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Displaying 101 - 125 out of 413
| Award Number | Organization | City | State | Amount | Award FY | NOFO | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SM061924-02 | Turtle Mountain Tribe | Belcourt | ND | $175,365 | 2015 | SM-14-013 | ||||
|
Title: Native Connections
Project Period: 2014/09/30 - 2019/09/29
Short Title: Native Connections Goals: To be achieved through collaborations and determined interventions 1. Continue to educate our Tribal community that suicide is a public health problem that is preventable and provide suicide prevention related programs in all area schools. 2. Develop Memorandum of Understanding agreements with a broad spectrum of Tribal entities to generate greater and more effective attention to suicide prevention and a referral process. 3. Enhance strategies to reduce the stigma associated with participating in mental health, substance abuse and suicide prevention services. 4. Develop postvention protocols that are in concert with our culture and beliefs. 5. Implement suicide prevention surveillance data collection and evaluation. Measurable objectives include: 1. Collaborate with a minimum of 14 Tribal entities utilizing a written MOU that will define a referral process and the role of each stakeholder for suicide prevention. 2. Screen 400 youth utilizing Signs of Suicide program. 3. Holding quarterly community forums to educate the public about suicide, recognizing at-risk behaviors, suicide prevention and community support. 4. Monthly review of surveillance data and quarterly reporting of data. 5. Train and educate mental health professionals, medical professionals, educators, law enforcement, youth program staff, juvenile court staff two times yearly. 6. Reduce the number of suicide attempts by 10% each year of the Native Connections program. 7. Provide prevention services and activities to 900 youth and 300 adults annually. 8. Monthly messaging utilizing local and social media to disseminate suicide prevention information. 9. Train 80 youth as peer leaders and 30 adult as mentors using Sources of Strength training curriculum. 10. Recruit 12 - 14 community leaders to participate on the advisory committee; conduct and document monthly.
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| SM061924-03 | Turtle Mountain Tribe | Belcourt | ND | $182,942 | 2016 | SM-14-013 | ||||
|
Title: Native Connections
Project Period: 2014/09/30 - 2019/09/29
Short Title: Native Connections Goals: To be achieved through collaborations and determined interventions 1. Continue to educate our Tribal community that suicide is a public health problem that is preventable and provide suicide prevention related programs in all area schools. 2. Develop Memorandum of Understanding agreements with a broad spectrum of Tribal entities to generate greater and more effective attention to suicide prevention and a referral process. 3. Enhance strategies to reduce the stigma associated with participating in mental health, substance abuse and suicide prevention services. 4. Develop postvention protocols that are in concert with our culture and beliefs. 5. Implement suicide prevention surveillance data collection and evaluation. Measurable objectives include: 1. Collaborate with a minimum of 14 Tribal entities utilizing a written MOU that will define a referral process and the role of each stakeholder for suicide prevention. 2. Screen 400 youth utilizing Signs of Suicide program. 3. Holding quarterly community forums to educate the public about suicide, recognizing at-risk behaviors, suicide prevention and community support. 4. Monthly review of surveillance data and quarterly reporting of data. 5. Train and educate mental health professionals, medical professionals, educators, law enforcement, youth program staff, juvenile court staff two times yearly. 6. Reduce the number of suicide attempts by 10% each year of the Native Connections program. 7. Provide prevention services and activities to 900 youth and 300 adults annually. 8. Monthly messaging utilizing local and social media to disseminate suicide prevention information. 9. Train 80 youth as peer leaders and 30 adult as mentors using Sources of Strength training curriculum. 10. Recruit 12 - 14 community leaders to participate on the advisory committee; conduct and document monthly.
|
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| SM061924-04 | Turtle Mountain Tribe | Belcourt | ND | $178,147 | 2017 | SM-14-013 | ||||
|
Title: Native Connections
Project Period: 2014/09/30 - 2019/09/29
Short Title: Native Connections Goals: To be achieved through collaborations and determined interventions 1. Continue to educate our Tribal community that suicide is a public health problem that is preventable and provide suicide prevention related programs in all area schools. 2. Develop Memorandum of Understanding agreements with a broad spectrum of Tribal entities to generate greater and more effective attention to suicide prevention and a referral process. 3. Enhance strategies to reduce the stigma associated with participating in mental health, substance abuse and suicide prevention services. 4. Develop postvention protocols that are in concert with our culture and beliefs. 5. Implement suicide prevention surveillance data collection and evaluation. Measurable objectives include: 1. Collaborate with a minimum of 14 Tribal entities utilizing a written MOU that will define a referral process and the role of each stakeholder for suicide prevention. 2. Screen 400 youth utilizing Signs of Suicide program. 3. Holding quarterly community forums to educate the public about suicide, recognizing at-risk behaviors, suicide prevention and community support. 4. Monthly review of surveillance data and quarterly reporting of data. 5. Train and educate mental health professionals, medical professionals, educators, law enforcement, youth program staff, juvenile court staff two times yearly. 6. Reduce the number of suicide attempts by 10% each year of the Native Connections program. 7. Provide prevention services and activities to 900 youth and 300 adults annually. 8. Monthly messaging utilizing local and social media to disseminate suicide prevention information. 9. Train 80 youth as peer leaders and 30 adult as mentors using Sources of Strength training curriculum. 10. Recruit 12 - 14 community leaders to participate on the advisory committee; conduct and document monthly.
|
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| SM061926-01 | Kickapoo Tribe in Kansas | Horton | KS | $200,000 | 2014 | SM-14-013 | ||||
|
Title: Native Connections
Short Title: Native Connections Kickapoo Native Connections
|
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| SM061926-02 | Kickapoo Tribe in Kansas | Horton | KS | $200,000 | 2015 | SM-14-013 | ||||
|
Title: Native Connections
Project Period: 2014/09/30 - 2019/09/29
Short Title: Native Connections The Kickapoo Tribe in Kansas (KTIK) is proposing a Tier 1 project. Kansas Department of Health and Environment (KDHE) indicate that the adjusted suicide rate among people ages 10 through 24 in the KTIK service area is 22.6 deaths per 100,000. KTIK lacks a comprehensive framework for preventive services to reduce risk factors for youth suicide and substance and promote protective factors for mental health. KTIK even lacks the information-gathering capabilities to paint an accurate portrait of the tribe's needs and tribal data is virtually nonexistent. Youth residing on the Kickapoo reservation may be acutely at-risk. The Kiikaapoa (Kickapoo) Native Connections Project vision for suicide prevention, substance abuse prevention and mental health promotion is to create a comprehensive, coordinated system of services and supports where youth in the community can thrive. Through an integrated tribal-community partnership, KTIK will increase awareness of risk factors, share information, and establish a protocol for identifying and addressing youth who are at high risk. Project Goals are to: Create a holistic model of wellness for youth in the Kickapoo community that guides the development of a tribal and local services prevention network; Provide an environment where youth in the Kickapoo community can thrive; Provide concrete supports to youth who are at high risk for suicide. KTIK will work closely with the Center for Public Partnerships and Research at the University of Kansas, which will provide technical assistance, data collection, evaluation, and reporting support. KTIK departments (Kickapoo Social Services, Kickapoo Nation Health Center, Adult Drug Court) will integrate assistance and services provided into a lasting infrastructure for providing substance abuse, suicide prevention, and mental health services to youth aged 10 - 24 years.
|
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| SM061926-03 | Kickapoo Tribe in Kansas | Horton | KS | $200,000 | 2016 | SM-14-013 | ||||
|
Title: Native Connections
Project Period: 2014/09/30 - 2019/09/29
Short Title: Native Connections The Kickapoo Tribe in Kansas (KTIK) is proposing a Tier 1 project. Kansas Department of Health and Environment (KDHE) indicate that the adjusted suicide rate among people ages 10 through 24 in the KTIK service area is 22.6 deaths per 100,000. KTIK lacks a comprehensive framework for preventive services to reduce risk factors for youth suicide and substance and promote protective factors for mental health. KTIK even lacks the information-gathering capabilities to paint an accurate portrait of the tribe's needs and tribal data is virtually nonexistent. Youth residing on the Kickapoo reservation may be acutely at-risk. The Kiikaapoa (Kickapoo) Native Connections Project vision for suicide prevention, substance abuse prevention and mental health promotion is to create a comprehensive, coordinated system of services and supports where youth in the community can thrive. Through an integrated tribal-community partnership, KTIK will increase awareness of risk factors, share information, and establish a protocol for identifying and addressing youth who are at high risk. Project Goals are to: Create a holistic model of wellness for youth in the Kickapoo community that guides the development of a tribal and local services prevention network; Provide an environment where youth in the Kickapoo community can thrive; Provide concrete supports to youth who are at high risk for suicide. KTIK will work closely with the Center for Public Partnerships and Research at the University of Kansas, which will provide technical assistance, data collection, evaluation, and reporting support. KTIK departments (Kickapoo Social Services, Kickapoo Nation Health Center, Adult Drug Court) will integrate assistance and services provided into a lasting infrastructure for providing substance abuse, suicide prevention, and mental health services to youth aged 10 - 24 years.
|
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| SM061926-04 | Kickapoo Tribe in Kansas | Horton | KS | $93,049 | 2017 | SM-14-013 | ||||
|
Title: Native Connections
Project Period: 2014/09/30 - 2019/09/29
Short Title: Native Connections The Kickapoo Tribe in Kansas (KTIK) is proposing a Tier 1 project. Kansas Department of Health and Environment (KDHE) indicate that the adjusted suicide rate among people ages 10 through 24 in the KTIK service area is 22.6 deaths per 100,000. KTIK lacks a comprehensive framework for preventive services to reduce risk factors for youth suicide and substance and promote protective factors for mental health. KTIK even lacks the information-gathering capabilities to paint an accurate portrait of the tribe's needs and tribal data is virtually nonexistent. Youth residing on the Kickapoo reservation may be acutely at-risk. The Kiikaapoa (Kickapoo) Native Connections Project vision for suicide prevention, substance abuse prevention and mental health promotion is to create a comprehensive, coordinated system of services and supports where youth in the community can thrive. Through an integrated tribal-community partnership, KTIK will increase awareness of risk factors, share information, and establish a protocol for identifying and addressing youth who are at high risk. Project Goals are to: Create a holistic model of wellness for youth in the Kickapoo community that guides the development of a tribal and local services prevention network; Provide an environment where youth in the Kickapoo community can thrive; Provide concrete supports to youth who are at high risk for suicide. KTIK will work closely with the Center for Public Partnerships and Research at the University of Kansas, which will provide technical assistance, data collection, evaluation, and reporting support. KTIK departments (Kickapoo Social Services, Kickapoo Nation Health Center, Adult Drug Court) will integrate assistance and services provided into a lasting infrastructure for providing substance abuse, suicide prevention, and mental health services to youth aged 10 - 24 years.
|
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| SM061931-01 | Delaware State Department of Services for Children, Youth and Their Families | Wilmington | DE | $1,000,000 | 2014 | SM-14-017 | ||||
|
Title: Healthy Transitions
Short Title: NITT-Healthy Transitions (NITT-HT) Project Community Outreach, Referral and Early Intervention (CORE)
|
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| SM061931-02 | Delaware State Department of Services for Children, Youth and Their Families | Wilmington | DE | $1,037,360 | 2015 | SM-14-017 | ||||
|
Title: Healthy Transitions
Project Period: 2014/09/30 - 2019/09/29
Short Title: NITT-Healthy Transitions (NITT-HT) CORE aims to improve long term outcomes for 16-25 year old Delawareans that have high risk for psychosis or have recently experienced a first episode in the past year. Working with key stakeholders, Delaware will improve these outcomes by bringing together family and youth service recipients, community liaisons and project staff into a Transition Team charged with the collective responsibility of: (1) increasing public awareness of psychosis and its early signs; (2) establishing a network of informed citizens and professionals to identify, engage and refer youth at possible risk for psychosis; (3) establishing personal contacts for those referred within 48 hours to screen for assessment eligibility; (4) delivering assessments to those eligible within 1 week of referral to determine treatment eligibility; (5) delivering treatment to those eligible based on the PIER Model developed by the Maine Medical Center; (6) track the effect of race/ethnicity on assessments, service delivery and outcomes and insure that African Americans and Hispanics are adequately represented in CORE; and (7) collaborate with local insurers to guarantee future accessibility and sustainability of this service.
|
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| SM061931-03 | Delaware State Department of Services for Children, Youth and Their Families | Wilmington | DE | $1,000,000 | 2016 | SM-14-017 | ||||
|
Title: Healthy Transitions
Project Period: 2014/09/30 - 2019/09/29
Short Title: NITT-Healthy Transitions (NITT-HT) CORE aims to improve long term outcomes for 16-25 year old Delawareans that have high risk for psychosis or have recently experienced a first episode in the past year. Working with key stakeholders, Delaware will improve these outcomes by bringing together family and youth service recipients, community liaisons and project staff into a Transition Team charged with the collective responsibility of: (1) increasing public awareness of psychosis and its early signs; (2) establishing a network of informed citizens and professionals to identify, engage and refer youth at possible risk for psychosis; (3) establishing personal contacts for those referred within 48 hours to screen for assessment eligibility; (4) delivering assessments to those eligible within 1 week of referral to determine treatment eligibility; (5) delivering treatment to those eligible based on the PIER Model developed by the Maine Medical Center; (6) track the effect of race/ethnicity on assessments, service delivery and outcomes and insure that African Americans and Hispanics are adequately represented in CORE; and (7) collaborate with local insurers to guarantee future accessibility and sustainability of this service.
|
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| SM061931-04 | Delaware State Department of Services for Children, Youth and Their Families | Wilmington | DE | $600,794 | 2017 | SM-14-017 | ||||
|
Title: Healthy Transitions
Project Period: 2014/09/30 - 2019/09/29
Short Title: NITT-Healthy Transitions (NITT-HT) CORE aims to improve long term outcomes for 16-25 year old Delawareans that have high risk for psychosis or have recently experienced a first episode in the past year. Working with key stakeholders, Delaware will improve these outcomes by bringing together family and youth service recipients, community liaisons and project staff into a Transition Team charged with the collective responsibility of: (1) increasing public awareness of psychosis and its early signs; (2) establishing a network of informed citizens and professionals to identify, engage and refer youth at possible risk for psychosis; (3) establishing personal contacts for those referred within 48 hours to screen for assessment eligibility; (4) delivering assessments to those eligible within 1 week of referral to determine treatment eligibility; (5) delivering treatment to those eligible based on the PIER Model developed by the Maine Medical Center; (6) track the effect of race/ethnicity on assessments, service delivery and outcomes and insure that African Americans and Hispanics are adequately represented in CORE; and (7) collaborate with local insurers to guarantee future accessibility and sustainability of this service.
|
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| SM061933-01 | Seneca Nation of Indians | Salamanca | NY | $195,481 | 2014 | SM-14-013 | ||||
|
Title: Native Connections
Short Title: Native Connections Seneca Nations Native Connection Program
|
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| SM061933-02 | Seneca Nation of Indians | Salamanca | NY | $162,558 | 2015 | SM-14-013 | ||||
|
Title: Native Connections
Project Period: 2014/09/30 - 2019/09/29
Short Title: Native Connections The Native Connection Funding Program has three objectives: 1)To coordinate all suicide and drug and alcohol prevention and intervention programs and efforts to create a community-driven and focused effort 2)To conduct, participate in, and implement tribal best practices training and educational opportunities for suicide, drug and alcohol prevention, assessment, and intervention; and 3)To create and implement tribally specific prevention and intervention education, awareness, and recreational programming opportunities. The Program will establish a cross-departmental team to evaluate current policies on suicide, drug and alcohol assessment, intervention, and the referral process to determine those systems that require either revision or establishment of new procedures in order to meet the Nation's need to receive interventions in a timely and effective manner. Emphasis will be placed on streamlining service delivery to reduce duplication in services. Policies will be developed for youth suicide assessment and intervention, youth drug and alcohol assessment and intervention, and postvention for suicide and attempted suicide. Once new policies and procedures have been revised and/or developed, education and training will be conducted for all agencies, organizations, and formal/informal youth activity staff in the areas of suicide, drug, and alcohol prevention, assessment, intervention, and postvention. "Connect - Training Professionals and Communities in Suicide Prevention and Response" will be utilized for all pertinent SNI staff members, as well as for community partners. Alternative therapies/intervention options (including EMDR - Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing) will be explored, diversity training will be provided, and a referral system for dissemination of information will be instituted.
|
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| SM061933-03 | Seneca Nation of Indians | Salamanca | NY | $147,558 | 2016 | SM-14-013 | ||||
|
Title: Native Connections
Project Period: 2014/09/30 - 2019/09/29
Short Title: Native Connections The Native Connection Funding Program has three objectives: 1)To coordinate all suicide and drug and alcohol prevention and intervention programs and efforts to create a community-driven and focused effort 2)To conduct, participate in, and implement tribal best practices training and educational opportunities for suicide, drug and alcohol prevention, assessment, and intervention; and 3)To create and implement tribally specific prevention and intervention education, awareness, and recreational programming opportunities. The Program will establish a cross-departmental team to evaluate current policies on suicide, drug and alcohol assessment, intervention, and the referral process to determine those systems that require either revision or establishment of new procedures in order to meet the Nation's need to receive interventions in a timely and effective manner. Emphasis will be placed on streamlining service delivery to reduce duplication in services. Policies will be developed for youth suicide assessment and intervention, youth drug and alcohol assessment and intervention, and postvention for suicide and attempted suicide. Once new policies and procedures have been revised and/or developed, education and training will be conducted for all agencies, organizations, and formal/informal youth activity staff in the areas of suicide, drug, and alcohol prevention, assessment, intervention, and postvention. "Connect - Training Professionals and Communities in Suicide Prevention and Response" will be utilized for all pertinent SNI staff members, as well as for community partners. Alternative therapies/intervention options (including EMDR - Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing) will be explored, diversity training will be provided, and a referral system for dissemination of information will be instituted.
|
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| SM061933-04 | Seneca Nation of Indians | Salamanca | NY | $142,558 | 2017 | SM-14-013 | ||||
|
Title: Native Connections
Project Period: 2014/09/30 - 2019/09/29
Short Title: Native Connections The Native Connection Funding Program has three objectives: 1)To coordinate all suicide and drug and alcohol prevention and intervention programs and efforts to create a community-driven and focused effort 2)To conduct, participate in, and implement tribal best practices training and educational opportunities for suicide, drug and alcohol prevention, assessment, and intervention; and 3)To create and implement tribally specific prevention and intervention education, awareness, and recreational programming opportunities. The Program will establish a cross-departmental team to evaluate current policies on suicide, drug and alcohol assessment, intervention, and the referral process to determine those systems that require either revision or establishment of new procedures in order to meet the Nation's need to receive interventions in a timely and effective manner. Emphasis will be placed on streamlining service delivery to reduce duplication in services. Policies will be developed for youth suicide assessment and intervention, youth drug and alcohol assessment and intervention, and postvention for suicide and attempted suicide. Once new policies and procedures have been revised and/or developed, education and training will be conducted for all agencies, organizations, and formal/informal youth activity staff in the areas of suicide, drug, and alcohol prevention, assessment, intervention, and postvention. "Connect - Training Professionals and Communities in Suicide Prevention and Response" will be utilized for all pertinent SNI staff members, as well as for community partners. Alternative therapies/intervention options (including EMDR - Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing) will be explored, diversity training will be provided, and a referral system for dissemination of information will be instituted.
|
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| SM061934-01 | Standing Rock Sioux Tribe | Fort Yates | ND | $199,950 | 2014 | SM-14-013 | ||||
|
Title: Native Connections
Short Title: Native Connections Prevent-Respond-Support
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| SM061934-02 | Standing Rock Sioux Tribe | Fort Yates | ND | $199,996 | 2015 | SM-14-013 | ||||
|
Title: Native Connections
Project Period: 2014/09/30 - 2019/09/29
Short Title: Native Connections Creating Sustainable Community-Based Programming for Suicide Prevention at Standing Rock Sioux Tribe (SRST) Purpose: To expand the capacity of the Tribal mental health care system to address Tier 1 and Tier 2 prevention efforts in: a) preventing suicide by empowerment of communities through support & training; b) responding to those youth/young adults at increased risk for suicide; & c) supporting youth, young adults, & families of the Standing Rock Nation to combat the roots of suicide risk by drawing on the strengths of Lakota values & spiritual traditions.
|
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| SM061934-03 | Standing Rock Sioux Tribe | Fort Yates | ND | $199,996 | 2016 | SM-14-013 | ||||
|
Title: Native Connections
Project Period: 2014/09/30 - 2019/09/29
Short Title: Native Connections Creating Sustainable Community-Based Programming for Suicide Prevention at Standing Rock Sioux Tribe (SRST) Purpose: To expand the capacity of the Tribal mental health care system to address Tier 1 and Tier 2 prevention efforts in: a) preventing suicide by empowerment of communities through support & training; b) responding to those youth/young adults at increased risk for suicide; & c) supporting youth, young adults, & families of the Standing Rock Nation to combat the roots of suicide risk by drawing on the strengths of Lakota values & spiritual traditions.
|
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| SM061903-02 | D. C. Department of Behavioral Health | Washington | DC | $1,037,359 | 2015 | SM-14-017 | ||||
|
Title: Healthy Transitions
Project Period: 2014/09/30 - 2019/09/29
Short Title: NITT-Healthy Transitions (NITT-HT) The Washington DC Department of Behavioral Health will design and implement a transition age youth-focused system of care (SOC) in partnership with key city agencies, core service agencies, community-based organizations, health care providers, and family and youth networks. This SOC for 16 to 25 year olds, called the DC Transition Age Youth Initiative, will be delivered by Department of Behavioral Health's Core Service Agencies (CSAs). The CSAs will provide transition age youth-specific care planning, wraparound, evidence-based practices and recovery supports, and will employ Transition Specialists specifically trained to address the needs of transition age youth and provide customized, individual plans of care to successfully transition them to adulthood. This Initiative is designed to overcome the current fragmented and siloed system of care that complicates access to appropriate services for this age group, currently straddling the child and adult mental health systems, and replace it with a system where all services are transition age youth-focused. Youth and young adults will receive continuous, developmentally appropriate mental health treatment, guidance in moving towards self-sufficiency, and a full menu of recovery supports in the realms of education, employment and housing-the key domains represented in the transition to adulthood.
|
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| SM061903-03 | D. C. Department of Behavioral Health | Washington | DC | $999,999 | 2016 | SM-14-017 | ||||
|
Title: Healthy Transitions
Project Period: 2014/09/30 - 2019/09/29
Short Title: NITT-Healthy Transitions (NITT-HT) The Washington DC Department of Behavioral Health will design and implement a transition age youth-focused system of care (SOC) in partnership with key city agencies, core service agencies, community-based organizations, health care providers, and family and youth networks. This SOC for 16 to 25 year olds, called the DC Transition Age Youth Initiative, will be delivered by Department of Behavioral Health's Core Service Agencies (CSAs). The CSAs will provide transition age youth-specific care planning, wraparound, evidence-based practices and recovery supports, and will employ Transition Specialists specifically trained to address the needs of transition age youth and provide customized, individual plans of care to successfully transition them to adulthood. This Initiative is designed to overcome the current fragmented and siloed system of care that complicates access to appropriate services for this age group, currently straddling the child and adult mental health systems, and replace it with a system where all services are transition age youth-focused. Youth and young adults will receive continuous, developmentally appropriate mental health treatment, guidance in moving towards self-sufficiency, and a full menu of recovery supports in the realms of education, employment and housing-the key domains represented in the transition to adulthood.
|
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| SM061903-04 | D. C. Department of Behavioral Health | Washington | DC | $999,999 | 2017 | SM-14-017 | ||||
|
Title: Healthy Transitions
Project Period: 2014/09/30 - 2019/09/29
Short Title: NITT-Healthy Transitions (NITT-HT) The Washington DC Department of Behavioral Health will design and implement a transition age youth-focused system of care (SOC) in partnership with key city agencies, core service agencies, community-based organizations, health care providers, and family and youth networks. This SOC for 16 to 25 year olds, called the DC Transition Age Youth Initiative, will be delivered by Department of Behavioral Health's Core Service Agencies (CSAs). The CSAs will provide transition age youth-specific care planning, wraparound, evidence-based practices and recovery supports, and will employ Transition Specialists specifically trained to address the needs of transition age youth and provide customized, individual plans of care to successfully transition them to adulthood. This Initiative is designed to overcome the current fragmented and siloed system of care that complicates access to appropriate services for this age group, currently straddling the child and adult mental health systems, and replace it with a system where all services are transition age youth-focused. Youth and young adults will receive continuous, developmentally appropriate mental health treatment, guidance in moving towards self-sufficiency, and a full menu of recovery supports in the realms of education, employment and housing-the key domains represented in the transition to adulthood.
|
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| SM061904-01 | Tanana Chiefs Conference, Inc. | Fairbanks | AK | $199,342 | 2014 | SM-14-013 | ||||
|
Title: Native Connections
Short Title: Native Connections Native Connections Project
|
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| SM061904-02 | Tanana Chiefs Conference, Inc. | Fairbanks | AK | $199,342 | 2015 | SM-14-013 | ||||
|
Title: Native Connections
Project Period: 2014/09/30 - 2019/09/29
Short Title: Native Connections The Tanana Chiefs Conference Native Connections project will serve the Yukon-Koyukuk Subregion, which includes six Alaska Native tribal communities: Galena, Huslia, Kaltag, Koyukuk, Nulato, and Ruby. The Native Connections project will create community-generated, coordinated approaches to preventing and reducing suicidal behavior and increase emotional well-being among children and youth as well as their families and the Yukon-Koyukuk Sub-Region communities at large. Our goal for this project is to reduce the youth suicide rate in the TCC region by increasing 1) the number of youth who are referred for behavioral health care services; 2) the number of youth at risk for suicide who receive behavioral health services; and 3) the number of youth at risk for suicide who have positive outcomes as a result of behavioral health services. To reach this goal, TCC will: First, build the Yukon-Koyukuk Sub-region's community resiliency to engage in community planning for suicide prevention, intervention and postvention by facilitating Gatherings of Native Americans in each of the communities, and training local facilitators to carry on GONA after funding ends. We anticipate that at least half of the adults and a quarter of the youth ages 10-24 will participate in the GONA activities. As a result, our participating communities will develop a shared community foundation from which they are able to address common goals, identify, experience, and express the impact of multigenerational trauma for the purposes of moving toward resolution, acquiring a vision of self in context of the family and community, and recognizing the community interdependence and building upon it. 2. Engage the communities in planning for suicide prevention, intervention and postvention by facilitating the development of community-led protocols that address suicide postvention and suicide attempts and facilitating the development of community suicide prevention plans in each of the six communities.
|
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| SM061904-03 | Tanana Chiefs Conference, Inc. | Fairbanks | AK | $199,342 | 2016 | SM-14-013 | ||||
|
Title: Native Connections
Project Period: 2014/09/30 - 2019/09/29
Short Title: Native Connections The Tanana Chiefs Conference Native Connections project will serve the Yukon-Koyukuk Subregion, which includes six Alaska Native tribal communities: Galena, Huslia, Kaltag, Koyukuk, Nulato, and Ruby. The Native Connections project will create community-generated, coordinated approaches to preventing and reducing suicidal behavior and increase emotional well-being among children and youth as well as their families and the Yukon-Koyukuk Sub-Region communities at large. Our goal for this project is to reduce the youth suicide rate in the TCC region by increasing 1) the number of youth who are referred for behavioral health care services; 2) the number of youth at risk for suicide who receive behavioral health services; and 3) the number of youth at risk for suicide who have positive outcomes as a result of behavioral health services. To reach this goal, TCC will: First, build the Yukon-Koyukuk Sub-region's community resiliency to engage in community planning for suicide prevention, intervention and postvention by facilitating Gatherings of Native Americans in each of the communities, and training local facilitators to carry on GONA after funding ends. We anticipate that at least half of the adults and a quarter of the youth ages 10-24 will participate in the GONA activities. As a result, our participating communities will develop a shared community foundation from which they are able to address common goals, identify, experience, and express the impact of multigenerational trauma for the purposes of moving toward resolution, acquiring a vision of self in context of the family and community, and recognizing the community interdependence and building upon it. 2. Engage the communities in planning for suicide prevention, intervention and postvention by facilitating the development of community-led protocols that address suicide postvention and suicide attempts and facilitating the development of community suicide prevention plans in each of the six communities.
|
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| SM061904-04 | Tanana Chiefs Conference, Inc. | Fairbanks | AK | $199,342 | 2017 | SM-14-013 | ||||
|
Title: Native Connections
Project Period: 2014/09/30 - 2019/09/29
Short Title: Native Connections The Tanana Chiefs Conference Native Connections project will serve the Yukon-Koyukuk Subregion, which includes six Alaska Native tribal communities: Galena, Huslia, Kaltag, Koyukuk, Nulato, and Ruby. The Native Connections project will create community-generated, coordinated approaches to preventing and reducing suicidal behavior and increase emotional well-being among children and youth as well as their families and the Yukon-Koyukuk Sub-Region communities at large. Our goal for this project is to reduce the youth suicide rate in the TCC region by increasing 1) the number of youth who are referred for behavioral health care services; 2) the number of youth at risk for suicide who receive behavioral health services; and 3) the number of youth at risk for suicide who have positive outcomes as a result of behavioral health services. To reach this goal, TCC will: First, build the Yukon-Koyukuk Sub-region's community resiliency to engage in community planning for suicide prevention, intervention and postvention by facilitating Gatherings of Native Americans in each of the communities, and training local facilitators to carry on GONA after funding ends. We anticipate that at least half of the adults and a quarter of the youth ages 10-24 will participate in the GONA activities. As a result, our participating communities will develop a shared community foundation from which they are able to address common goals, identify, experience, and express the impact of multigenerational trauma for the purposes of moving toward resolution, acquiring a vision of self in context of the family and community, and recognizing the community interdependence and building upon it. 2. Engage the communities in planning for suicide prevention, intervention and postvention by facilitating the development of community-led protocols that address suicide postvention and suicide attempts and facilitating the development of community suicide prevention plans in each of the six communities.
|
||||||||||
Short Title: Native Connections
Short Title: Native Connections
Short Title: Native Connections
Short Title: Native Connections
Short Title: Native Connections
Short Title: Native Connections
Short Title: Native Connections
Short Title: NITT-Healthy Transitions (NITT-HT)
Short Title: NITT-Healthy Transitions (NITT-HT)
Short Title: NITT-Healthy Transitions (NITT-HT)
Short Title: NITT-Healthy Transitions (NITT-HT)
Short Title: Native Connections
Short Title: Native Connections
Short Title: Native Connections
Short Title: Native Connections
Short Title: Native Connections
Short Title: Native Connections
Short Title: Native Connections
Short Title: NITT-Healthy Transitions (NITT-HT)
Short Title: NITT-Healthy Transitions (NITT-HT)
Short Title: NITT-Healthy Transitions (NITT-HT)
Short Title: Native Connections
Short Title: Native Connections
Short Title: Native Connections
Short Title: Native Connections
Displaying 36276 - 36300 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 |