Short Title EMS Training
Due Date
Center CSAT
FAQ's / Webinars
NOFO Number TI-22-001 (Initial)

Short Title Harm Reduction
Due Date
Center CSAP
NOFO Number SP-22-001 (Modified)

Short Title 988 State and Territory Cooperative Agreements
Due Date
Center CMHS
FAQ's / Webinars View Webinar
NOFO Number SM-22-015 (Initial)

Short Title
Due Date
Center CSAT
FAQ's / Webinars
NOFO Number TI-22-099 (Initial)

Short Title
Due Date
Center CMHS
FAQ's / Webinars
NOFO Number SM-22-F1 (Initial)

Short Title TTA-CCBHC
Due Date
Center CMHS
FAQ's / Webinars
NOFO Number SM-21-015 (Initial)

Short Title CMHC
Due Date
Center CMHS
FAQ's / Webinars FAQ Document
NOFO Number SM-21-014 (Modified)

Short Title FR-CARA
Due Date
Center CSAT
FAQ's / Webinars
NOFO Number TI-21-009 (Initial)

Short Title SPF Rx
Due Date
Center CSAP
FAQ's / Webinars
NOFO Number SP-21-001 (Modified)

Short Title MAT-PDOA
Due Date
Center CSAT
FAQ's / Webinars
NOFO Number TI-21-006 (Initial)

Short Title PCSS-Universities
Due Date
Center CSAT
FAQ's / Webinars
NOFO Number TI-21-003 (Initial)

Short Title SBIRT
Due Date
Center CSAT
FAQ's / Webinars
NOFO Number TI-21-008 (Initial)

Short Title AWARE-SEA
Due Date
Center CMHS
FAQ's / Webinars
NOFO Number SM-21-006 (Modified)

Short Title TOR
Due Date
Center CSAT
FAQ's / Webinars
NOFO Number TI-21-007 (Modified)

Short Title EMS Training
Due Date
Center CSAT
FAQ's / Webinars
NOFO Number TI-21-005 (Modified)

Short Title CCBHC Expansion Grants
Due Date
Center CMHS
FAQ's / Webinars
NOFO Number SM-21-013 (Initial)

Short Title PDO
Due Date
Center CSAP
FAQ's / Webinars
NOFO Number SP-21-002 (Initial)

Short Title NCTSI II
Due Date
Center CMHS
FAQ's / Webinars
NOFO Number SM-21-009 (Modified)

Short Title PPW-PLT
Due Date
Center CSAT
FAQ's / Webinars
NOFO Number TI-21-002 (Modified)

Short Title ReCAST Program
Due Date
Center CMHS
FAQ's / Webinars
NOFO Number SM-21-012 (Modified)

Short Title BCOR
Due Date
Center CSAT
FAQ's / Webinars
NOFO Number TI-21-004 (Modified)

Short Title NCTSI I
Due Date
Center CMHS
FAQ's / Webinars
NOFO Number SM-21-008 (Modified)

Short Title NCTSI III
Due Date
Center CMHS
FAQ's / Webinars
NOFO Number SM-21-010 (Modified)

Short Title Suicide Lifeline/DDH
Due Date
Center CMHS
FAQ's / Webinars
NOFO Number SM-21-005 (Modified)

Short Title Native Connections
Due Date
Center CMHS
FAQ's / Webinars
NOFO Number SM-21-011 (Modified)

Displaying 126 - 150 out of 413

Title NCTSI III
Amount $392,558
Award FY 2016
Award Number SM063057-01
Project Period 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
City Northampton
State MA
NOFO SM-16-005
Project Description Clinical and Support Options (CSO) will use Attachment, Self-Regulation, and Competency (ARC) as its primary evidence-based practice in the proposed Trauma Treatment and Training Institute of Western Massachusetts. CSO seeks maximum impact for both trauma treatment and trauma training by reaching out to populations with the highest level of disparities to reduce stigma and foster acceptance and understanding. ARC-trained clinical staff will treat 240 children and families annually, totaling 1,200 for the 5-year period. The Institute will train 160 people in ARC annually including 60 clinicians to be ARC-certified, totaling 775 people over the 5-year period. Goal 1: CSO will provide and oversee effective service approaches by offering high quality training and technical assistance in ARC, an evidence-based practice. Objective 1.a. CSO will provide free trauma training and technical assistance to institutional workforces; Objective 1.b. Training participants will understand and be able to operationalize the core principles of a trauma-informed approach to care. Objective 1.c. CSO will integrate trauma training with its current community training offerings. Goal 2: CSO will increase access to high quality trauma treatment services for children and their families. Objective 2.a. CSO will create an ongoing system of outreach and engagement to at-risk children and families. Objective 2.b. CSO will provide screening for trauma to 100% of youth and children referred to CSO for trauma treatment. Objective 2.c. CSO and its partners will provide direct trauma treatment using ARC to 240 children and their families a year. Goal 3: To create awareness of the importance of recognizing and treating trauma. Objective 3.a. CSO will reduce stigma of trauma induced mental illness/emotional disturbance by general trauma education across communities and agencies. Objective 3.b. CSO will use communication and social marketing tools to engage communities in primary prevention.... View More

Title NCTSI III
Amount $391,437
Award FY 2017
Award Number SM063057-02
Project Period 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
City Northampton
State MA
NOFO SM-16-005
Project Description Clinical and Support Options (CSO) will use Attachment, Self-Regulation, and Competency (ARC) as its primary evidence-based practice in the proposed Trauma Treatment and Training Institute of Western Massachusetts. CSO seeks maximum impact for both trauma treatment and trauma training by reaching out to populations with the highest level of disparities to reduce stigma and foster acceptance and understanding. ARC-trained clinical staff will treat 240 children and families annually, totaling 1,200 for the 5-year period. The Institute will train 160 people in ARC annually including 60 clinicians to be ARC-certified, totaling 775 people over the 5-year period. Goal 1: CSO will provide and oversee effective service approaches by offering high quality training and technical assistance in ARC, an evidence-based practice. Objective 1.a. CSO will provide free trauma training and technical assistance to institutional workforces; Objective 1.b. Training participants will understand and be able to operationalize the core principles of a trauma-informed approach to care. Objective 1.c. CSO will integrate trauma training with its current community training offerings. Goal 2: CSO will increase access to high quality trauma treatment services for children and their families. Objective 2.a. CSO will create an ongoing system of outreach and engagement to at-risk children and families. Objective 2.b. CSO will provide screening for trauma to 100% of youth and children referred to CSO for trauma treatment. Objective 2.c. CSO and its partners will provide direct trauma treatment using ARC to 240 children and their families a year. Goal 3: To create awareness of the importance of recognizing and treating trauma. Objective 3.a. CSO will reduce stigma of trauma induced mental illness/emotional disturbance by general trauma education across communities and agencies. Objective 3.b. CSO will use communication and social marketing tools to engage communities in primary prevention.... View More

Title NCTSI III
Amount $399,824
Award FY 2016
Award Number SM063060-01
Project Period 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
City New Brunswick
State NJ
NOFO SM-16-005
Project Description Rutgers University Behavioral Health Care (UBHC) enthusiastically submits this proposal to create a Children's Center for Resilience and Trauma Recovery. The proposed project aims to bridge the gap to provide trauma-informed care for children ages 0-10 who present to the New Jersey child welfare system and/or community mental health care providers. Over 70% of youth presenting to CSOC and UBHC Child division programs are identified as an ethnic minority, and many are considered low income families with limited access to quality mental health treatment. The proposed project will develop an infrastructure to provide highly specialized training, consultation, and capacity-building for New Jersey providers serving children from these underserved populations. The evidence-based practice this project is the Attachment, Regulation, and Competency (ARC) framework for children with complex trauma. The project goals are: to develop the mental health workforce through training and consultation in evidence-based screening and treatment; provide basic and advanced trauma screening and ARC training to UBHC Child Division and NJ CSOC providers, with built in supports for ongoing consultation printed communications to educate the public about trauma and its impact on young children; and to work collaboratively with the ARC model developers to create a strategic plan to implement a trauma-informed learning community with our participating providers throughout the grant cycle and beyond. UBHC intends to serve approximately 300 providers annually through training and consultation, and an average of 382 children annually will receive the benefits of the ARC framework implementation. In total, UBHC will serve 400 providers in total and 1,910 children over the course of the five year cycle. The proposed project will create a highly skilled workforce to provide trauma-focused interventions to our most vulnerable children at a critical time in their development.... View More

Title NCTSI III
Amount $394,668
Award FY 2017
Award Number SM063060-02
Project Period 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
City New Brunswick
State NJ
NOFO SM-16-005
Project Description Rutgers University Behavioral Health Care (UBHC) enthusiastically submits this proposal to create a Children's Center for Resilience and Trauma Recovery. The proposed project aims to bridge the gap to provide trauma-informed care for children ages 0-10 who present to the New Jersey child welfare system and/or community mental health care providers. Over 70% of youth presenting to CSOC and UBHC Child division programs are identified as an ethnic minority, and many are considered low income families with limited access to quality mental health treatment. The proposed project will develop an infrastructure to provide highly specialized training, consultation, and capacity-building for New Jersey providers serving children from these underserved populations. The evidence-based practice this project is the Attachment, Regulation, and Competency (ARC) framework for children with complex trauma. The project goals are: to develop the mental health workforce through training and consultation in evidence-based screening and treatment; provide basic and advanced trauma screening and ARC training to UBHC Child Division and NJ CSOC providers, with built in supports for ongoing consultation printed communications to educate the public about trauma and its impact on young children; and to work collaboratively with the ARC model developers to create a strategic plan to implement a trauma-informed learning community with our participating providers throughout the grant cycle and beyond. UBHC intends to serve approximately 300 providers annually through training and consultation, and an average of 382 children annually will receive the benefits of the ARC framework implementation. In total, UBHC will serve 400 providers in total and 1,910 children over the course of the five year cycle. The proposed project will create a highly skilled workforce to provide trauma-focused interventions to our most vulnerable children at a critical time in their development.... View More

Title NCTSI III
Amount $399,901
Award FY 2016
Award Number SM063061-01
Project Period 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
City Chicago
State IL
NOFO SM-16-005
Project Description Children's Research Triangle's (CRT) Trauma Treatment Program (TTP) is an assessment-driven, trauma-informed intervention program based in Chicago, Illinois. The TTP will increase the availability of trauma-informed therapeutic services for children and adolescents ages 0 to 18 years by implementing evidence-based interventions in under-resourced communities. The TTP follows a comprehensive screening, assessment, and treatment process, which includes foundational material from the NCTSN's 2012 Breakthrough Series Collaborative, Improving Comprehensive Assessments and Case Formulations by Implementing the NCTSN Core Curriculum. A high standard of care will be ensured by ongoing training, consultation, and reflective supervision for TTP staff and partner site staff, as well as continuous input from the consumer groups, the Youth Advisory Board and the Parent Network Committee, to provide consumer voice in the development and implementation of services. The TTP employs several Evidence-Based Practices, including Child-Parent Psychotherapy (CPP), Trauma-Focused Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (TF-CBT), and Structured Psychotherapy for Adolescents Responding to Chronic Stress (SPARCS). During each of the five years of funding, 400 children and adolescents will be screened for traumatic histories; 225 will undergo a systematic trauma assessment; 60 will participate in TTP trauma-focused interventions; 60 will participate in Youth Trauma Workshops; 100 community members will receive training about the mental health impact of childhood trauma, and 50 community members will receive training on prevention/mental health promotion topics related to childhood trauma. Taking into account overlap in screening, assessment, and treatment, CRT will provide direct services to a minimum of 3,050 individuals over the five years.... View More

Title NCTSI III
Amount $395,659
Award FY 2017
Award Number SM063061-02
Project Period 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
City Chicago
State IL
NOFO SM-16-005
Project Description Children's Research Triangle's (CRT) Trauma Treatment Program (TTP) is an assessment-driven, trauma-informed intervention program based in Chicago, Illinois. The TTP will increase the availability of trauma-informed therapeutic services for children and adolescents ages 0 to 18 years by implementing evidence-based interventions in under-resourced communities. The TTP follows a comprehensive screening, assessment, and treatment process, which includes foundational material from the NCTSN's 2012 Breakthrough Series Collaborative, Improving Comprehensive Assessments and Case Formulations by Implementing the NCTSN Core Curriculum. A high standard of care will be ensured by ongoing training, consultation, and reflective supervision for TTP staff and partner site staff, as well as continuous input from the consumer groups, the Youth Advisory Board and the Parent Network Committee, to provide consumer voice in the development and implementation of services. The TTP employs several Evidence-Based Practices, including Child-Parent Psychotherapy (CPP), Trauma-Focused Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (TF-CBT), and Structured Psychotherapy for Adolescents Responding to Chronic Stress (SPARCS). During each of the five years of funding, 400 children and adolescents will be screened for traumatic histories; 225 will undergo a systematic trauma assessment; 60 will participate in TTP trauma-focused interventions; 60 will participate in Youth Trauma Workshops; 100 community members will receive training about the mental health impact of childhood trauma, and 50 community members will receive training on prevention/mental health promotion topics related to childhood trauma. Taking into account overlap in screening, assessment, and treatment, CRT will provide direct services to a minimum of 3,050 individuals over the five years.... View More

Title NCTSI III
Amount $400,000
Award FY 2016
Award Number SM063062-01
Project Period 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
City Somerville
State NJ
NOFO SM-16-005
Project Description The Center for Great Expectation's (CGE) Trauma Focused Care project will improve the quality and access of effective trauma treatment for pregnant/parenting adolescents, pregnant/parenting women with substance use disorders, and their children. CGE will implement the Attachment, Self-Regulation and Competency (ARC) treatment model in its own and other residential programs who serve this population in New Jersey. To improve the likelihood of interrupting intergenerational child welfare involvement, CGE's proposal will address disparities by offering comprehensive services that address the trauma and mental health needs of adult and adolescent parents, children and the family system. The goals of this proposed project are to train 100% of CGE's direct care and clinical staff in the ARC treatment model; reduce trauma symptoms in adolescent mothers by 50% between admission and discharge; improve the parenting effectiveness of both adolescent and adult mothers between admission and discharge; reduce the number of trauma symptoms/behaviors in the children who live with their mothers in residential programs by 50%; increase the number of trauma competencies mastered by clinicians employed by CGE and partner treatment providers; and to provide this training to one New Jersey residential treatment provider annually who serves adolescent mothers or adult mothers with substance use disorders and their children, so they can implement the ARC model into their programs, for a total of five treatment providers over the five years of the grant. This project will serve an average of 250 individuals annually and 1250 over the lifetime of the project.... View More

Title NCTSI III
Amount $400,000
Award FY 2017
Award Number SM063062-02
Project Period 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
City Somerville
State NJ
NOFO SM-16-005
Project Description The Center for Great Expectation's (CGE) Trauma Focused Care project will improve the quality and access of effective trauma treatment for pregnant/parenting adolescents, pregnant/parenting women with substance use disorders, and their children. CGE will implement the Attachment, Self-Regulation and Competency (ARC) treatment model in its own and other residential programs who serve this population in New Jersey. To improve the likelihood of interrupting intergenerational child welfare involvement, CGE's proposal will address disparities by offering comprehensive services that address the trauma and mental health needs of adult and adolescent parents, children and the family system. The goals of this proposed project are to train 100% of CGE's direct care and clinical staff in the ARC treatment model; reduce trauma symptoms in adolescent mothers by 50% between admission and discharge; improve the parenting effectiveness of both adolescent and adult mothers between admission and discharge; reduce the number of trauma symptoms/behaviors in the children who live with their mothers in residential programs by 50%; increase the number of trauma competencies mastered by clinicians employed by CGE and partner treatment providers; and to provide this training to one New Jersey residential treatment provider annually who serves adolescent mothers or adult mothers with substance use disorders and their children, so they can implement the ARC model into their programs, for a total of five treatment providers over the five years of the grant. This project will serve an average of 250 individuals annually and 1250 over the lifetime of the project.... View More

Title NCTSI III
Amount $400,000
Award FY 2016
Award Number SM063067-01
Project Period 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
City Baltimore
State MD
NOFO SM-16-005
Project Description You Turns will partner with Safe Streets Baltimore to extend a continuum of support to youth who have been exposed to violence and victimization by utilizing a peer-based, relational model in which participation is self-directed, not mandated. The target population is youth between the ages of 14-25 in Sandtown, Winchester. You Turns proposes to serve 627 youth over five years. You Turns will co-locate at the Safe Streets Sandtown site to extend a continuum of support by: increasing access of care to youth exposed to chronic stress and trauma; reducing gaps in treatment; and increasing partnerships and collaboration at the community level. The project will recruit and train Peer Navigators who will conduct street outreach and engage youth. The Peer Navigators will be trained in S.E.L.F groups. The project will measure street outreach encounters with youth; the number of youth who are screened for exposure to adverse childhood events; the number of youth who engage in each of the recovery support options; the number of organizations collaborating; and the number of people trained in trauma-response.... View More

Title NCTSI III
Amount $400,000
Award FY 2017
Award Number SM063067-02
Project Period 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
City Baltimore
State MD
NOFO SM-16-005
Project Description You Turns will partner with Safe Streets Baltimore to extend a continuum of support to youth who have been exposed to violence and victimization by utilizing a peer-based, relational model in which participation is self-directed, not mandated. The target population is youth between the ages of 14-25 in Sandtown, Winchester. You Turns proposes to serve 627 youth over five years. You Turns will co-locate at the Safe Streets Sandtown site to extend a continuum of support by: increasing access of care to youth exposed to chronic stress and trauma; reducing gaps in treatment; and increasing partnerships and collaboration at the community level. The project will recruit and train Peer Navigators who will conduct street outreach and engage youth. The Peer Navigators will be trained in S.E.L.F groups. The project will measure street outreach encounters with youth; the number of youth who are screened for exposure to adverse childhood events; the number of youth who engage in each of the recovery support options; the number of organizations collaborating; and the number of people trained in trauma-response.... View More

Title NCTSI III
Amount $399,735
Award FY 2016
Award Number SM063070-01
Project Period 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
City Aurora
State CO
NOFO SM-16-005
Project Description The purpose of the proposed Project Bridge is to bring a high quality of services for trauma treatment to the underserved population of children of refugee and immigrant families. The core strategy is to create a safe, culturally-sensitive, linguistically accessible and trauma-informed system of care that includes effective evidence-based treatment interventions. Project Bridge plans to develop a systematic engagement, screening, assessment, treatment and recovery process that takes into account cultural and linguistic needs. The population of focus for Project Bridge is refugees and immigrants who have resettled in Aurora, Colorado. According to the most recent Colorado Department of Public Health and the Environment (CDPHE) Surveillance Report about 2,000 refugees and asylum seekers come into Colorado annually, with most of them settling in Aurora, the geographic area for Project Bridge. By targeting immigrant and refugee children specifically, Project Bridge's population includes those that are most vulnerable to social, economic and health inequities. These communities experience insecure and difficult socioeconomic conditions, including poor housing, unstable employment, acculturation issues, insufficient income and limited access to transportation and benefits. These health disparities are exacerbated by language and cultural barriers. The services and methods described in this project are responsive to the diverse linguistic and cultural needs of our unique population. The providers include those that come from the cultures we serve and our partner agencies are specifically designed to serve immigrant and refugee groups and base all of their service provision on providing culturally and linguistically relevant services.... View More

Title NCTSI III
Amount $398,019
Award FY 2017
Award Number SM063070-02
Project Period 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
City Aurora
State CO
NOFO SM-16-005
Project Description The purpose of the proposed Project Bridge is to bring a high quality of services for trauma treatment to the underserved population of children of refugee and immigrant families. The core strategy is to create a safe, culturally-sensitive, linguistically accessible and trauma-informed system of care that includes effective evidence-based treatment interventions. Project Bridge plans to develop a systematic engagement, screening, assessment, treatment and recovery process that takes into account cultural and linguistic needs. The population of focus for Project Bridge is refugees and immigrants who have resettled in Aurora, Colorado. According to the most recent Colorado Department of Public Health and the Environment (CDPHE) Surveillance Report about 2,000 refugees and asylum seekers come into Colorado annually, with most of them settling in Aurora, the geographic area for Project Bridge. By targeting immigrant and refugee children specifically, Project Bridge's population includes those that are most vulnerable to social, economic and health inequities. These communities experience insecure and difficult socioeconomic conditions, including poor housing, unstable employment, acculturation issues, insufficient income and limited access to transportation and benefits. These health disparities are exacerbated by language and cultural barriers. The services and methods described in this project are responsive to the diverse linguistic and cultural needs of our unique population. The providers include those that come from the cultures we serve and our partner agencies are specifically designed to serve immigrant and refugee groups and base all of their service provision on providing culturally and linguistically relevant services.... View More

Title NCTSI III
Amount $399,636
Award FY 2016
Award Number SM063074-01
Project Period 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
City Houston
State TX
NOFO SM-16-005
Project Description Juvenile justice involved adolescents in Harris County Juvenile Probation Department's (HCJPD's) residential post-adjudication facility is the population of focus for the Center for Success and Independence's (TCSI's) proposed Survival Through Empowered Mindfulness (STEM) project. Goal 1) To expand access to trauma-focused treatment and trauma-informed services to all juvenile justice involved adolescents in long-term residential placement. Objectives 1.1, 1.3, & 1.5 will expand systematic trauma exposure and diagnostic screening to all adolescents at the facility, a minimum of 275 in year one and an estimated 324 each year thereafter. Objectives 1.2, 1.4, & 1.6 will expand assessment and comprehensive trauma-focused therapy. Objective 1.7 involves demonstrating clinically significant improvement in PTSD & co-occurring disorder symptoms for 80% of adolescents served. Goal 2) To improve the quality of trauma-focused treatment and trauma-informed services provided to juvenile justice involved adolescents in residential placement. Objectives 2.1-2.4 will add EMDR to current therapeutic options for PTSD treatment for adolescents who are unwilling or unable to initially engage in TF-CBT, a minimum of 11 in Year 1 and 22 each year thereafter. Objective 2.5 will train staff at all levels of HCJPD's long-term placement facility in trauma-informed service delivery, and Objective 2.6 involves demonstrating clinically significant improvement for 95% of adolescents receiving EMDR. Goal 3) To sustain expanded access and quality improvement beyond the life of the project. Objectives 3.1, 3.2, 3.4, & 3.5 will use documentation of clinically significant and functional improvements relevant to juvenile justice decision-makers to educate decision-makers regarding the benefits of sustained support for STEM services. Objective 3.3 will build the capacity of TCSI to sustain evidence-based practices by fostering local training capability in the therapy staff.... View More

Title NCTSI III
Amount $377,001
Award FY 2017
Award Number SM063074-02
Project Period 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
City Houston
State TX
NOFO SM-16-005
Project Description Juvenile justice involved adolescents in Harris County Juvenile Probation Department's (HCJPD's) residential post-adjudication facility is the population of focus for the Center for Success and Independence's (TCSI's) proposed Survival Through Empowered Mindfulness (STEM) project. Goal 1) To expand access to trauma-focused treatment and trauma-informed services to all juvenile justice involved adolescents in long-term residential placement. Objectives 1.1, 1.3, & 1.5 will expand systematic trauma exposure and diagnostic screening to all adolescents at the facility, a minimum of 275 in year one and an estimated 324 each year thereafter. Objectives 1.2, 1.4, & 1.6 will expand assessment and comprehensive trauma-focused therapy. Objective 1.7 involves demonstrating clinically significant improvement in PTSD & co-occurring disorder symptoms for 80% of adolescents served. Goal 2) To improve the quality of trauma-focused treatment and trauma-informed services provided to juvenile justice involved adolescents in residential placement. Objectives 2.1-2.4 will add EMDR to current therapeutic options for PTSD treatment for adolescents who are unwilling or unable to initially engage in TF-CBT, a minimum of 11 in Year 1 and 22 each year thereafter. Objective 2.5 will train staff at all levels of HCJPD's long-term placement facility in trauma-informed service delivery, and Objective 2.6 involves demonstrating clinically significant improvement for 95% of adolescents receiving EMDR. Goal 3) To sustain expanded access and quality improvement beyond the life of the project. Objectives 3.1, 3.2, 3.4, & 3.5 will use documentation of clinically significant and functional improvements relevant to juvenile justice decision-makers to educate decision-makers regarding the benefits of sustained support for STEM services. Objective 3.3 will build the capacity of TCSI to sustain evidence-based practices by fostering local training capability in the therapy staff.... View More

Title NCTSI III
Amount $400,000
Award FY 2016
Award Number SM063077-01
Project Period 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
City Anchorage
State AK
NOFO SM-16-005
Project Description The ACTC (Alaska Child Trauma Center) at Anchorage Community Mental Health Services is proposing to develop a Military Family Child Trauma Program. This program will provide specialized, evidence-based trauma services to the children of members of the Armed Services, Veterans, Reservists and Guard members in Anchorage, Alaska. These services will improve behavioral health outcomes for children served. To improve access to services across Alaska, the ACTC is proposing to incorporate training on serving military families into our statewide trauma training networks, so that providers statewide have a better understanding and are better able to meet the needs of military families. The ACTC is also proposing to enhance services currently available at the center to children who are involved with the child protection system by adding parenting support/education groups. These services will improve the skills of parents assisting children impacted by complex trauma. The ACTC is also proposing to provide training and resources on child trauma to stakeholders in Alaska's legal system. The Military Family Child Trauma Program will serve 50 families annually. Seventy additional children involved in the child protection system will receive services annually. Three hundred children will be served over the project period. Training will be provided to 300 providers annually. These providers are estimated to serve 3,000 children impacted by trauma annually, 9,000 over the project period.... View More

Title NCTSI III
Amount $400,000
Award FY 2017
Award Number SM063077-02
Project Period 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
City Anchorage
State AK
NOFO SM-16-005
Project Description The ACTC (Alaska Child Trauma Center) at Anchorage Community Mental Health Services is proposing to develop a Military Family Child Trauma Program. This program will provide specialized, evidence-based trauma services to the children of members of the Armed Services, Veterans, Reservists and Guard members in Anchorage, Alaska. These services will improve behavioral health outcomes for children served. To improve access to services across Alaska, the ACTC is proposing to incorporate training on serving military families into our statewide trauma training networks, so that providers statewide have a better understanding and are better able to meet the needs of military families. The ACTC is also proposing to enhance services currently available at the center to children who are involved with the child protection system by adding parenting support/education groups. These services will improve the skills of parents assisting children impacted by complex trauma. The ACTC is also proposing to provide training and resources on child trauma to stakeholders in Alaska's legal system. The Military Family Child Trauma Program will serve 50 families annually. Seventy additional children involved in the child protection system will receive services annually. Three hundred children will be served over the project period. Training will be provided to 300 providers annually. These providers are estimated to serve 3,000 children impacted by trauma annually, 9,000 over the project period.... View More

Title NCTSI III
Amount $400,000
Award FY 2016
Award Number SM063084-01
Project Period 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
City Oakland
State CA
NOFO SM-16-005
Project Description La Clinica de La Raza, Inc. (La Clinica) is a Federally Qualified Health Center that strives to improve the quality of life of the diverse communities it serves by providing culturally appropriate, high quality and accessible health care for all. La Clinica proposes to implement the Screening, Treatment and Trauma Training in Primary Care (STATTPC) program across its eight School-Based Health Centers (SBHCs). STATT-PC uses a three-pronged approach to expand access to trauma-focused services for youth (ages 12-17) who have been exposed to community violence, physical abuses, domestic violence and/or other traumatic events. The first is a primary care approach, which focuses on training medical team staff to be more cognizant of childhood trauma by using The National Child Traumatic Stress Network's Pediatric Medical Traumatic Stress Toolkit for Health Care Providers combined with the implementation of the PTSD CheckList (PCL). The second approach is a population-based classroom approach. Third, La Clinica will partner with other agencies to implement a CBITS Learning Collaborative to further expand trauma services across Alameda County. Specifically, STATT-PC has five primary goals that frame key activities: 1) Increase staff and teacher awareness of the impact of trauma on youth; 2) Expand the identification and treatment of youth experiencing trauma symptoms in primary; 3) Expand the identification and treatment of youth experiencing trauma symptoms; 4) Develop and expand the CBITS Learning Collaborative to increase the capacity of behavioral health clinicians working in partner agencies and schools throughout Alameda County; and 5) Promote policies supporting the implementation of trauma-informed practices and services. La Clinica's three-pronged approach will improve the quality of trauma treatment through the use of a Learning Collaborative and provide direct trauma-focused services to 1352 youth.... View More

Title NCTSI III
Amount $400,000
Award FY 2017
Award Number SM063084-02
Project Period 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
City Oakland
State CA
NOFO SM-16-005
Project Description La Clinica de La Raza, Inc. (La Clinica) is a Federally Qualified Health Center that strives to improve the quality of life of the diverse communities it serves by providing culturally appropriate, high quality and accessible health care for all. La Clinica proposes to implement the Screening, Treatment and Trauma Training in Primary Care (STATTPC) program across its eight School-Based Health Centers (SBHCs). STATT-PC uses a three-pronged approach to expand access to trauma-focused services for youth (ages 12-17) who have been exposed to community violence, physical abuses, domestic violence and/or other traumatic events. The first is a primary care approach, which focuses on training medical team staff to be more cognizant of childhood trauma by using The National Child Traumatic Stress Network's Pediatric Medical Traumatic Stress Toolkit for Health Care Providers combined with the implementation of the PTSD CheckList (PCL). The second approach is a population-based classroom approach. Third, La Clinica will partner with other agencies to implement a CBITS Learning Collaborative to further expand trauma services across Alameda County. Specifically, STATT-PC has five primary goals that frame key activities: 1) Increase staff and teacher awareness of the impact of trauma on youth; 2) Expand the identification and treatment of youth experiencing trauma symptoms in primary; 3) Expand the identification and treatment of youth experiencing trauma symptoms; 4) Develop and expand the CBITS Learning Collaborative to increase the capacity of behavioral health clinicians working in partner agencies and schools throughout Alameda County; and 5) Promote policies supporting the implementation of trauma-informed practices and services. La Clinica's three-pronged approach will improve the quality of trauma treatment through the use of a Learning Collaborative and provide direct trauma-focused services to 1352 youth.... View More

Title CCBHCs Planning Grants
Amount $978,401
Award FY 2016
Award Number SM062957-01
Project Period 2015/10/23 - 2017/06/30
City Raleigh
State NC
NOFO SM-16-001
Short Title: CCBHCs Planning Grants
Project Description North Carolina will expand, increase access to, and improve the quality of services delivered served through its systems. The populations of focus are children and youth with serious emotional disturbances, adults with serious mental illness, individuals with long-term and serious substance use disorders and those with mental illness and substance use disorders. North Carolina has already begun soliciting input from consumers with mental and substance use disorders and their families in preparing to apply for the Planning Grant for CCBHCs. At least two, one urban and one rural clinic, will be certified through an application, assessment, and selection process. North Carolina plans to use the PPS-2 monthly rate methodology and to require CCBHCs to provide Motivational Interviewing, Motivational Enhancement Therapy, Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, Trauma-Focused/Trauma Informed CBT, Dialectical Behavior Therapy, Community Wrap-around, Evidence-based Medication Evaluation and Management, Assertive Community Treatment, and Multi-systemic Therapy.... View More

Title CCBHCs Planning Grants
Amount $982,373
Award FY 2016
Award Number SM062959-01
Project Period 2015/10/23 - 2017/03/31
City Sacramento
State CA
NOFO SM-16-001
Short Title: CCBHCs Planning Grants
Project Description California will design CCBHCs that will function as "behavioral health homes," providing high-quality, cost effective, intensive care coordination for physical and behavioral health services. The population of focus is high-cost Medi-Cal utilizers, often referred to as "super-utilizers" with the goal of improving overall health and well-being and reducing the overuse of emergency and inpatient services. Although all mental health providers will be invited to apply for CCBHC certification, California will encourage applications from clinics located in super-utilizer hot spots or concentrated geographic areas and certify at least two. California plans to use the PPS 2 monthly rate methodology and to require CCBHCs to provide Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy (CBT), Motivational Interviewing (MI), and Patient Activation and Engagement.... View More

Title CCBHCs Planning Grants
Amount $982,373
Award FY 2016
Award Number SM062960-01
Project Period 2015/10/23 - 2017/10/22
City Springfield
State IL
NOFO SM-16-001
Short Title: CCBHCs Planning Grants
Project Description Illinois will certify a minimum of two CCBHCs during the planning year. Through a rigorous assessment process the state will select agencies that demonstrate the commitment, capacity, and readiness for certification. The populations of focus are Medicaid eligible adults with serious mental illnesses, children/adolescents with serious emotional disturbance, adults and youth with long-term and serious substance use disorders, and individuals with mental illness and/or substance use disorders. CCBHCs will be required to provide Wellness Recovery Action Plan (WRAP), Individual Placement and Support (IPS), Assertive Community Treatment (ACT), Dialectic Behavioral Therapy (DBT), Motivational Interviewing (MI), Integrated Dual Diagnosis Treatment (IDDT), and Adolescent Reinforcement Approach (A-CRA) evidence based practices. Illinois plans to use the PPS-2 monthly rate methodology.... View More

Title CCBHCs Planning Grants
Amount $982,372
Award FY 2016
Award Number SM062962-01
Project Period 2015/10/23 - 2017/06/30
City Des Moines
State IA
NOFO SM-16-001
Short Title: CCBHCs Planning Grants
Project Description Iowa will use CCBHC to strengthen the state's behavioral health services, improve service capacity, and test the CCBHC model. The project will integrate related state activities including High Quality Healthcare Initiative (Medicaid managed care), the State Innovation Model, value-based purchasing, accountable-care organizations, integrated health homes, and addictions service system transition. Iowa plans to certify two to four CCBHCs and to use the PPS-1 daily rate methodology. The populations of focus are adults with a serious mental illness, children with a serious emotional disturbance, adults with long-term substance use disorders, and individuals seeking mental health and substance use disorder treatment in the selected CCBHC regions.... View More

Title CCBHCs Planning Grants
Amount $982,372
Award FY 2016
Award Number SM062963-01
Project Period 2015/10/23 - 2017/04/22
City Denver
State CO
NOFO SM-16-001
Short Title: CCBHCs Planning Grants
Project Description Colorado will close gaps in the system of care, expand access to behavioral health services, and ensure that all Coloradans have access to the right care at the right time, in the least restrictive setting. The planning grant will support a coordinated continuum of medical, mental and substance use disorder care by Medicaid, and permit allocation of federal block grant dollars to more effectively assist in supporting non-covered services, such as residential treatment. Colorado plans to require Trauma Focused CBT, Health and Recovery Program (HARP), and Coordinated Specialty Care (CSC) and permit CCBHCs to select among optional evidence-based practices. Colorado plans to use the PPS-2 monthly rate methodology and to certify rural and urban community mental health centers from among those that have expressed early interest.... View More

Title PBHCI
Amount $1,590,143
Award FY 2014
Award Number SM062964-01
Project Period 2014/09/30 - 2018/09/29
City South Portland
State ME
NOFO  
Project Description Counseling Services Incorporated (CSI) will implement two PRIDE Health Homes in York County, Maine. PRIDE stands for Prevention, Recovery, Integration and Delivery through Engagement. Evidence-based, integrated physical and mental health care will be provided via an interdisciplinary team including a co-located primary care provider, psychiatrist, nurse care manager, and social work case manager, and the patient and family. Each patient will have an individualized care plan. Outcome goals include: At least 10% increase in adherence to chronic disease care and participation in wellness; At least 10% decrease in hospitalizations, readmissions, and avoidable emergency room use; At least 80% of clients report satisfaction with the quality of care they receive; Meaningful use standards are met by the end of year four; At least 50% of patients increase on their GAF score (measured by DLA-20); and At least 90% of non-mental health medical staff increase their NAB of mental health. CSI has served individuals with SMI since 1963. We have strong experience delivering evidence-based Assertive Community Treatment (ACT) and adult case management programs, both of which deliver services through interdisciplinary teams. We have well established relationships with our PRIDE primary care partner, the York Community FQHC, having collaborated with them on other efforts. Our ice President of Clinical Affairs is on their Board of Directors. PRIDE Health Homes will be guided by "Evolving Models of Behavioral Health Integration in Primary Care;" 2) the Four-Quadrant Model; 3) the Chronic Care Model and NCQA Recommendations; 4) the Assertive Community Treatment model, with which CSI already has extensive experience and high fidelity ratings; and 5) The Health and Recovery Peer (HARP) Program and other proven health promotion models currently used by CSI. A comprehensive evaluation of the effectiveness of PRIDE Health Homes will be implemented using the Strategic Prevention Framework (SPF... View More

Title Statewide Consumer Network Program
Amount $94,899
Award FY 2016
Award Number SM062965-01
Project Period 2016/06/01 - 2019/05/31
City Bozeman
State MT
NOFO SM-16-002
Project Description The Peer Support & Recovery Enhancement Project is designed to improve the overall quality of mental health services statewide, by training the peer support workforce, educate providers and the general public on recovery practices including trauma informed care and enhance organizational infrastructure by strengthening consumer voice and leadership statewide. This project will serve mental health consumers, veterans, youth, Native Americans, potential peer supporters and professional peer supporters in Montana. The three main activities of this project are (1) to improve the overall quality of mental health services statewide by promoting evidence-based and promising practices by peer supporters that are recovery oriented, culturally aware and trauma informed; (2) to enhance our organizational infrastructure and increase membership to strengthen consumer voice and leadership through the development of community-based affiliates across the state, leveraging existing signature programs such as Healthy Minds Healthy Bodies, Recovery Talks, and Peer Support 101; and (3) to enhance existing partnerships with stakeholders and build new pathways of collaboration with Native American, veteran, and cross disability groups to achieve long term strategic and project goals. The long range vision is a highly trained peer support workforce and Montana's Peer Network positioned as a leader in accessible recovery, support and leadership training.... View More

Displaying 35326 - 35350 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