum of holistic services.
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| SM061301-05 | Cherokee Nation | Tahlequah | OK | $839,650 | 2016 | |||||
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Title: Project Launch
Project Period: 2012/09/30 - 2018/09/29
The Cherokee Nation, acting through the tribal Department of Behavioral Health Services, seeks to forge a comprehensive and integrated system of care to advance the delivery of those services, practices, and cultural experiences that promote the wellness of young American Indian children and their families within selected areas (four counties) of the 14-county area of northeastern Oklahoma served by the tribe. This shared vision shall both expand and enhance current efforts and shall provide the foundation for delivering and sustaining effective, efficient, and culturally appropriate services. The Cherokee Nation Finding Hope project shall identify and define the need for services, the gaps between needed and available services, barriers to services, and other problems related to the need to implement wellness activities and services for American Indian children from birth to eight years of age. The project will serve 1,600 American Indian children over the course of the project. The target population is rural non-reservation American Indian children. Goal 1: Improve and expand the existing infrastructure for child wellness services for young American Indian children and their families in four Cherokee Nation counties. Goal 2: Develop a continuum of holistic services.
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| SM061302-03 | Pueblo of Laguna | Laguna | NM | $839,650 | 2014 | |||||
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Title: Project Launch
Project Period: 2012/09/30 - 2017/09/29
The Pueblo of Laguna's Project LAUNCH grant will develop a common agenda and vision that will drive the development of a tribal community network for the coordination of key child-serving systems serving Laguna children prenatal through 8 years of age and their families. Improved coordination of services will result in improved access to and availability of evidence-based prevention and wellness promotion practices that match with traditional tribal practices. Population to be served: During the 1st year of the grant, new mental health interventions will be used with 420 Native American children prenatal to age eight and 840 of their parents living on Pueblo of Laguna lands. 660 children prenatal to 8 years and 1320 of their parents will be served throughout the lifetime of the grant (total 1980 unduplicated participants).
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| SM061260-04 | University of Illinois at Chicago | Chicago | IL | $1,000,000 | 2015 | |||||
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Title: NCTSI CAT II
Project Period: 2012/09/30 - 2017/09/29
The Urban Youth Trauma Center's Treatment Collaborative for Trauma and Violence (TCTV) aims to promote and disseminate comprehensive, integrated, and coordinated care for multiproblem, at-risk youth affected by trauma and violence involved with delinquency or the justice system, strengthening both service system connectivity and community-based best practices for trauma-informed intervention and prevention, particularly among court judges, juvenile justice probation officers, and law enforcement staff. TCTV goals are to 1) increase awareness about the needs of traumatized youth affected by community and domestic violence and involved with court, juvenile justice, and law enforcement systems while emphasizing the enhancement of community resources and service system collaboration; 2) disseminate trauma-informed treatment approaches designed specifically for multi-problem youth experiencing traumatic stress, violence exposure, and co-occurring substance abuse (Trauma Systems Therapy for Adolescent Substance Abuse-TST-SA) and disruptive behavior problems (STRONG Families); and 3) provide training and consultation to facilitate service system and community resource collaboration using a socio-ecologically based and trauma-informed model of collaboration developed by UYTC called YOUTH-CAN (Youth Overcoming Urban Trauma and Healing through Urban Community Action Network), which aims promote the use of best practices for trauma intervention and violence prevention among youth service providers within targeted communities.
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| SM061262-03 | University of Southern California | Los Angeles | CA | $600,000 | 2014 | |||||
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Title: NCTSI CAT II
Project Period: 2012/09/30 - 2016/09/29
The University of Southern California Adolescent Trauma Training Center (USC-ATTC), will train clinicians and disseminate information throughout the United States on the assessment and treatment of trauma effects - including substance abuse -- in multiply traumatized, socially marginalized adolescents who come in contact with mental health, substance abuse, child welfare, and juvenile justice environments. USC-ATTC will disseminate the recently developed, empirically-validated Integrative Treatment of Complex Trauma for Adolescents (ITCT-A; Briere & Lanktree, 2011). In order to further increase ITCT-A's focus on youth who are involved in significant alcohol or drug abuse, we will consult with experts and augment this treatment package with two additional components, Intervention in Substance Abuse and Mindfulness Training. In addition, these new ITCT-A components will be expanded into more comprehensive, stand-alone treatment guides (Mindfulness Training for Traumatized Adolescents and Treating Substance Abuse Issues in Traumatized Adolescents) that can be used as supplements to treatment packages or approaches other than ITCT-A. Additional products of this project will be disseminated on the USC-ATTC and NCTSN websites, and in face-to-face and web-based workshops to NCTSN and non-NCTSN individuals and groups.
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| SM061262-04 | University of Southern California | Los Angeles | CA | $600,000 | 2015 | |||||
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Title: NCTSI CAT II
Project Period: 2012/09/30 - 2016/11/29
The University of Southern California Adolescent Trauma Training Center (USC-ATTC), will train clinicians and disseminate information throughout the United States on the assessment and treatment of trauma effects - including substance abuse -- in multiply traumatized, socially marginalized adolescents who come in contact with mental health, substance abuse, child welfare, and juvenile justice environments. USC-ATTC will disseminate the recently developed, empirically-validated Integrative Treatment of Complex Trauma for Adolescents (ITCT-A; Briere & Lanktree, 2011). In order to further increase ITCT-A's focus on youth who are involved in significant alcohol or drug abuse, we will consult with experts and augment this treatment package with two additional components, Intervention in Substance Abuse and Mindfulness Training. In addition, these new ITCT-A components will be expanded into more comprehensive, stand-alone treatment guides (Mindfulness Training for Traumatized Adolescents and Treating Substance Abuse Issues in Traumatized Adolescents) that can be used as supplements to treatment packages or approaches other than ITCT-A. Additional products of this project will be disseminated on the USC-ATTC and NCTSN websites, and in face-to-face and web-based workshops to NCTSN and non-NCTSN individuals and groups.
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| SM061264-03 | University of Missouri-Columbia | Columbia | MO | $600,000 | 2014 | |||||
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Title: NCTSI CAT II
Project Period: 2012/09/30 - 2016/09/29
The Terrorism and Disaster Center (TDC), will work to enhance mental health preparedness, recovery, and resilience in children, families, and communities affected by disaster. TDC will provide national expertise and resources for intervention, training, consultation, and technical assistance related to disasters and terrorism and will promote public awareness of disaster mental health. TDC's goals include providing national disaster mental health leadership, increasing disaster mental health public awareness, developing and implementing disaster mental health interventions, creating disaster mental health training protocols, generating disaster mental health resources, partnering with service providers, and collaborating with NCTSN partners on disaster issues. TDC will develop, implement, and evaluate four disaster mental health interventions: (1)the Resilience and Coping Intervention for Children (RCI), (2) the Communities Advancing Resilience Toolkit (CART), (3) CART for Youth (CART-Youth), and (4) the Disaster and Media Intervention for Youth (DMI). RCI helps children experiencing disasters identify resilience and coping strategies and can be implemented in schools and community organizations.
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| SM061264-04 | University of Missouri-Columbia | Columbia | MO | $600,000 | 2015 | |||||
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Title: NCTSI CAT II
Project Period: 2012/09/30 - 2017/09/29
The Terrorism and Disaster Center (TDC), will work to enhance mental health preparedness, recovery, and resilience in children, families, and communities affected by disaster. TDC will provide national expertise and resources for intervention, training, consultation, and technical assistance related to disasters and terrorism and will promote public awareness of disaster mental health. TDC's goals include providing national disaster mental health leadership, increasing disaster mental health public awareness, developing and implementing disaster mental health interventions, creating disaster mental health training protocols, generating disaster mental health resources, partnering with service providers, and collaborating with NCTSN partners on disaster issues. TDC will develop, implement, and evaluate four disaster mental health interventions: (1)the Resilience and Coping Intervention for Children (RCI), (2) the Communities Advancing Resilience Toolkit (CART), (3) CART for Youth (CART-Youth), and (4) the Disaster and Media Intervention for Youth (DMI). RCI helps children experiencing disasters identify resilience and coping strategies and can be implemented in schools and community organizations.
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| SM061265-03 | Lutheran Medical Center | New York | NY | $600,000 | 2014 | |||||
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Title: NCTSI CAT II
Project Period: 2012/09/30 - 2016/09/29
Lutheran Family Health Centers (LFHC), in collaboration with the NYC Department of Education proposes to develop a National Child Traumatic Stress School-Based Treatment and Services Adaptation Center (TSA) in southwest Brooklyn, NY. The proposed project will further develop and validate two innovative and trauma informed treatments and services to culturally diverse children and youth, and their families. The goals of this project are: 1. To develop a community coalition focused on building capacity to address child and family trauma, particularly within the context of larger social systems, including day care and preschools, schools, youth services, and child welfare. 2. To build up community and stakeholder consensus and work collaboratively with Treatment and Adaptation (TSA) Centers and the National Center for Traumatic Stress (NCCTS). 3. To further culturally modify 2 trauma-informed treatments, the Cognitive Behavioral Intervention for Trauma in Schools (CBITS-NCTSN-SAMHSA and the TEMAS Narrative Trauma Therapy. (TNT-T) 3. To use a total of 680 children and parents to further validate those two treatments modalities.4. To develop an outreach component, which will include workshop training with parents, school and community agency personnel, and primary care providers. 5. To train mental health staff and pediatric staff throughout the Lutheran Family Health Centers' 9 primary care centers and 15 school-based health centers. 6. To identify, screen, and refer children and adolescents at high risk for traumatic stress. 7. To train mental health staff at the Sunset Terrace Mental Health Center and Healthy Connections program. 8. To export training locally and nationally on the implementation of the culturally competent, evidence-based CBITS and TNT-T modalities.
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| SM061265-04 | Lutheran Medical Center | New York | NY | $600,000 | 2015 | |||||
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Title: NCTSI CAT II
Project Period: 2012/09/30 - 2016/10/29
Lutheran Family Health Centers (LFHC), in collaboration with the NYC Department of Education proposes to develop a National Child Traumatic Stress School-Based Treatment and Services Adaptation Center (TSA) in southwest Brooklyn, NY. The proposed project will further develop and validate two innovative and trauma informed treatments and services to culturally diverse children and youth, and their families. The goals of this project are: 1. To develop a community coalition focused on building capacity to address child and family trauma, particularly within the context of larger social systems, including day care and preschools, schools, youth services, and child welfare. 2. To build up community and stakeholder consensus and work collaboratively with Treatment and Adaptation (TSA) Centers and the National Center for Traumatic Stress (NCCTS). 3. To further culturally modify 2 trauma-informed treatments, the Cognitive Behavioral Intervention for Trauma in Schools (CBITS-NCTSN-SAMHSA and the TEMAS Narrative Trauma Therapy. (TNT-T) 3. To use a total of 680 children and parents to further validate those two treatments modalities.4. To develop an outreach component, which will include workshop training with parents, school and community agency personnel, and primary care providers. 5. To train mental health staff and pediatric staff throughout the Lutheran Family Health Centers' 9 primary care centers and 15 school-based health centers. 6. To identify, screen, and refer children and adolescents at high risk for traumatic stress. 7. To train mental health staff at the Sunset Terrace Mental Health Center and Healthy Connections program. 8. To export training locally and nationally on the implementation of the culturally competent, evidence-based CBITS and TNT-T modalities.
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Displaying 37126 - 37150 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 |