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Displaying 76 - 100 out of 413
| Award Number | Organization | City | State | Amount | Award FY | NOFO | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SM063100-02 | Mercy Family Center | Metairie | LA | $400,000 | 2017 | SM-16-005 | ||||
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Title: NCTSI III
Project Period: 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
Project Fleur-de-lis (PFDL), a service division of the Mercy Health Ministry created in October 2005, provides evidence-based treatment to youth, military families, and communities in New Orleans who have been impacted by community violence and interpersonal conflict. PFDL will offer trauma-focused services to schools predominately in Orleans Parish, with a majority of students being African American, from low-socioeconomic backgrounds, and 4-18 years old. PFDL will serve 5,357 individuals in year 1; 5,893 individuals in year 2; 6,333 individuals in year 3; 6,763 individuals in year 4; and 7,236 individuals in year 5. Thus, PFDL will serve a total of 31,582 over the proposed 5 year proposed project. PFDL proposes the following goals and objectives to address the needs of our population of focus: Goal 1: Expand our school-based child and family services. Objective 1: Increase trauma-focused individual and group intervention services by at least 10% per year over the 5 year proposed grant period. Goal 2: Strengthen military families by improving access to mental health services. Objective 2: Increase individual, group, and family interventions at progressive identified levels of need by at least10% per year over the 5 year proposed grant period. Goal 3: Establish a comprehensive suicide awareness and responsiveness program for youth, caregivers, and school personnel in middle and high schools. Objective 3: Provide information, technical assistance, training, and consultation to a minimum of 2 schools per year over the 5 year proposed grant period. Goal 4: Build capacity and implement restorative practices in school and community systems. Objective 4: Provide training, consultation, and implementation support to a minimum of two schools per year over the 5 year proposed grant period.
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| SM063102-01 | Georgia Center for Child Advocacy, Inc. | Atlanta | GA | $400,000 | 2016 | SM-16-005 | ||||
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Title: NCTSI III
Project Period: 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
"Intersections: A Trauma-Informed Continuum of Services for Commercially Sexually Exploited Youth in Georgia" will deliver trauma-focused treatment to Commercially Sexually Exploited Children (CSEC) and train professionals in systems that intersect with CSEC at high rates. Since 2012, The Project Team of the proposed project has utilized NCTSN funding to increase CSEC access to services through the development of CSEC applications of Trauma-focused Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (TF-CBT) and intensive training of 65 providers (PITN). The primary aims of the current proposal are to continue to improve treatment access and utilization by strengthening the network of providers and eliminating the gaps in these 3 systems. Goals are: (1) Sustain and strengthen PITN provision of treatment to CSEC; (2) Improve JJ workforce knowledge and awareness of traumatic stress, trauma-informed care, and trauma focused treatment (3): Improve FC knowledge of traumatic stress, trauma-informed care and trauma-focused treatment to achieve safe, supportive, and sustained placements for CSEC; (4): Improve trauma-informed care and trauma-focused treatment access in community agencies serving H/R, and LGBTQ youth. To accomplish these goals, 3 cohorts of providers will be trained in TF-CBT and Advanced TF-CBT for CSEC, and NCTSN Trauma training will be implemented: "Think Trauma" in Juvenile Justice, "Resource Parent Curriculum" in Foster Care, and "Psychological First Aid for Youth Experiencing Homelessness" for H/R and LGBTQ-serving agencies. Measurable objectives include client level program evaluation for youth served by PITN therapists with TF-CBT; and training, referral, and implementation outcomes for the training in child serving systems. In all, 250 CSEC (50 per year) will receive TF-CBT treatment. The proposed project will also create more trauma informed child-serving systems and more therapists providing trauma-focused treatment for youth in Georgia.
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| SM063102-02 | Georgia Center for Child Advocacy, Inc. | Atlanta | GA | $400,000 | 2017 | SM-16-005 | ||||
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Title: NCTSI III
Project Period: 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
"Intersections: A Trauma-Informed Continuum of Services for Commercially Sexually Exploited Youth in Georgia" will deliver trauma-focused treatment to Commercially Sexually Exploited Children (CSEC) and train professionals in systems that intersect with CSEC at high rates. Since 2012, The Project Team of the proposed project has utilized NCTSN funding to increase CSEC access to services through the development of CSEC applications of Trauma-focused Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (TF-CBT) and intensive training of 65 providers (PITN). The primary aims of the current proposal are to continue to improve treatment access and utilization by strengthening the network of providers and eliminating the gaps in these 3 systems. Goals are: (1) Sustain and strengthen PITN provision of treatment to CSEC; (2) Improve JJ workforce knowledge and awareness of traumatic stress, trauma-informed care, and trauma focused treatment (3): Improve FC knowledge of traumatic stress, trauma-informed care and trauma-focused treatment to achieve safe, supportive, and sustained placements for CSEC; (4): Improve trauma-informed care and trauma-focused treatment access in community agencies serving H/R, and LGBTQ youth. To accomplish these goals, 3 cohorts of providers will be trained in TF-CBT and Advanced TF-CBT for CSEC, and NCTSN Trauma training will be implemented: "Think Trauma" in Juvenile Justice, "Resource Parent Curriculum" in Foster Care, and "Psychological First Aid for Youth Experiencing Homelessness" for H/R and LGBTQ-serving agencies. Measurable objectives include client level program evaluation for youth served by PITN therapists with TF-CBT; and training, referral, and implementation outcomes for the training in child serving systems. In all, 250 CSEC (50 per year) will receive TF-CBT treatment. The proposed project will also create more trauma informed child-serving systems and more therapists providing trauma-focused treatment for youth in Georgia.
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| SM063104-01 | Fmrs Health Systems, Inc. | Beckley | WV | $399,726 | 2016 | SM-16-005 | ||||
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Title: NCTSI III
Project Period: 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
The Resilience for Appalachian Youth (RAPP) Community Treatment and Services Center will serve children/adolescents and families (including veterans) who experience multiple traumatic experiences in an 11 county area of southern West Virginia known for poverty, poor health, drug-addicted young parents and minimal access to services. The purpose of RAPP is to increase trauma-informed services across child-serving agencies in WV and to increase evidence-based trauma treatment to children and adolescents ages 4-18. RAPP is a partnership of three community based, comprehensive behavioral health centers, FMRS Health Systems, Inc., Southern Highlands Community Mental Health Center and Seneca Health Services. Together, they will train 25 therapists and supervisors who will provide evidence-based trauma treatment to 6,120 children/adolescents and their families over a five year period (600 in Y1; 1160 in Y2; 1340 in Y3; 1500 in Y4; 1520 Y5). The goals of RAPP are to: o increase awareness of childhood trauma and trauma-informed practices throughout the state and across agencies who provide children's services. o provide training in evidence based treatment (PCIT and TF-CBT), including web-based, on-site and virtual training, to therapists throughout southern West Virginia. o increase evidence-based treatment to children/adolescents with identified trauma in each of the three partnering centers via center, school-based and expanded use of telehealth. o collaborate with CBHCs in the state, the Children's Services Division of the WV Bureau for Behavioral Health and Health Facilities to develop/promote policies supporting the implementation of trauma-informed services and practices across the state. RAPP will collaborate with consumers and community agency leaders and a strong evaluation team to implement the project and maintain long term sustainability. RAPP will improve the quality of life and resilience of WV children and families.
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| SM063104-02 | Fmrs Health Systems, Inc. | Beckley | WV | $399,956 | 2017 | SM-16-005 | ||||
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Title: NCTSI III
Project Period: 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
The Resilience for Appalachian Youth (RAPP) Community Treatment and Services Center will serve children/adolescents and families (including veterans) who experience multiple traumatic experiences in an 11 county area of southern West Virginia known for poverty, poor health, drug-addicted young parents and minimal access to services. The purpose of RAPP is to increase trauma-informed services across child-serving agencies in WV and to increase evidence-based trauma treatment to children and adolescents ages 4-18. RAPP is a partnership of three community based, comprehensive behavioral health centers, FMRS Health Systems, Inc., Southern Highlands Community Mental Health Center and Seneca Health Services. Together, they will train 25 therapists and supervisors who will provide evidence-based trauma treatment to 6,120 children/adolescents and their families over a five year period (600 in Y1; 1160 in Y2; 1340 in Y3; 1500 in Y4; 1520 Y5). The goals of RAPP are to: o increase awareness of childhood trauma and trauma-informed practices throughout the state and across agencies who provide children's services. o provide training in evidence based treatment (PCIT and TF-CBT), including web-based, on-site and virtual training, to therapists throughout southern West Virginia. o increase evidence-based treatment to children/adolescents with identified trauma in each of the three partnering centers via center, school-based and expanded use of telehealth. o collaborate with CBHCs in the state, the Children's Services Division of the WV Bureau for Behavioral Health and Health Facilities to develop/promote policies supporting the implementation of trauma-informed services and practices across the state. RAPP will collaborate with consumers and community agency leaders and a strong evaluation team to implement the project and maintain long term sustainability. RAPP will improve the quality of life and resilience of WV children and families.
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| SM063109-01 | Serving Children and Adults in Need, Inc. | Laredo | TX | $400,000 | 2016 | SM-16-005 | ||||
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Title: NCTSI III
Project Period: 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
Serving Children and Adults in Need Inc. (SCAN) is proposing to implement its Border Traumatic Stress Response Center to increase access to effective trauma-focused treatment services for children and adolescents in Webb County and within regional child service systems in South Texas and the state who have experienced or witnessed traumatic events. SCAN will increase the quality of treatment and services for children and adolescents who have experienced or witnessed traumatic events. The proposed project will expand and enhance the capacity of SCAN to deliver more diverse, effective and linguistically and culturally competent trauma treatment to underserved Mexican American families. The project's goals are to: 1) Increase access to care, expand array of services, and achieve improved outcomes for children and families in Webb County; 2) Increase staff expertise in delivering evidence-based trauma informed treatment interventions; 3) Enhance the capacity of local and regional infrastructure to develop trauma-informed systems of care; and 4) Collaborate with the national center and other centers within the network to develop, advance, adapt, and pilot best practices and interventions. The project will serve 100 youth per year for a total of 500 youth utilizing Trauma-Focused Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (TF-CBT), Trauma Systems Therapy for Substance Abuse (TST-SA), and Trauma Affect Regulation: Guide for Education and Therapy (TARGET). The population of focus is trauma exposed youth ages 3 to 17 including children of military families, children involved in the child welfare system and children of caregivers with substance use disorders who will receive outpatient trauma treatment, and adolescents ages 12 to 17 with co-occurring trauma and substance abuse that are involved in the juvenile justice and/or child welfare systems and are receiving residential substance abuse treatment at SCAN.
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| SM063109-02 | Serving Children and Adults in Need, Inc. | Laredo | TX | $400,000 | 2017 | SM-16-005 | ||||
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Title: NCTSI III
Project Period: 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
Serving Children and Adults in Need Inc. (SCAN) is proposing to implement its Border Traumatic Stress Response Center to increase access to effective trauma-focused treatment services for children and adolescents in Webb County and within regional child service systems in South Texas and the state who have experienced or witnessed traumatic events. SCAN will increase the quality of treatment and services for children and adolescents who have experienced or witnessed traumatic events. The proposed project will expand and enhance the capacity of SCAN to deliver more diverse, effective and linguistically and culturally competent trauma treatment to underserved Mexican American families. The project's goals are to: 1) Increase access to care, expand array of services, and achieve improved outcomes for children and families in Webb County; 2) Increase staff expertise in delivering evidence-based trauma informed treatment interventions; 3) Enhance the capacity of local and regional infrastructure to develop trauma-informed systems of care; and 4) Collaborate with the national center and other centers within the network to develop, advance, adapt, and pilot best practices and interventions. The project will serve 100 youth per year for a total of 500 youth utilizing Trauma-Focused Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (TF-CBT), Trauma Systems Therapy for Substance Abuse (TST-SA), and Trauma Affect Regulation: Guide for Education and Therapy (TARGET). The population of focus is trauma exposed youth ages 3 to 17 including children of military families, children involved in the child welfare system and children of caregivers with substance use disorders who will receive outpatient trauma treatment, and adolescents ages 12 to 17 with co-occurring trauma and substance abuse that are involved in the juvenile justice and/or child welfare systems and are receiving residential substance abuse treatment at SCAN.
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| SM063113-01 | University of Pittsburgh at Pittsburgh | Pittsburgh | PA | $400,000 | 2016 | SM-16-005 | ||||
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Title: NCTSI III
Project Period: 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
The purpose of the University of Pittsburgh's proposal is to increase the availability of trauma-focused, evidence-based practices (EBPs) provided for young children and families, through expansion of the Theiss Early Childhood Trauma Treatment Center (ECTTC). The population of focus is the racial/ethnic minority and/or low-income early childhood population (ages 0-8), in Allegheny County and throughout the surrounding, more rural counties of Western Pennsylvania. Strategies will include: expansion of trauma-informed PCIT; increase services for children under 3; incorporation of FOCUS to increase family engagement and improve treatment outcomes; development of regional trainings; and provision of outreach/engagement and treatment to high-need populations through mobile service delivery. ECTTC goals include: increasing the knowledge, skills, and expertise of clinicians in EBPs; increasing access to services across Western PA (implementation within at least 10 additional programs/organizations and 3 additional counties); increasing outreach/access for underserved populations (serve at least 15 immigrant/refugee children; 30 military children; 50 children impacted by maternal addiction and 50 children impacted by intimate partner violence); and achieve statistically significant reductions in children's behavioral and trauma symptoms, across racial/ethnic backgrounds, while improving relationships and well-being. ECTTC will address behavioral health disparities by maintaining a high percentage of children served from racial/ethnic minority populations (at least 45% of children annually), and will increase the percentage of grant-served children from outlying counties to at least 25% by year 5. Children served will gradually increase each subsequent grant year (Year 1: 40; Year 2: 70; Year 3: 90; Year 4: 110; and Year 5:140). A total of 450 young children throughout Western Pennsylvania will receive EBPs as a result of the proposed ECTTC expansion.
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| SM063113-02 | University of Pittsburgh at Pittsburgh | Pittsburgh | PA | $400,000 | 2017 | SM-16-005 | ||||
|
Title: NCTSI III
Project Period: 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
The purpose of the University of Pittsburgh's proposal is to increase the availability of trauma-focused, evidence-based practices (EBPs) provided for young children and families, through expansion of the Theiss Early Childhood Trauma Treatment Center (ECTTC). The population of focus is the racial/ethnic minority and/or low-income early childhood population (ages 0-8), in Allegheny County and throughout the surrounding, more rural counties of Western Pennsylvania. Strategies will include: expansion of trauma-informed PCIT; increase services for children under 3; incorporation of FOCUS to increase family engagement and improve treatment outcomes; development of regional trainings; and provision of outreach/engagement and treatment to high-need populations through mobile service delivery. ECTTC goals include: increasing the knowledge, skills, and expertise of clinicians in EBPs; increasing access to services across Western PA (implementation within at least 10 additional programs/organizations and 3 additional counties); increasing outreach/access for underserved populations (serve at least 15 immigrant/refugee children; 30 military children; 50 children impacted by maternal addiction and 50 children impacted by intimate partner violence); and achieve statistically significant reductions in children's behavioral and trauma symptoms, across racial/ethnic backgrounds, while improving relationships and well-being. ECTTC will address behavioral health disparities by maintaining a high percentage of children served from racial/ethnic minority populations (at least 45% of children annually), and will increase the percentage of grant-served children from outlying counties to at least 25% by year 5. Children served will gradually increase each subsequent grant year (Year 1: 40; Year 2: 70; Year 3: 90; Year 4: 110; and Year 5:140). A total of 450 young children throughout Western Pennsylvania will receive EBPs as a result of the proposed ECTTC expansion.
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| SM063114-01 | Institute for Health and Recovery | Cambridge | MA | $400,000 | 2016 | SM-16-005 | ||||
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Title: NCTSI III
Project Period: 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
The Institute for Health and Recovery's Project BRIGHT (Building Resilience through Intervention: Growing Healthier Together) III provides trauma-informed evidence-based interventions to young children birth to 6 and their parents affected by substance use disorders. The 5 year project will serve 120 parent-child dyads, (18 dyads in year 1 and 5; 28 in years 2, 3 and 4) through supporting children in developing stability and mitigating the effects of trauma, while providing the parents with SUD treatment. Project goals include decreased children's symptoms of traumatic responses & behavioral problems; increases in capacity for emotional regulation; enhancing the quality of the parent-child relationship; building capacity of partners to provide family centered trauma informed care; and ensuring trauma informed services for children are sustained after the grant ends. The institute will achieve these goals through service provision, collaboration and training. IHR uses Child-Parent Psychotherapy (CPP), the Nurturing Program for Families in Substance Abuse Treatment and Recovery, and Attachment, Regulation, and Competency (ARC). Fall River and New Bedford, the target regions, are located in the Massachusetts communities most impacted by the state's opiate abuse epidemic. BRIGHT III builds on prior IHR services in this region to develop an integrated behavioral health treatment system for young children and their parents that coordinates with primary healthcare services and supports family healing and recovery. BRIGHT III will partner with Fall River's SSTAR, which offers a full continuum of behavioral health services. BRIGHT III will also partner with Steppingstone, a SUD provider of women's residential resources. Boston University School of Social Work is an additional partner in the design and implementation of the project, and will serve as evaluators.
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| SM063114-02 | Institute for Health and Recovery | Cambridge | MA | $400,000 | 2017 | SM-16-005 | ||||
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Title: NCTSI III
Project Period: 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
The Institute for Health and Recovery's Project BRIGHT (Building Resilience through Intervention: Growing Healthier Together) III provides trauma-informed evidence-based interventions to young children birth to 6 and their parents affected by substance use disorders. The 5 year project will serve 120 parent-child dyads, (18 dyads in year 1 and 5; 28 in years 2, 3 and 4) through supporting children in developing stability and mitigating the effects of trauma, while providing the parents with SUD treatment. Project goals include decreased children's symptoms of traumatic responses & behavioral problems; increases in capacity for emotional regulation; enhancing the quality of the parent-child relationship; building capacity of partners to provide family centered trauma informed care; and ensuring trauma informed services for children are sustained after the grant ends. The institute will achieve these goals through service provision, collaboration and training. IHR uses Child-Parent Psychotherapy (CPP), the Nurturing Program for Families in Substance Abuse Treatment and Recovery, and Attachment, Regulation, and Competency (ARC). Fall River and New Bedford, the target regions, are located in the Massachusetts communities most impacted by the state's opiate abuse epidemic. BRIGHT III builds on prior IHR services in this region to develop an integrated behavioral health treatment system for young children and their parents that coordinates with primary healthcare services and supports family healing and recovery. BRIGHT III will partner with Fall River's SSTAR, which offers a full continuum of behavioral health services. BRIGHT III will also partner with Steppingstone, a SUD provider of women's residential resources. Boston University School of Social Work is an additional partner in the design and implementation of the project, and will serve as evaluators.
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| SM063115-01 | Toledo Hospital | Toledo | OH | $394,371 | 2016 | SM-16-005 | ||||
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Title: NCTSI III
Project Period: 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
The Cullen Center will focus on the needs of the children and families involved with Lucas County Children's Services (LCCS), the Child Protective Services (CPS) agency in Northwest Ohio. The Cullen Center will focus on CPS-involved youth (aged infancy to 18), their parents, and when appropriate their caregivers (e.g., foster parents, relative caregivers, and pre-adoptive/adoptive parents). The purpose of the proposed project is: (1) To increase the number of CPS-involved youth and families served by providing families with trauma-informed, evidenced-based services; and (2) Increase access to care for CPS-involved youth and families by decreasing the barriers to care. The primary service site and leadership for this project is the Cullen Center for Children, Adolescents and Families, which serves traumatized youth and their families living in Northwest Ohio. With funding from SAMHSA's National Child Traumatic Stress Initiative (NCTSN) and a partnership between Toledo Children's Hospital and Family and Child Abuse Prevention Center, Cullen Center opened its doors in 2002. The Center is housed at the hospital's pediatric outpatient clinic near downtown Toledo. In addition to direct treatment and support services, Cullen Center has trained many hundreds of professionals, community stakeholders, youth, and families on the child traumatic stress, trauma-informed care, and evidence-based treatment. The Cullen Center recognizes that military families are vulnerable and require specialized trauma-informed services. There are not a large percentage of military families in Northwest Ohio and very few access services at the Cullen Center. However, when they do present for services, the Cullen Center will be ready to provide appropriate, trauma-sensitive, and military informed services.
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| SM063115-02 | Toledo Hospital | Toledo | OH | $397,656 | 2017 | SM-16-005 | ||||
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Title: NCTSI III
Project Period: 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
The Cullen Center will focus on the needs of the children and families involved with Lucas County Children's Services (LCCS), the Child Protective Services (CPS) agency in Northwest Ohio. The Cullen Center will focus on CPS-involved youth (aged infancy to 18), their parents, and when appropriate their caregivers (e.g., foster parents, relative caregivers, and pre-adoptive/adoptive parents). The purpose of the proposed project is: (1) To increase the number of CPS-involved youth and families served by providing families with trauma-informed, evidenced-based services; and (2) Increase access to care for CPS-involved youth and families by decreasing the barriers to care. The primary service site and leadership for this project is the Cullen Center for Children, Adolescents and Families, which serves traumatized youth and their families living in Northwest Ohio. With funding from SAMHSA's National Child Traumatic Stress Initiative (NCTSN) and a partnership between Toledo Children's Hospital and Family and Child Abuse Prevention Center, Cullen Center opened its doors in 2002. The Center is housed at the hospital's pediatric outpatient clinic near downtown Toledo. In addition to direct treatment and support services, Cullen Center has trained many hundreds of professionals, community stakeholders, youth, and families on the child traumatic stress, trauma-informed care, and evidence-based treatment. The Cullen Center recognizes that military families are vulnerable and require specialized trauma-informed services. There are not a large percentage of military families in Northwest Ohio and very few access services at the Cullen Center. However, when they do present for services, the Cullen Center will be ready to provide appropriate, trauma-sensitive, and military informed services.
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| SM063116-07 | Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai | New York | NY | $202,317 | 2015 | |||||
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Title: NCTSI CAT III
Project Period: 2016/01/01 - 2016/09/29
The BI-SLR HEARTS program aims to: 1) increase the number of children, youth and families involved in child welfare, juvenile justice, and children of military families, who receive culturally-competent, evidence-based, trauma-informed services in Beth Israel outpatient clinics and at partner agencies. Screening 1,620 children, youth and families/year and 6,075/project; assessing 170/year and 638/project; and treating 90/year and 338/project; 2) train six partners in the first half of the project and six more in the second half; 3) collaborate with SAMHSA and NCTSN to disseminate NCTSN products and participate in NCTSN-led activities; and 4) increase awareness of child traumatic stress in multiple child-serving systems and promote trauma-informed policies.
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| SM063126-01 | Alliance for Inclusion and Prevention, Inc. | Jamaica Plain | MA | $400,000 | 2016 | SM-16-005 | ||||
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Title: NCTSI III
Project Period: 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
Alliance for Inclusion and Prevention, Inc. (AIP) proposes to launch the Center for Trauma Care in Schools (CTCS), a hub for training and school-based delivery of evidence- based practices to treat traumatic stress in children in Boston's public schools. The Center's goals are to improve quality and increase access to evidence-based practices for trauma and help schools become more trauma sensitive environments for children. The Center intends to achieve these goals by providing a significant new workforce development infrastructure for training school-based clinicians and clinical interns. The Center will train 530 professionals who provide clinical services in the Boston Public Schools (BPS) in the use of evidence-based screening tools and treatments for trauma. Over the grant period they will screen17, 000 Boston students for trauma (average of 3,500/year). This represents the first opportunity the school district will have had to undertake a broad trauma screening program. A parallel increase in the number of school-based clinicians to deliver EBPs for trauma will dramatically increase access for these needed services. The Center's trauma focus will align closely with the school district's initiatives to address trauma and promote social-emotional wellness. The Center will help the Boston Public Schools better serve the impact of high levels of violence and other forms of trauma among its 53,530 students, the majority of whom are classified as "High Needs," a reflection of majority low-income students from distressed and under-resourced neighborhoods.
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| SM063126-02 | Alliance for Inclusion and Prevention, Inc. | Jamaica Plain | MA | $400,000 | 2017 | SM-16-005 | ||||
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Title: NCTSI III
Project Period: 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
Alliance for Inclusion and Prevention, Inc. (AIP) proposes to launch the Center for Trauma Care in Schools (CTCS), a hub for training and school-based delivery of evidence- based practices to treat traumatic stress in children in Boston's public schools. The Center's goals are to improve quality and increase access to evidence-based practices for trauma and help schools become more trauma sensitive environments for children. The Center intends to achieve these goals by providing a significant new workforce development infrastructure for training school-based clinicians and clinical interns. The Center will train 530 professionals who provide clinical services in the Boston Public Schools (BPS) in the use of evidence-based screening tools and treatments for trauma. Over the grant period they will screen17, 000 Boston students for trauma (average of 3,500/year). This represents the first opportunity the school district will have had to undertake a broad trauma screening program. A parallel increase in the number of school-based clinicians to deliver EBPs for trauma will dramatically increase access for these needed services. The Center's trauma focus will align closely with the school district's initiatives to address trauma and promote social-emotional wellness. The Center will help the Boston Public Schools better serve the impact of high levels of violence and other forms of trauma among its 53,530 students, the majority of whom are classified as "High Needs," a reflection of majority low-income students from distressed and under-resourced neighborhoods.
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| SM063135-01 | Community Connections, Inc | Washington | DC | $399,684 | 2016 | SM-16-005 | ||||
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Title: NCTSI III
Project Period: 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
Community Connections (CC) proposes developing the Healing, Empowering, and Recovering Together (HEART) Project to serve children and families living with mental illness, addiction, and inter-generational trauma in the District of Columbia. HEART will reach and serve children 650 (plus an additional 300 in their mothers/primary caretakers) living in the poorest Wards of Washington, DC, including Ward 8. Services are for the whole family within one program utilizing Community Based Intervention (CBI) and Family Team Meetings at the core, with trauma-specific EBP offerings family members can choose amongst (TF-CBT for 1:1 child-specific recovery work, SFCR for multi-family group recovery work, and TREM for adult women's recovery work). HEART's goals are: 1) outreach to improve access of children and families with multiple ACEs to integrated behavioral health and trauma recovery treatment; 2) screen, assess, and provide behavioral health services and EBPs to improve outcomes of children, caregivers, and the family unit; 3) collaborate with NCTSI and local partners for system alignment and transformation; and 4) develop data driven approach to evaluate and sustain system change. Primary outcomes in children are: decreases in mental health symptoms, substance use, and days absent from school; improved health, social connectedness, and stability in housing; and in parents/families are: effective problem-solving, adaptive coping to threats and/or crisis, communication skills, clear family roles and routines, affective involvement and responsiveness with families. CC will team with an experienced group of child health services researchers from the University of Maryland School of Medicine led by Laurel Kiser, Ph.D., to conduct process and outcome evaluations of the project.
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| SM063135-02 | Community Connections, Inc | Washington | DC | $399,994 | 2017 | SM-16-005 | ||||
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Title: NCTSI III
Project Period: 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
Community Connections (CC) proposes developing the Healing, Empowering, and Recovering Together (HEART) Project to serve children and families living with mental illness, addiction, and inter-generational trauma in the District of Columbia. HEART will reach and serve children 650 (plus an additional 300 in their mothers/primary caretakers) living in the poorest Wards of Washington, DC, including Ward 8. Services are for the whole family within one program utilizing Community Based Intervention (CBI) and Family Team Meetings at the core, with trauma-specific EBP offerings family members can choose amongst (TF-CBT for 1:1 child-specific recovery work, SFCR for multi-family group recovery work, and TREM for adult women's recovery work). HEART's goals are: 1) outreach to improve access of children and families with multiple ACEs to integrated behavioral health and trauma recovery treatment; 2) screen, assess, and provide behavioral health services and EBPs to improve outcomes of children, caregivers, and the family unit; 3) collaborate with NCTSI and local partners for system alignment and transformation; and 4) develop data driven approach to evaluate and sustain system change. Primary outcomes in children are: decreases in mental health symptoms, substance use, and days absent from school; improved health, social connectedness, and stability in housing; and in parents/families are: effective problem-solving, adaptive coping to threats and/or crisis, communication skills, clear family roles and routines, affective involvement and responsiveness with families. CC will team with an experienced group of child health services researchers from the University of Maryland School of Medicine led by Laurel Kiser, Ph.D., to conduct process and outcome evaluations of the project.
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| SM063138-01 | Las Cumbres Community Services, Inc. | Espanola | NM | $399,999 | 2016 | SM-16-005 | ||||
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Title: NCTSI III
Project Period: 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
Las Cumbres Community Services will expand its breadth and depth of trauma screening, assessment and treatment, and strengthen its comprehensive network of evidence-based, trauma-informed service providers through the Healing Early Adversity through Resilience and Treatment (HEART) program. Las Cumbres will provide direct trauma-focused services to approximately 1,200 individuals over the project's five-year course across six counties in northern New Mexico. Las Cumbres will provide integrated evidence-based, trauma-informed therapies to families with children ages prenatal to six, with treatment available to older siblings. Las Cumbres will also increase the availability of intensive case management services, as well as trauma screening, referral and care coordination within regional primary care clinics. Las Cumbres will support family resilience through: treatment engagement and retention strategies; the early identification of Adverse Childhood Experiences; improving parent-child relationships, safety and stability; resolving traumatic stress symptoms in children and their caregivers; decreasing parental stress and mental health concerns; and restoring normal developmental trajectories within children. Las Cumbres will improve the children's system of care through leadership efforts to: increase awareness of the impact of trauma and risk exposure; increase multi-disciplinary workforce specialization in trauma-informed infant and early childhood mental health practice; and increase client and community participation in system design, implementation, and advocacy.
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| SM063138-02 | Las Cumbres Community Services, Inc. | Espanola | NM | $399,999 | 2017 | SM-16-005 | ||||
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Title: NCTSI III
Project Period: 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
Las Cumbres Community Services will expand its breadth and depth of trauma screening, assessment and treatment, and strengthen its comprehensive network of evidence-based, trauma-informed service providers through the Healing Early Adversity through Resilience and Treatment (HEART) program. Las Cumbres will provide direct trauma-focused services to approximately 1,200 individuals over the project's five-year course across six counties in northern New Mexico. Las Cumbres will provide integrated evidence-based, trauma-informed therapies to families with children ages prenatal to six, with treatment available to older siblings. Las Cumbres will also increase the availability of intensive case management services, as well as trauma screening, referral and care coordination within regional primary care clinics. Las Cumbres will support family resilience through: treatment engagement and retention strategies; the early identification of Adverse Childhood Experiences; improving parent-child relationships, safety and stability; resolving traumatic stress symptoms in children and their caregivers; decreasing parental stress and mental health concerns; and restoring normal developmental trajectories within children. Las Cumbres will improve the children's system of care through leadership efforts to: increase awareness of the impact of trauma and risk exposure; increase multi-disciplinary workforce specialization in trauma-informed infant and early childhood mental health practice; and increase client and community participation in system design, implementation, and advocacy.
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| SM063140-01 | Children's Home Society of Florida | Winter Park | FL | $400,000 | 2016 | SM-16-005 | ||||
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Title: NCTSI III
Project Period: 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
Children's Home Society of Florida (CHS), in partnership with the University of South Florida (USF) will advance the Trauma Recovery Initiative (TRI) Center through the implementation of Real Life Heroes, a culturally competent, trauma-informed treatment model, in Title I schools across NW Florida. The TRI Child and Family goal is to improve the lives of 350 children and families annually through a local pilot and the local implementation of Real Life Heroes (RLH) within partnering school districts to promote effective resolution of emotion and behavioral dysregulation reflecting complex trauma including children ages 6-12. Over the course of the length of the grant cycle, 1650 children and their families will be served by RLH. The local focus of the project will be implemented in seven different schools across three counties of Florida's northwest "Panhandle". The TRI project Clinical/Organizational goal is to strengthen CHS as a trauma-informed organization including continued implementation of CPP, PCIT, TF-CBT, and Sanctuary models. The TRI System goal is improving and strengthening the capacity of the local child serving system of care to provide trauma-focused treatment and services in the community. System intervention strategies will include the development of a community-wide, cross sector initiative to identify and mobilize resources to address the holistic needs of children who have already experienced or are at risk of experiencing trauma; as well as to promote community-wide awareness of the impact of trauma and the resources available to prevent and heal trauma.
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| SM063140-02 | Children's Home Society of Florida | Winter Park | FL | $400,000 | 2017 | SM-16-005 | ||||
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Title: NCTSI III
Project Period: 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
Children's Home Society of Florida (CHS), in partnership with the University of South Florida (USF) will advance the Trauma Recovery Initiative (TRI) Center through the implementation of Real Life Heroes, a culturally competent, trauma-informed treatment model, in Title I schools across NW Florida. The TRI Child and Family goal is to improve the lives of 350 children and families annually through a local pilot and the local implementation of Real Life Heroes (RLH) within partnering school districts to promote effective resolution of emotion and behavioral dysregulation reflecting complex trauma including children ages 6-12. Over the course of the length of the grant cycle, 1650 children and their families will be served by RLH. The local focus of the project will be implemented in seven different schools across three counties of Florida's northwest "Panhandle". The TRI project Clinical/Organizational goal is to strengthen CHS as a trauma-informed organization including continued implementation of CPP, PCIT, TF-CBT, and Sanctuary models. The TRI System goal is improving and strengthening the capacity of the local child serving system of care to provide trauma-focused treatment and services in the community. System intervention strategies will include the development of a community-wide, cross sector initiative to identify and mobilize resources to address the holistic needs of children who have already experienced or are at risk of experiencing trauma; as well as to promote community-wide awareness of the impact of trauma and the resources available to prevent and heal trauma.
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| SM063157-01 | Public Health Institute | Oakland | CA | $396,038 | 2016 | SM-16-005 | ||||
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Title: NCTSI III
Project Period: 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
In the collaboration of three key agencies: the Asian Community Mental Health Services (ACMHS), Asian Health Services (AHS), and Public Health Institute (PHI), the Trauma Informed Programs for Asian Communities (TIPAC) aims to provide trauma-informed treatment and other services to reduce psychological symptoms and behavioral problems (e.g., substance use) and promote health and well-being for Asian American and immigrants (hereafter termed "Asians") in Alameda County, CA. TIPAC will target Asian children (6 to 18 years old) and their families who have had traumatic experiences due to the refugee/immigration process, being children of deployed military personnel, child abuse, and other traumatic events (e.g., exposure to war and disaster). In collaboration with stakeholders, local CBOs, and the Public Health Department, TIPAC will conduct community and online outreach and recruit the targeted Asian children and families who are suffering from trauma. The counselors at ACMHS and AHS will provide trauma-informed treatment and other programs based on EBPs (IFACES and TF-CBT) and monitor the progress of clients. The efficacy of TIPAC will be evaluated utilizing GPRA/NOMs and local measures. Based on the collaboration with service providers, TIPAC will also facilitate system level changes in child-serving systems to improve access, use, and outcomes of trauma-informed treatment and other services. Results of the process and outcome evaluation will be reported to SAMHSA and the targeted communities through community forums and newsletters. Through direct individual and system level interventions, TIPAC will have a significant impact on increasing access, use, and outcomes of trauma-informed treatment and other services for Asian children and families who are suffering from trauma but have been neglected by mental health and other service providers.
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| SM063157-02 | Public Health Institute | Oakland | CA | $398,712 | 2017 | SM-16-005 | ||||
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Title: NCTSI III
Project Period: 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
In the collaboration of three key agencies: the Asian Community Mental Health Services (ACMHS), Asian Health Services (AHS), and Public Health Institute (PHI), the Trauma Informed Programs for Asian Communities (TIPAC) aims to provide trauma-informed treatment and other services to reduce psychological symptoms and behavioral problems (e.g., substance use) and promote health and well-being for Asian American and immigrants (hereafter termed "Asians") in Alameda County, CA. TIPAC will target Asian children (6 to 18 years old) and their families who have had traumatic experiences due to the refugee/immigration process, being children of deployed military personnel, child abuse, and other traumatic events (e.g., exposure to war and disaster). In collaboration with stakeholders, local CBOs, and the Public Health Department, TIPAC will conduct community and online outreach and recruit the targeted Asian children and families who are suffering from trauma. The counselors at ACMHS and AHS will provide trauma-informed treatment and other programs based on EBPs (IFACES and TF-CBT) and monitor the progress of clients. The efficacy of TIPAC will be evaluated utilizing GPRA/NOMs and local measures. Based on the collaboration with service providers, TIPAC will also facilitate system level changes in child-serving systems to improve access, use, and outcomes of trauma-informed treatment and other services. Results of the process and outcome evaluation will be reported to SAMHSA and the targeted communities through community forums and newsletters. Through direct individual and system level interventions, TIPAC will have a significant impact on increasing access, use, and outcomes of trauma-informed treatment and other services for Asian children and families who are suffering from trauma but have been neglected by mental health and other service providers.
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| SM063162-01 | Chris Kids, Inc. | Atlanta | GA | $394,987 | 2016 | SM-16-005 | ||||
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Title: NCTSI III
Project Period: 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
The ARC and Trauma STARS program is the establishment of a Trauma-Informed Mental Health Workforce, School Referral Network and Learning Collaborative to support trauma-focused services for uninsured or under insured children and young adults age 5-15 in identified Title 1 elementary and middle schools in Fulton and DeKalb Counties in Georgia and evidence-based trauma treatment for traumatized youth throughout the state. The purpose of this program is to implement a project composed of five goals/objectives: 1) To increase school-based ARC services by delivering trauma-focused treatment and services in eight target schools. 2) To develop trauma-informed school environments and train school staff on trauma-informed practices aimed at transforming the culture from punitive to trauma-focused. 3) To develop a trauma-informed School Referral Network designed to train school staff in target and non-target schools. 4) To provide ARC training of mental health workers across the state on trauma-informed practices and form an ARC Collaborative that offers support, training and coaching to members. 5) To create an interactive, informative website where professionals and the public can go to find information, get referrals, register for training, receive coaching, and obtain support.
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Displaying 35251 - 35275 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 |