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Displaying 326 - 350 out of 413
| Award Number | Organization | City | State | Amount | Award FY | NOFO | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SM061251-04 | Georgia Department of Behavioral Health and Developmental Disabilities (Dbhdd) | Atlanta | GA | $999,054 | 2016 | |||||
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Title: SOC Expansion Implementation Grants
Project Period: 2013/07/01 - 2018/06/30
Georgia's Department of Behavioral Health and Developmental Disabilities (DBHDD) is seeking SAMHSA funds to further develop Family/Youth Service Organizations, enhance Cultural and Linguistic Competence, support local/regional interagency teams; provide cross- agency training on evidence-based and promising practices; implement financing strategies for services and supports, and develop a social marketing/strategic communications campaign. The SOC Expansion grant provides DBHD, in partnership with other child serving agencies, the opportunity to further implement infrastructure and services which support the development of a more effective service delivery system.
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| SM061252-02 | Delaware State Department of Services for Children, Youth and Their Families | Wilmington | DE | $1,000,000 | 2014 | |||||
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Title: SOC Expansion Implementation Grants
Project Period: 2013/07/01 - 2017/06/30
Delaware will use this grant to create sustainable statewide system of care for children with serious emotional disturbance, improve behavioral health outcomes and increase access to services as well as youth/family involvement. Transforming our system also, includes the following: enhancing electronic data systems, enhancing infrastructure supporting the service system, addressing behavioral health impacts of trauma through a systematic public health approach, developing strategic financing and firmly establishing sustainable system of care statewide that includes all our children and families, our own staff, service providers, community partners and involves other child-serving agencies to integrate and improve care for children who need mental health services and their families.
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| SM061252-03 | Delaware State Department of Services for Children, Youth and Their Families | Wilmington | DE | $1,000,000 | 2015 | |||||
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Title: SOC Expansion Implementation Grants
Project Period: 2013/07/01 - 2017/06/30
Delaware will use this grant to create sustainable statewide system of care for children with serious emotional disturbance, improve behavioral health outcomes and increase access to services as well as youth/family involvement. Transforming our system also, includes the following: enhancing electronic data systems, enhancing infrastructure supporting the service system, addressing behavioral health impacts of trauma through a systematic public health approach, developing strategic financing and firmly establishing sustainable system of care statewide that includes all our children and families, our own staff, service providers, community partners and involves other child-serving agencies to integrate and improve care for children who need mental health services and their families.
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| SM061252-04 | Delaware State Department of Services for Children, Youth and Their Families | Wilmington | DE | $1,000,000 | 2016 | |||||
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Title: SOC Expansion Implementation Grants
Project Period: 2013/07/01 - 2018/06/30
Delaware will use this grant to create sustainable statewide system of care for children with serious emotional disturbance, improve behavioral health outcomes and increase access to services as well as youth/family involvement. Transforming our system also, includes the following: enhancing electronic data systems, enhancing infrastructure supporting the service system, addressing behavioral health impacts of trauma through a systematic public health approach, developing strategic financing and firmly establishing sustainable system of care statewide that includes all our children and families, our own staff, service providers, community partners and involves other child-serving agencies to integrate and improve care for children who need mental health services and their families.
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| SM061253-03 | Maryland State Dept of Hlth/Mental Hyg | Catonsville | MD | $997,547 | 2014 | |||||
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Title: SOC Expansion Implementation Grants
Project Period: 2012/09/30 - 2016/09/29
Maryland submits Launching Individual Futures Together (LIFT) to infuse SOC practice and principles throughout the entire public behavioral health system for children and families. Building upon progress made in developing a comprehensive behavioral health strategic plan for youth with co-occurring mental health and substance use needs and their families, LIFT will target youth, ages 13-17, with serious emotional disturbance and co-occurring substance abuse needs. LIFT will put into practice Maryland's implementation of the Patient Care and Protection Affordable Care Act (ACA), which includes full merger of mental health and substance abuse authority and rollout of a new Medicaid financing and behavioral health integration model, at the local level while addressing a critical gap in the public behavioral health system service delivery.
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| SM061253-04 | Maryland State Dept of Hlth/Mental Hyg | Catonsville | MD | $997,547 | 2015 | |||||
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Title: SOC Expansion Implementation Grants
Project Period: 2012/09/30 - 2017/09/29
Maryland submits Launching Individual Futures Together (LIFT) to infuse SOC practice and principles throughout the entire public behavioral health system for children and families. Building upon progress made in developing a comprehensive behavioral health strategic plan for youth with co-occurring mental health and substance use needs and their families, LIFT will target youth, ages 13-17, with serious emotional disturbance and co-occurring substance abuse needs. LIFT will put into practice Maryland's implementation of the Patient Care and Protection Affordable Care Act (ACA), which includes full merger of mental health and substance abuse authority and rollout of a new Medicaid financing and behavioral health integration model, at the local level while addressing a critical gap in the public behavioral health system service delivery.
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| SM061254-03 | Northwestern University at Chicago | Chicago | IL | $599,998 | 2014 | |||||
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Title: NCTSI CAT II
Project Period: 2012/09/30 - 2016/09/29
The Center for Child Trauma Assessment and Service Planning (CCTASP) at Northwestern University Medical School will specialize in comprehensive, trauma-focused assessment; training and consultation; and development, implementation, and evaluation of interventions focused on the developmental effects of trauma. The purpose of CCTASP is to build an infrastructure to (a) more effectively assess the developmental effects of trauma across child-serving systems, (b) develop intervention resources to address identified needs in practice, and (c) enhance widespread dissemination and application of effective interventions. Interventions will be geared towards children, adolescents, caregivers, and providers across a range of child serving settings with a particular focus on child welfare, residential, and juvenile justice. This Center will emphasize the dissemination and application of the Child and Adolescent Needs and Strengths (CANS)-Trauma, as a trauma-focused and strengths-based comprehensive assessment, treatment and systems planning tool. The CCTASP will focus on enhancing education and skill-building on the range of developmental effects, translating and applying assessment information in a meaningful way for providers and consumers, and integrating assessment and treatment/services interventions more effectively in practice. The goals of CCTASP are to: 1) Enhance education on the developmental effects of trauma across child serving settings; 2) Expand dissemination and increase accessibility of comprehensive trauma-focused assessments on the developmental effects of trauma across settings; 3) Enhance translation of trauma-focused assessments in practice; and 4) Integrate and disseminate trauma-focused assessments and service/treatment interventions on the developmental effects of trauma.
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| SM061254-04 | Northwestern University at Chicago | Chicago | IL | $599,994 | 2015 | |||||
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Title: NCTSI CAT II
Project Period: 2012/09/30 - 2017/09/29
The Center for Child Trauma Assessment and Service Planning (CCTASP) at Northwestern University Medical School will specialize in comprehensive, trauma-focused assessment; training and consultation; and development, implementation, and evaluation of interventions focused on the developmental effects of trauma. The purpose of CCTASP is to build an infrastructure to (a) more effectively assess the developmental effects of trauma across child-serving systems, (b) develop intervention resources to address identified needs in practice, and (c) enhance widespread dissemination and application of effective interventions. Interventions will be geared towards children, adolescents, caregivers, and providers across a range of child serving settings with a particular focus on child welfare, residential, and juvenile justice. This Center will emphasize the dissemination and application of the Child and Adolescent Needs and Strengths (CANS)-Trauma, as a trauma-focused and strengths-based comprehensive assessment, treatment and systems planning tool. The CCTASP will focus on enhancing education and skill-building on the range of developmental effects, translating and applying assessment information in a meaningful way for providers and consumers, and integrating assessment and treatment/services interventions more effectively in practice. The goals of CCTASP are to: 1) Enhance education on the developmental effects of trauma across child serving settings; 2) Expand dissemination and increase accessibility of comprehensive trauma-focused assessments on the developmental effects of trauma across settings; 3) Enhance translation of trauma-focused assessments in practice; and 4) Integrate and disseminate trauma-focused assessments and service/treatment interventions on the developmental effects of trauma.
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| SM061255-03 | Children's Hosp of Philadelphia | Philadelphia | PA | $599,901 | 2014 | |||||
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Title: NCTSI CAT II
Project Period: 2012/09/30 - 2016/09/29
The Center for Pediatric Traumatic Stress (CPTS) at Children's Hospital of Philadelphia addresses health-related trauma in the lives of children and families. The Center's mission is to reduce medical traumatic stress by promoting trauma-informed health care, integrating practical evidence-based tools into pediatric medical care, and ensuring that health care providers are knowledgeable and skilled in trauma-informed care with culturally diverse youth and their families. CPTS has developed and evaluated acute and brief interventions, focused on families, which can be integrated within pediatric health care. CPTS' proposed work focuses on four goals / key constituencies: Goal 1: Engage and provide national expertise to health care providers and health care systems in improving outcomes for children and families with medical trauma. Goal 2: Adapt, disseminate and provide training to mental health providers in trauma-informed assessments and interventions for children & families experiencing medical trauma. Goal 3: Ensure that children and families have access to evidence-based resources and interventions that address the impact of medical trauma. Goal 4: Equip other child-serving systems with trauma-informed approaches to address injury, illness and medical problems in children and families. Activities to achieve these goals include: Promoting professional and public awareness of medical trauma via CPTS' active web presence (www.healthcaretoolbox.org) reaching 20,000 providers per year and our partnership with national health provider organizations; Supporting the implementation of effective assessment and intervention for medical trauma in more than 100 health care settings; Delivering training and tools for on assessment and intervention with medical trauma to more than 9000 health and mental health providers; Disseminating trauma-focused resources in English and Spanish to children and families experiencing medical trauma.
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| SM061255-04 | Children's Hosp of Philadelphia | Philadelphia | PA | $599,943 | 2015 | |||||
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Title: NCTSI CAT II
Project Period: 2012/09/30 - 2017/03/29
The Center for Pediatric Traumatic Stress (CPTS) at Children's Hospital of Philadelphia addresses health-related trauma in the lives of children and families. The Center's mission is to reduce medical traumatic stress by promoting trauma-informed health care, integrating practical evidence-based tools into pediatric medical care, and ensuring that health care providers are knowledgeable and skilled in trauma-informed care with culturally diverse youth and their families. CPTS has developed and evaluated acute and brief interventions, focused on families, which can be integrated within pediatric health care. CPTS' proposed work focuses on four goals / key constituencies: Goal 1: Engage and provide national expertise to health care providers and health care systems in improving outcomes for children and families with medical trauma. Goal 2: Adapt, disseminate and provide training to mental health providers in trauma-informed assessments and interventions for children & families experiencing medical trauma. Goal 3: Ensure that children and families have access to evidence-based resources and interventions that address the impact of medical trauma. Goal 4: Equip other child-serving systems with trauma-informed approaches to address injury, illness and medical problems in children and families. Activities to achieve these goals include: Promoting professional and public awareness of medical trauma via CPTS' active web presence (www.healthcaretoolbox.org) reaching 20,000 providers per year and our partnership with national health provider organizations; Supporting the implementation of effective assessment and intervention for medical trauma in more than 100 health care settings; Delivering training and tools for on assessment and intervention with medical trauma to more than 9000 health and mental health providers; Disseminating trauma-focused resources in English and Spanish to children and families experiencing medical trauma.
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| SM061256-03 | University of Maryland Baltimore | Baltimore | MD | $600,000 | 2014 | |||||
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Title: NCTSI CAT II
Project Period: 2012/09/30 - 2016/09/29
The Family-Informed Trauma Treatment (FITT) Center, proposes to lead national and local efforts to understand the impact of trauma, especially complex trauma, on families; to recognize that families are the foundation through which children comprehend and cope with their traumatic experiences; and to understand that family trauma interventions optimize healing. The FITT Center proposes to enhance system capacity to address the needs of children and their families using a two-pronged approach of increasing provider capacity (Objectives 1 and 2) and consumer advocacy voice (Objective 3). The Center's Objectives are to: (1) Increase the availability of training and tools for child service systems' workforces to enhance knowledge and skills necessary to work with family systems exposed to chronic trauma related to poverty by widely disseminating the FITT Toolkit and developing innovative training curricula focusing on family informed, evidence-based trauma interventions for mental health professionals and master and doctoral students. (2) Improve access to three effective family trauma treatments, Strengthening Families Coping Resources (SFCR), Trauma Adapted Family Connections (TA-FC), FamilyLive (FL), and a family based assessment and treatment planning tool, Family Assessment of Needs and Strengths-Trauma (FANS-Trauma) through collaborations with 19 CTCs and other provider organizations that support large numbers of families living in poverty. (3) Develop messages and tools designed to help families be heard as they advocate in the public arena and within child service systems.
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| SM061256-04 | University of Maryland Baltimore | Baltimore | MD | $600,000 | 2015 | |||||
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Title: NCTSI CAT II
Project Period: 2012/09/30 - 2017/09/29
The Family-Informed Trauma Treatment (FITT) Center, proposes to lead national and local efforts to understand the impact of trauma, especially complex trauma, on families; to recognize that families are the foundation through which children comprehend and cope with their traumatic experiences; and to understand that family trauma interventions optimize healing. The FITT Center proposes to enhance system capacity to address the needs of children and their families using a two-pronged approach of increasing provider capacity (Objectives 1 and 2) and consumer advocacy voice (Objective 3). The Center's Objectives are to: (1) Increase the availability of training and tools for child service systems' workforces to enhance knowledge and skills necessary to work with family systems exposed to chronic trauma related to poverty by widely disseminating the FITT Toolkit and developing innovative training curricula focusing on family informed, evidence-based trauma interventions for mental health professionals and master and doctoral students. (2) Improve access to three effective family trauma treatments, Strengthening Families Coping Resources (SFCR), Trauma Adapted Family Connections (TA-FC), FamilyLive (FL), and a family based assessment and treatment planning tool, Family Assessment of Needs and Strengths-Trauma (FANS-Trauma) through collaborations with 19 CTCs and other provider organizations that support large numbers of families living in poverty. (3) Develop messages and tools designed to help families be heard as they advocate in the public arena and within child service systems.
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| SM061257-03 | Allegheny-Singer Research Institute | Pittsburgh | PA | $1,000,000 | 2014 | |||||
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Title: NCTSI CAT II
Project Period: 2012/09/30 - 2016/09/29
Allegheny General Hospital's Center for Traumatic Stress in Children and Adolescents will provide national expertise in Clinical Interventions for Traumatic Stress Reactions and Traumatic Grief. As the developers of Trauma-Focused Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (TF-CBT) and Alternatives for Families: A Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (AF-CBT), the Center will address behavioral health disparities for children in foster care, LGBTQ youth, and military children with traumatic stress reactions or traumatic grief. The Center will adapt TFCBT and AF-CBT for foster children with severe behavioral traumatic stress reactions, develop a culturally adapted AF-CBT implementation manual and provide culturally adapted TF-CBT and AF-CBT training and consultation to therapists who treat military children, and collaborate with Persad Center, the nation's second oldest LGBTQ provider organization, to develop tool kits for child and adolescent mental health providers; adapt TF-CBT treatment materials and provide LGBTQ-competent TF-CBT training to therapists. With Supplemental Partnership Funding, the Center will develop a Clinical Interventions for Traumatic Stress and Traumatic Grief Partnership of national experts, highly experienced service providers and consumers, to develop and evaluate strategies of national impact to establish a sustainable workforce of therapists who can provide affordable, high quality TF-CBT and AF-CBT for children across the United States.
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| SM061257-04 | Allegheny-Singer Research Institute | Pittsburgh | PA | $1,000,000 | 2015 | |||||
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Title: NCTSI CAT II
Project Period: 2012/09/30 - 2017/09/29
Allegheny General Hospital's Center for Traumatic Stress in Children and Adolescents will provide national expertise in Clinical Interventions for Traumatic Stress Reactions and Traumatic Grief. As the developers of Trauma-Focused Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (TF-CBT) and Alternatives for Families: A Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (AF-CBT), the Center will address behavioral health disparities for children in foster care, LGBTQ youth, and military children with traumatic stress reactions or traumatic grief. The Center will adapt TFCBT and AF-CBT for foster children with severe behavioral traumatic stress reactions, develop a culturally adapted AF-CBT implementation manual and provide culturally adapted TF-CBT and AF-CBT training and consultation to therapists who treat military children, and collaborate with Persad Center, the nation's second oldest LGBTQ provider organization, to develop tool kits for child and adolescent mental health providers; adapt TF-CBT treatment materials and provide LGBTQ-competent TF-CBT training to therapists. With Supplemental Partnership Funding, the Center will develop a Clinical Interventions for Traumatic Stress and Traumatic Grief Partnership of national experts, highly experienced service providers and consumers, to develop and evaluate strategies of national impact to establish a sustainable workforce of therapists who can provide affordable, high quality TF-CBT and AF-CBT for children across the United States.
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| SM061259-03 | Johns Hopkins University | Baltimore | MD | $451,430 | 2014 | |||||
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Title: NCTSI CAT II
Project Period: 2012/09/30 - 2016/09/29
The Pediatric Integrated Care Collaborative (PICC) will (1) increase the quality of child trauma services by integrating behavioral and physical health services targeting traumatic stress exposure and recovery, (2) extend accessibility of services by integrating trauma-informed behavioral health services with primary care, and (3) promote a sustainable integration through a Breakthrough Series, Learning Collaborative, and a Training and Resource Toolkit. The PICC will be based at Center for Mental Health Services in Pediatric Primary Care (CMHPC). The Center will support three levels of collaborative activity: (1) A Breakthrough Series Collaborative will generate and test innovations to bridge the gaps between existing practices for prevention/early intervention for toxic stress in young children and the application of these practices within primary care settings; (2) A Learning Collaborative will promote the dissemination and adoption of these innovations and develop a Pediatric Integrated Care Training and Resource Toolkit; (3) Support will be provided for the newly forming NCTSN Integrated Care Collaborative Group (ICCG) of participants throughout NCTSN sites and affiliates. Dissemination will also be facilitated through the CMHPC's six core sites, its links to the American Academy of Pediatrics, and its hosting of the National Network of Child Psychiatry Access Programs.
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| SM061259-04 | Johns Hopkins University | Baltimore | MD | $418,914 | 2015 | |||||
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Title: NCTSI CAT II
Project Period: 2012/09/30 - 2017/09/29
The Pediatric Integrated Care Collaborative (PICC) will (1) increase the quality of child trauma services by integrating behavioral and physical health services targeting traumatic stress exposure and recovery, (2) extend accessibility of services by integrating trauma-informed behavioral health services with primary care, and (3) promote a sustainable integration through a Breakthrough Series, Learning Collaborative, and a Training and Resource Toolkit. The PICC will be based at Center for Mental Health Services in Pediatric Primary Care (CMHPC). The Center will support three levels of collaborative activity: (1) A Breakthrough Series Collaborative will generate and test innovations to bridge the gaps between existing practices for prevention/early intervention for toxic stress in young children and the application of these practices within primary care settings; (2) A Learning Collaborative will promote the dissemination and adoption of these innovations and develop a Pediatric Integrated Care Training and Resource Toolkit; (3) Support will be provided for the newly forming NCTSN Integrated Care Collaborative Group (ICCG) of participants throughout NCTSN sites and affiliates. Dissemination will also be facilitated through the CMHPC's six core sites, its links to the American Academy of Pediatrics, and its hosting of the National Network of Child Psychiatry Access Programs.
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| SM061260-03 | University of Illinois at Chicago | Chicago | IL | $600,000 | 2014 | |||||
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Title: NCTSI CAT II
Project Period: 2012/09/30 - 2016/09/29
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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| SM061260-03S1 | University of Illinois at Chicago | Chicago | IL | $400,000 | 2014 | |||||
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Title: NCTSI CAT II
Project Period: 2012/09/30 - 2016/09/29
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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| SM061226-04 | Hawaii State Department of Health | Honolulu | HI | $945,101 | 2015 | |||||
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Title: SOC Expansion Implementation Grants
Project Period: 2012/09/30 - 2017/09/29
The proposed project will build a new infrastructure allowing statewide interagency collaboration to happen in a meaningful, accountable, and sustainable way. This effort will focus initially on a sub-population of youth who have been underserved in the past - youth with co-occurring behavior problems and developmental difficulties. Eventually, it is hoped that the infrastructure for interagency collaboration built via this project can address the needs of other multi-agency youth including youth in state custody, youth in the juvenile justice system, transition-age youth, and so forth. The proposed project will be governed by a "Children's Cabinet" of agency leaders, and it is expected to roll-out in three phases: a consensus building phase during which: 1) some expanded services start to be provided to the target population and 2) ongoing discussions among stakeholders and agency leaders are held to finalize the architecture for the collaboration-facilitating entity (year 1-2); a demonstration phase during which case-review and policy-development activities are conducted at both the state level and in a few regional pilot areas (year 2-3); and a consolidation phase during which the lessons learned in the pilot regions are utilized to organize collaborative activities in the remaining regional areas, and specific funding commitments are made by the participating agencies to support the ongoing function of the new entity (year 3-4).
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| SM061227-02 | Guam Dept of Mental Hlth/Substance Abuse | Tamuning | GU | $1,000,000 | 2014 | |||||
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Title: SOC Expansion Implementation Grants
Project Period: 2013/07/01 - 2017/06/30
The U.S. territory of Guam requests funding to support Para Todu I Famagu'on-ta, which means "For All Our Children" in Chamorro. The proposed project will build a unified system of care, which provides a broadly supported, sustainable array of home-and community based services that enables children and youth to achieve their maximum potential and builds on the strengths of our diverse families.
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| SM061227-03 | Guam Dept of Mental Hlth/Substance Abuse | Tamuning | GU | $1,000,000 | 2015 | |||||
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Title: SOC Expansion Implementation Grants
Project Period: 2013/07/01 - 2017/06/30
The U.S. territory of Guam requests funding to support Para Todu I Famagu'on-ta, which means "For All Our Children" in Chamorro. The proposed project will build a unified system of care, which provides a broadly supported, sustainable array of home-and community based services that enables children and youth to achieve their maximum potential and builds on the strengths of our diverse families.
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| SM061227-04 | Guam Dept of Mental Hlth/Substance Abuse | Tamuning | GU | $1,000,000 | 2016 | |||||
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Title: SOC Expansion Implementation Grants
Project Period: 2013/07/01 - 2018/06/30
The U.S. territory of Guam requests funding to support Para Todu I Famagu'on-ta, which means "For All Our Children" in Chamorro. The proposed project will build a unified system of care, which provides a broadly supported, sustainable array of home-and community based services that enables children and youth to achieve their maximum potential and builds on the strengths of our diverse families.
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| SM061228-03 | Pueblo of San Felipe | San Felipe Pueblo | NM | $1,000,000 | 2014 | |||||
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Title: SOC Expansion Implementation Grants
Project Period: 2012/09/30 - 2016/09/29
Healing Our People: Achieving Hope (HOPAH) is a partnership between the Pueblo of San Felipe and the State of New Mexico statewide System of Care grant to implement broad-scale operation, expansion and integration of systems of care (SOC) in San Felipe and the 21 tribes statewide. The population served will be American Indian youth aged 0-21 years old with serious emotional disturbances and their families. HOPAH will build on existing infrastructure in San Felipe to support the availability and provision of mental health and related recovery support services for children with emotional disturbances through the further implementation of systemic changes in policy, financing, services, supports, training, and workforce development; and will support other tribal communities on SOC implementation.
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| SM061228-04 | Pueblo of San Felipe | San Felipe Pueblo | NM | $1,000,000 | 2015 | |||||
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Title: SOC Expansion Implementation Grants
Project Period: 2012/09/30 - 2017/09/29
Healing Our People: Achieving Hope (HOPAH) is a partnership between the Pueblo of San Felipe and the State of New Mexico statewide System of Care grant to implement broad-scale operation, expansion and integration of systems of care (SOC) in San Felipe and the 21 tribes statewide. The population served will be American Indian youth aged 0-21 years old with serious emotional disturbances and their families. HOPAH will build on existing infrastructure in San Felipe to support the availability and provision of mental health and related recovery support services for children with emotional disturbances through the further implementation of systemic changes in policy, financing, services, supports, training, and workforce development; and will support other tribal communities on SOC implementation.
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| SM061230-02 | Mississippi State Department of Mental Health | Jackson | MS | $1,000,000 | 2014 | |||||
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Title: SOC Expansion Implementation Grants
Project Period: 2013/07/01 - 2017/06/30
The Expansion project (XPand) will serve an average of 100 participants annually over the 3 1/2- year implementation period, or a total of 350 youth and young adults, ages 14-21, with SED who are transitioning from child mental health services to adult mental health services and/or from an institutional setting to the community, while implementing Mississippi's first System of Care Division of Services. This initiative will establish the first System of Care Division within the MDMH. This division will be responsible for oversight of all system of care projects and ensure policies, minimum standards, and trainings are based on the SOC principles. In addition, MDMH will award a sub-grant to Region 10 (roman numeral X) community mental health center to implement the direct services portion of this grant. The center will be required to provide a full range of individualized services and supports to facilitate transition to a more independent environment; integrating the 12 mandatory mental health services with an array of non-mental health supports, such as vocational counseling, education services, health-related services, substance abuse prevention, stable housing supports, independent living skills and advocacy.
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Displaying 37176 - 37200 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 |