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Displaying 201 - 225 out of 413
| Award Number | Organization | City | State | Amount | Award FY | NOFO | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SM063457-01 | Winnebago Tribe of Nebraska | Winnebago | NE | $168,466 | 2016 | SM-16-010 | ||||
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Title: Native Connections
Project Period: 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
Short Title: Native Connections The Winnebago Tribe of Nebraska requests $952,232 from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, SAMHSA Native Connections over a five year period with $168,466 of the funds requested in the first year to prevent and reduce suicidal behavior and substance abuse, reduce the impact of trauma, and promote mental health among Winnebago youth ages 14 to 20 in order to reduce abuse-related problems. This project will further the success of the Strategic Prevention Framework Project (SPF) recently completed and compliment and coordinate efforts of the Winnebago Tribe of Nebraska Community Partnership Project, a Strategic Prevention Frameworks-Partnerships for Success Grant (SPF-PFS), to prevent the onset and reduce the progression of underage drinking of youth ages 12-20. Winnebago is a small Indian Reservation located in northeast Nebraska approximately 20 miles south of the Sioux City, IA metropolitan area and 90 miles north of the Omaha, Nebraska metropolitan area. According to the 2010 U .S. Census the Winnebago Reservation population is 2,694 residents.
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| SM063457-02 | Winnebago Tribe of Nebraska | Winnebago | NE | $193,246 | 2017 | SM-16-010 | ||||
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Title: Native Connections
Project Period: 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
Short Title: Native Connections The Winnebago Tribe of Nebraska requests $952,232 from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, SAMHSA Native Connections over a five year period with $168,466 of the funds requested in the first year to prevent and reduce suicidal behavior and substance abuse, reduce the impact of trauma, and promote mental health among Winnebago youth ages 14 to 20 in order to reduce abuse-related problems. This project will further the success of the Strategic Prevention Framework Project (SPF) recently completed and compliment and coordinate efforts of the Winnebago Tribe of Nebraska Community Partnership Project, a Strategic Prevention Frameworks-Partnerships for Success Grant (SPF-PFS), to prevent the onset and reduce the progression of underage drinking of youth ages 12-20. Winnebago is a small Indian Reservation located in northeast Nebraska approximately 20 miles south of the Sioux City, IA metropolitan area and 90 miles north of the Omaha, Nebraska metropolitan area. According to the 2010 U .S. Census the Winnebago Reservation population is 2,694 residents.
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| SM063458-01 | Lac Courte Oreilles Tribal Govern/Board | Hayward | WI | $198,866 | 2016 | SM-16-010 | ||||
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Title: Native Connections
Project Period: 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
Short Title: Native Connections A 5-year project titled "Native Connections" is proposed to address suicide among tribal youth. The vision for the Native Connections project is to protect the lives of all tribal members by promoting health and healing in the realms of physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual health. Traditional Anishinaabe beliefs state that all realms of health are intrinsically related. The proposed project will specifically address contributing factors by improving fragmented health care systems (tribal and non-tribal), improving access to mental health care, conducting community outreach, and implementing evidence-based suicide prevention practices. The proposed project will center on the promotion of mental health to coincide with other community interventions which may address physical, emotional, and spiritual health. Taken altogether, these interventions including the proposed Native Connections project will lead to healthy, living Anishinaabe people.
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| SM063458-02 | Lac Courte Oreilles Tribal Govern/Board | Hayward | WI | $198,866 | 2017 | SM-16-010 | ||||
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Title: Native Connections
Project Period: 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
Short Title: Native Connections A 5-year project titled "Native Connections" is proposed to address suicide among tribal youth. The vision for the Native Connections project is to protect the lives of all tribal members by promoting health and healing in the realms of physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual health. Traditional Anishinaabe beliefs state that all realms of health are intrinsically related. The proposed project will specifically address contributing factors by improving fragmented health care systems (tribal and non-tribal), improving access to mental health care, conducting community outreach, and implementing evidence-based suicide prevention practices. The proposed project will center on the promotion of mental health to coincide with other community interventions which may address physical, emotional, and spiritual health. Taken altogether, these interventions including the proposed Native Connections project will lead to healthy, living Anishinaabe people.
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| SM063459-01 | Bad River Band of Lake Superior Tribe of Chippewa Indians | Odanah | WI | $200,000 | 2016 | SM-16-010 | ||||
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Title: Native Connections
Project Period: 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
Short Title: Native Connections The goal of the Bad River Native Connections Program is to improve mental health and reduce substance abuse and suicidal behavior by increasing culturally responsive prevention activities and integrating access to supportive treatment and recovery services for the native youth in the Bad River Area. The audience for the Native Connections program is school-aged youth to 24 years of age; we plan to serve approximately 350 youth annually. The Bad River Native Connections Program will work to integrate prevention, support, and recovery services by hiring an AODA Prevention Specialist and a Case Manager to fill gaps in services and build strong connections with other services in the schools and related agencies. Both positions will be overseen by the Bad River Health and Wellness Center administration and directly supervised by the Assistant Administrator. The AODA Prevention specialist will: gather data and information; establish baselines for reporting; plan and coordinate appropriate tribal prevention and education activities; and determine where more work and intervention is needed. The Case Manager will improve access, use of services, and outcomes by working within the school system to build collaboration and service connections for Native youth with substance abuse, alcohol abuse and/or suicide ideation. The Case Manager will: receive referrals; connect youth in need to appropriate resources; follow participants through prevention, treatment and aftercare; and boost prevention efforts by connecting outside services with the Bad River Health and Wellness Center and other tribal AODA and prevention programs. A data gathering and reporting system will be designed and implemented to assure referrals from Ashland School District. Program metrics will be added to our established performance improvement process, analyzed, and reported monthly for changes or course corrections in the project. We look forward to working with SAMHSA to implement this important project.
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| SM063459-02 | Bad River Band of Lake Superior Tribe of Chippewa Indians | Odanah | WI | $200,000 | 2017 | SM-16-010 | ||||
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Title: Native Connections
Project Period: 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
Short Title: Native Connections The goal of the Bad River Native Connections Program is to improve mental health and reduce substance abuse and suicidal behavior by increasing culturally responsive prevention activities and integrating access to supportive treatment and recovery services for the native youth in the Bad River Area. The audience for the Native Connections program is school-aged youth to 24 years of age; we plan to serve approximately 350 youth annually. The Bad River Native Connections Program will work to integrate prevention, support, and recovery services by hiring an AODA Prevention Specialist and a Case Manager to fill gaps in services and build strong connections with other services in the schools and related agencies. Both positions will be overseen by the Bad River Health and Wellness Center administration and directly supervised by the Assistant Administrator. The AODA Prevention specialist will: gather data and information; establish baselines for reporting; plan and coordinate appropriate tribal prevention and education activities; and determine where more work and intervention is needed. The Case Manager will improve access, use of services, and outcomes by working within the school system to build collaboration and service connections for Native youth with substance abuse, alcohol abuse and/or suicide ideation. The Case Manager will: receive referrals; connect youth in need to appropriate resources; follow participants through prevention, treatment and aftercare; and boost prevention efforts by connecting outside services with the Bad River Health and Wellness Center and other tribal AODA and prevention programs. A data gathering and reporting system will be designed and implemented to assure referrals from Ashland School District. Program metrics will be added to our established performance improvement process, analyzed, and reported monthly for changes or course corrections in the project. We look forward to working with SAMHSA to implement this important project.
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| SM063461-01 | Red Cliff Band of Lake Superior Chippewa Indians | Bayfield | WI | $199,984 | 2016 | SM-16-010 | ||||
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Title: Native Connections
Project Period: 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
Short Title: Native Connections The Red Cliff Tribe of the Lake Superior Chippewa Native Connections Project will work with youth 0-24 on our reservation. Recently, we found 54.30% of our population indicated that they had multiple days that included stress, depression, and problems with emotions. Over the most recent past 30 days of the survey, 28.4% reported feelings of hopelessness. 24% reported feeling so depressed that nothing could cheer them. These indicators have increased the need for licensed behavioral specialists who have been trained to use culturally relevant interventions to substance abuse, suicides, and suicide attempts. The Native Connections Project will spend Year 1 to develop written plan to support intervention strategies using our ranking of Priorities: 1: Selective 2: Universal 3: Indicated. The goals, objectives, short-term and long-term goals will align with our most recent data on needs assessment. We anticipate serving 106 each year and 530 during the five years of the grant.
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| SM063461-02 | Red Cliff Band of Lake Superior Chippewa Indians | Bayfield | WI | $199,984 | 2017 | SM-16-010 | ||||
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Title: Native Connections
Project Period: 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
Short Title: Native Connections The Red Cliff Tribe of the Lake Superior Chippewa Native Connections Project will work with youth 0-24 on our reservation. Recently, we found 54.30% of our population indicated that they had multiple days that included stress, depression, and problems with emotions. Over the most recent past 30 days of the survey, 28.4% reported feelings of hopelessness. 24% reported feeling so depressed that nothing could cheer them. These indicators have increased the need for licensed behavioral specialists who have been trained to use culturally relevant interventions to substance abuse, suicides, and suicide attempts. The Native Connections Project will spend Year 1 to develop written plan to support intervention strategies using our ranking of Priorities: 1: Selective 2: Universal 3: Indicated. The goals, objectives, short-term and long-term goals will align with our most recent data on needs assessment. We anticipate serving 106 each year and 530 during the five years of the grant.
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| SM063462-01 | Toiyabe Indian Health Project, Inc. | Bishop | CA | $200,000 | 2016 | SM-16-010 | ||||
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Title: Native Connections
Project Period: 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
Short Title: Native Connections The Toiyabe Youth Connections Project (TYCP) will be implemented by Toiyabe Indian Health Project, Inc. The overall goal of the TYCP is to provide Native American youth and young adults (14 - 24 years of age), who are at-risk of suicide ideation/suicide with high-quality treatment services. The TYCP will serve a minimum of 120 Native American youth and young adults each year for five years. This will result in a minimum of 600 Native American youth and young adults being served through the TYCP. The project participants will come from the organization's service area - seven federally recognized tribes and two Indian communities in rural and remote Inyo County in Northern California. The individuals served through the TYCP will be transitioning out of a juvenile detention facility or jail, or at risk of entering the criminal justice system. The TYCP will prioritize Tier 2 for the five years of project implementation. Tier 2 was selected because it focuses on the critical behavioral health needs that persist throughout the Toiyabe community. From the time period of April 2015 through April 2016, Native Americans were overrepresented by 300% in the Inyo County Jail population, averaging more than 38% of the jail population while accounting for only 12.7% of the overall Inyo County population. The TYCP will enable the organization's Family Services Department and a treatment team to make contact with juvenile wards and adult inmates identified as having behavioral health needs that are risk factors for suicidal ideations and attempts, and to determine the appropriate outpatient treatment plan for them to begin upon release from jail or juvenile hall, to improve behavioral health outcomes, decrease the risk of suicide, and reduce the risk of reentry into the criminal justice system.
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| SM063462-02 | Toiyabe Indian Health Project, Inc. | Bishop | CA | $200,000 | 2017 | SM-16-010 | ||||
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Title: Native Connections
Project Period: 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
Short Title: Native Connections The Toiyabe Youth Connections Project (TYCP) will be implemented by Toiyabe Indian Health Project, Inc. The overall goal of the TYCP is to provide Native American youth and young adults (14 - 24 years of age), who are at-risk of suicide ideation/suicide with high-quality treatment services. The TYCP will serve a minimum of 120 Native American youth and young adults each year for five years. This will result in a minimum of 600 Native American youth and young adults being served through the TYCP. The project participants will come from the organization's service area - seven federally recognized tribes and two Indian communities in rural and remote Inyo County in Northern California. The individuals served through the TYCP will be transitioning out of a juvenile detention facility or jail, or at risk of entering the criminal justice system. The TYCP will prioritize Tier 2 for the five years of project implementation. Tier 2 was selected because it focuses on the critical behavioral health needs that persist throughout the Toiyabe community. From the time period of April 2015 through April 2016, Native Americans were overrepresented by 300% in the Inyo County Jail population, averaging more than 38% of the jail population while accounting for only 12.7% of the overall Inyo County population. The TYCP will enable the organization's Family Services Department and a treatment team to make contact with juvenile wards and adult inmates identified as having behavioral health needs that are risk factors for suicidal ideations and attempts, and to determine the appropriate outpatient treatment plan for them to begin upon release from jail or juvenile hall, to improve behavioral health outcomes, decrease the risk of suicide, and reduce the risk of reentry into the criminal justice system.
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| SM063463-01 | Great Plains Tribal Chairmen's Hlth Brd | Rapid City | SD | $200,000 | 2016 | SM-16-010 | ||||
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Title: Native Connections
Project Period: 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
Short Title: Native Connections The Great Plains Tribal Chairmen's Health Board (GPTCHB) - Native Connections Program will provide prevention services to the Crow Creek Sioux Tribe and Crow Creek School District located in South Dakota over a five year period. The Native Connections Program aims to provide culturally-relevant prevention services to youth ages 10 -18 that are enrolled in the Crow Creek School District. In order to provide prevention services the Native Connections Program will collaborate with three identified prevention programs, Lifeways, Oceti Wakan and the Network of Support to implement community support system, which will help educate the targeted community to ensure the success of American Indian's (AI). By creating stronger community linkages, the Native Connections Program will provide much-needed prevention services that will be utilizes by the Crow Creek Sioux Tribe and the Crow Creek School District. The Native Connections Program seeks to implement prevention services by increasing access to resources and to ensure high-quality education and training services to promote a healthy and positive lifestyle for at risk youth. The Native Connections Program will also implement measures of internal accountability to ensure that it meets or exceeds professional standards for program objectives, fulfills SAMHSA requirements for mandatory reporting of performance data, and develops and implements the GPTCHB data-driven quality improvement plan. The goals, objectives and prevention strategies outlined in this grant proposal will allow for strong collaborations between the GPTCHB, Crow Creek Sioux Tribe, Crow Creek School District, Community Steering Committee and Contracted Providers. The strengthened collaborations will provide increased resources and services to AI's within the targeted community and allow AI's to have a productive and successful future.
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| SM063463-02 | Great Plains Tribal Chairmen's Hlth Brd | Rapid City | SD | $200,000 | 2017 | SM-16-010 | ||||
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Title: Native Connections
Project Period: 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
Short Title: Native Connections The Great Plains Tribal Chairmen's Health Board (GPTCHB) - Native Connections Program will provide prevention services to the Crow Creek Sioux Tribe and Crow Creek School District located in South Dakota over a five year period. The Native Connections Program aims to provide culturally-relevant prevention services to youth ages 10 -18 that are enrolled in the Crow Creek School District. In order to provide prevention services the Native Connections Program will collaborate with three identified prevention programs, Lifeways, Oceti Wakan and the Network of Support to implement community support system, which will help educate the targeted community to ensure the success of American Indian's (AI). By creating stronger community linkages, the Native Connections Program will provide much-needed prevention services that will be utilizes by the Crow Creek Sioux Tribe and the Crow Creek School District. The Native Connections Program seeks to implement prevention services by increasing access to resources and to ensure high-quality education and training services to promote a healthy and positive lifestyle for at risk youth. The Native Connections Program will also implement measures of internal accountability to ensure that it meets or exceeds professional standards for program objectives, fulfills SAMHSA requirements for mandatory reporting of performance data, and develops and implements the GPTCHB data-driven quality improvement plan. The goals, objectives and prevention strategies outlined in this grant proposal will allow for strong collaborations between the GPTCHB, Crow Creek Sioux Tribe, Crow Creek School District, Community Steering Committee and Contracted Providers. The strengthened collaborations will provide increased resources and services to AI's within the targeted community and allow AI's to have a productive and successful future.
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| SM063464-01 | Spokane Tribe of Indians | Wellpinit | WA | $200,000 | 2016 | SM-16-010 | ||||
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Title: Native Connections
Project Period: 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
Short Title: Native Connections Project Hope and Healing is a Spokane Indian Reservation youth wellness initiative offering a plan to amplify the existing substance abuse, suicide prevention and trauma reduction program as well as providing new therapeutic and recreational opportunities for youth and their families. The goals of Project Hope and Healing are to promote effective programs and practices that increase protection from suicide risk, reduce the stigma associated with mental health disorders and promote the understanding that recovery from mental and substance use disorders is possible for everyone. The initiative would serve all 2,868 members of the Spokane Indian Tribe with emphasis on young people up to and including age 24. The proposed initiative will deploy a prevention strategy which includes mentoring and leadership opportunities, skill based learning, recreational opportunities and culturally adapted interventions that build on unique, tribal holistic healing beliefs. Primary intervention targets will include: community-wide education to promote protective factors and reduce risks; early identification and triage of high-risk youth; and intensive intervention for youth who attempt suicide. Tier 1 Universal objectives will be utilized to promote broad community advocacy and education to increase understanding that suicide is preventable and reinforce protective factors that are core to the Spokane Indian's native belief system. Specific strategies will include engagement of tribal leadership in mandating prevention activities; utilizing a cultural advisor; community workshop series to build prevention skills among parents and youth caretakers; utilizing the Wellpinit Community Center as a youth wellness center, as well as engaging youth in a new social media campaign to share messages of hope. The project target is to serve 250 people annually with 1500 people served throughout the project who are high risk for suicide or substance abuse.
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| SM063464-02 | Spokane Tribe of Indians | Wellpinit | WA | $199,899 | 2017 | SM-16-010 | ||||
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Title: Native Connections
Project Period: 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
Short Title: Native Connections Project Hope and Healing is a Spokane Indian Reservation youth wellness initiative offering a plan to amplify the existing substance abuse, suicide prevention and trauma reduction program as well as providing new therapeutic and recreational opportunities for youth and their families. The goals of Project Hope and Healing are to promote effective programs and practices that increase protection from suicide risk, reduce the stigma associated with mental health disorders and promote the understanding that recovery from mental and substance use disorders is possible for everyone. The initiative would serve all 2,868 members of the Spokane Indian Tribe with emphasis on young people up to and including age 24. The proposed initiative will deploy a prevention strategy which includes mentoring and leadership opportunities, skill based learning, recreational opportunities and culturally adapted interventions that build on unique, tribal holistic healing beliefs. Primary intervention targets will include: community-wide education to promote protective factors and reduce risks; early identification and triage of high-risk youth; and intensive intervention for youth who attempt suicide. Tier 1 Universal objectives will be utilized to promote broad community advocacy and education to increase understanding that suicide is preventable and reinforce protective factors that are core to the Spokane Indian's native belief system. Specific strategies will include engagement of tribal leadership in mandating prevention activities; utilizing a cultural advisor; community workshop series to build prevention skills among parents and youth caretakers; utilizing the Wellpinit Community Center as a youth wellness center, as well as engaging youth in a new social media campaign to share messages of hope. The project target is to serve 250 people annually with 1500 people served throughout the project who are high risk for suicide or substance abuse.
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| SM063465-01 | Central Council Tlingit and Haida Indian Tribes of Alaska (Ccthita) | Juneau | AK | $200,000 | 2016 | SM-16-010 | ||||
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Title: Native Connections
Project Period: 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
Short Title: Native Connections The Central Council Tlingit and Haida Indian Tribes of Alaska is proposing a 5 year project to plan and implement a traditional suicide prevention model for Native youth within the Juneau urban area. The Native Connections Behavioral Health Project will target Native youth through age 24 at risk for suicide, substance abuse, and related mental health problems. The project will develop and implement a culturally relevant prevention services delivery model within the context of Native cultural values. The project will enable the Central Council to develop a prevention service model around some key questions relating to suicide prevention and mental health service delivery: 1) What is the long term vision for Native youth suicide prevention/early intervention services; 2) What has worked in the past, what needs to be changed; 3) What constitutes a healthy community, based on Tlingit and Haida values. 4) What should a youth suicide prevention program look like for Tlingit and Haida families and children who are confronted with financial and cultural barriers, and a range of personal and family issues/problems. 5) How has traditional culture addressed issues of healing and mental health in a community setting and how can these concepts be invoked and appropriately applied to the current situation. 6) What are the resources required to adequately address youth suicide prevention needs for Tlingit and Haida families. The project model will provide culturally appropriate targeted prevention services for these youth and families which will: 1) Connect with at-risk Native youth and their families through culturally acceptable approaches; 2) Work with at-risk Native youth and their families who have unresolved personal issues either with self, their children, and/or family; and 3) Work at the community level to develop a circle of care for youth with suicide, mental health, or substance abuse issues, thereby
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| SM063465-02 | Central Council Tlingit and Haida Indian Tribes of Alaska (Ccthita) | Juneau | AK | $200,000 | 2017 | SM-16-010 | ||||
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Title: Native Connections
Project Period: 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
Short Title: Native Connections The Central Council Tlingit and Haida Indian Tribes of Alaska is proposing a 5 year project to plan and implement a traditional suicide prevention model for Native youth within the Juneau urban area. The Native Connections Behavioral Health Project will target Native youth through age 24 at risk for suicide, substance abuse, and related mental health problems. The project will develop and implement a culturally relevant prevention services delivery model within the context of Native cultural values. The project will enable the Central Council to develop a prevention service model around some key questions relating to suicide prevention and mental health service delivery: 1) What is the long term vision for Native youth suicide prevention/early intervention services; 2) What has worked in the past, what needs to be changed; 3) What constitutes a healthy community, based on Tlingit and Haida values. 4) What should a youth suicide prevention program look like for Tlingit and Haida families and children who are confronted with financial and cultural barriers, and a range of personal and family issues/problems. 5) How has traditional culture addressed issues of healing and mental health in a community setting and how can these concepts be invoked and appropriately applied to the current situation. 6) What are the resources required to adequately address youth suicide prevention needs for Tlingit and Haida families. The project model will provide culturally appropriate targeted prevention services for these youth and families which will: 1) Connect with at-risk Native youth and their families through culturally acceptable approaches; 2) Work with at-risk Native youth and their families who have unresolved personal issues either with self, their children, and/or family; and 3) Work at the community level to develop a circle of care for youth with suicide, mental health, or substance abuse issues, thereby
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| SM063467-01 | Cow Creek Band of Umpqua Indians/Oregon | Roseburg | OR | $195,294 | 2016 | SM-16-010 | ||||
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Title: Native Connections
Project Period: 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
Short Title: Native Connections The Native Connection Project will build upon an array of integrated services that will reduce mental health and substance abuse disorders and ultimately prevent suicides amongst targeted youth up 24 years of age. Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs) scores are closely correlated with health and social disparities such as alcoholism, diabetes and unemployment. The Native Connections Project will introduce resiliency skills to those at greatest risk and will build upon a foundation of successful suicide prevention programs and comprehensive health and mental healthcare of the Cow Creek Tribal Behavioral Health Program. Located in Southern Oregon, the Cow Creek Band of Umpqua Tribe of Indians has experienced hundreds of years of intergenerational trauma. Trauma is a potential causative factor for long term distress, substance abuse and suicide amongst American Indian and Alaska Native communities. The Tribe's 7-county service area is one of the largest in the nation and is home to over 1,000 tribal members. Suicide rates within this service area is one of the largest in the State with an average of 20 suicides per month for all Oregonians living within the area. The 2014 Oregon Student Wellness Survey (SWS) reported Cow Creek youth grades 6, 8 and 11 to be at an increased risk for ACEs versus other community youth with a 12.1% higher reporting of feeling sad or hopeless in the past 2 or more weeks and a 29.2% increase in actually attempting suicide. The Native Connections Project's goals will be to reach an estimated 2,000 tribal member families and local community members within the 5-year project implementation period with the first 500 individuals being reached at the end of the Year 1 Kick-Off Event. The project will produce a cascade of trauma-informed awareness events, identification of youth and young adults primarily though the tribal clinics, resiliency skills taught at school, after school boys/girl club and tribal youth center and activities.
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| SM063467-02 | Cow Creek Band of Umpqua Indians/Oregon | Roseburg | OR | $194,451 | 2017 | SM-16-010 | ||||
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Title: Native Connections
Project Period: 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
Short Title: Native Connections The Native Connection Project will build upon an array of integrated services that will reduce mental health and substance abuse disorders and ultimately prevent suicides amongst targeted youth up 24 years of age. Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs) scores are closely correlated with health and social disparities such as alcoholism, diabetes and unemployment. The Native Connections Project will introduce resiliency skills to those at greatest risk and will build upon a foundation of successful suicide prevention programs and comprehensive health and mental healthcare of the Cow Creek Tribal Behavioral Health Program. Located in Southern Oregon, the Cow Creek Band of Umpqua Tribe of Indians has experienced hundreds of years of intergenerational trauma. Trauma is a potential causative factor for long term distress, substance abuse and suicide amongst American Indian and Alaska Native communities. The Tribe's 7-county service area is one of the largest in the nation and is home to over 1,000 tribal members. Suicide rates within this service area is one of the largest in the State with an average of 20 suicides per month for all Oregonians living within the area. The 2014 Oregon Student Wellness Survey (SWS) reported Cow Creek youth grades 6, 8 and 11 to be at an increased risk for ACEs versus other community youth with a 12.1% higher reporting of feeling sad or hopeless in the past 2 or more weeks and a 29.2% increase in actually attempting suicide. The Native Connections Project's goals will be to reach an estimated 2,000 tribal member families and local community members within the 5-year project implementation period with the first 500 individuals being reached at the end of the Year 1 Kick-Off Event. The project will produce a cascade of trauma-informed awareness events, identification of youth and young adults primarily though the tribal clinics, resiliency skills taught at school, after school boys/girl club and tribal youth center and activities.
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| SM063468-01 | Native American Health Center, Inc. | Oakland | CA | $1,000,000 | 2016 | SM-16-010 | ||||
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Title: Native Connections
Project Period: 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
Short Title: Native Connections Native Connection's purpose is to increase access to culturally-appropriate substance abuse and suicide prevention programming and mental health services for American Indian/ Alaska Native youth and young people living in the San Francisco Bay Area ages 10-24 by increasing community engagement and strengthening service delivery. The Project will be available at our Oakland and San Francisco Community Wellness site locations The Native American Health Center, Inc. provides medical, dental, WIC, nutrition/fitness, counseling/therapy, youth, media, home visiting, and community/cultural based services. The proposed project goal is to expand and strengthen the CWD's integrated programming capacity and community support systems that a) reduce the impact of trauma; b) prevents suicide/suicidal ideation and substance use; and 3) integrate mental health promotion for AIAN youth and transitional aged youth ages 10 - 24. Project components include: 1) Planning and building community engagement capacity specific community needs and readiness; 2) Address gaps in service and strengthening current service delivery by developing and implementing transitional aged youth programming; 3) Engaging staff clinicians to participate in youth care coordination activities and programming; and 4) Engage community voice. Native Connections will increase community voice and engagement through a variety of resource building and readiness activities which will increase the overall effectives of the NAHC's suicide/ substance abuse prevention and mental health programming as well as identify needs and gaps in service. NAHC will proactively target challenges and disparities within current programming through member identification and assessment, enhanced outreach, and integration of traditional healing practices with evidence-based practices.
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| SM063469-01 | Muckleshoot Indian Tribe | Auburn | WA | $167,417 | 2016 | SM-16-010 | ||||
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Title: Native Connections
Project Period: 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
Short Title: Native Connections MTS's vision is to provide services and staff that meet the mental health needs of the students to promote academic outcomes and healthy functioning. MTS recognizes current services are not meeting the significant need among students to prevent crisis, support students in a crisis, and provide on-going support and resources after a crisis. MTS's wants to better understand the needs within the community and structure a culturally appropriate comprehensive three tiered approach that responds to those needs and increases family support. The goal is to reduce the prevalence of suicide and suicide attempts, the negative impact of mental health disorders, the use and misuse of substances and the incidences of mental and behavioral health crisis at MTS.
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| SM063469-02 | Muckleshoot Indian Tribe | Auburn | WA | $167,417 | 2017 | SM-16-010 | ||||
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Title: Native Connections
Project Period: 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
Short Title: Native Connections MTS's vision is to provide services and staff that meet the mental health needs of the students to promote academic outcomes and healthy functioning. MTS recognizes current services are not meeting the significant need among students to prevent crisis, support students in a crisis, and provide on-going support and resources after a crisis. MTS's wants to better understand the needs within the community and structure a culturally appropriate comprehensive three tiered approach that responds to those needs and increases family support. The goal is to reduce the prevalence of suicide and suicide attempts, the negative impact of mental health disorders, the use and misuse of substances and the incidences of mental and behavioral health crisis at MTS.
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| SM063470-01 | Kivalina Village Council | Kivalina | AK | $185,838 | 2016 | SM-16-010 | ||||
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Title: Native Connections
Project Period: 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
Short Title: Native Connections With SAMHSA funding, the Native Village of Kivalina will form the Kivalina Wellness Coalition, which will be comprised of the following four task forces: Wellness Promotion; Suicide Prevention; Crisis Intervention; and the Postvention. The goals of the Kivalina Wellness Coalition will be fourfold: 1) For Kivalina residents to take ownership of the problem and of the solution through wellness promotion; 2) To educate residents on how to effectively and appropriately respond to people at risk of suicide; 3) To connect with other organizations and villages to create a region-wide alliance focused on increasing the quality of life in rural Alaska; and 4) To provide Kivalina residents with immediate access to prevention, treatment, and recovery services when needed. The overall indicators of success will be a reduction in both the rate of suicide and suicide attempts in Kivalina, Alaska. Other measurable objectives include: o a reduced rate of adult binge drinking; o reduced rate of children seeing violence or physical abuse firsthand; increased number of students participating in organized after-school activities; o increased number of residents with ASIST and Gatekeeper training; o increased number of community members participating in talking circles and support groups; o number of youth participating in the Kivalina Youth Council; o and increased data collection on all factors relevant to suicide prevention. Each task force will target different areas on the spectrum of suicide prevention. These task forces will consist of IRA staff, city staff, relevant agencies, health and safety officials, and community volunteers. The first year will focus on developing these task forces and creating action plans.
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| SM063470-02 | Kivalina Village Council | Kivalina | AK | $189,064 | 2017 | SM-16-010 | ||||
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Title: Native Connections
Project Period: 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
Short Title: Native Connections With SAMSHA funding, the Native Village of Kivalina will form the Kivalina Wellness Coalition, which will be comprised of the following four task forces: Wellness Promotion; Suicide Prevention; Crisis Intervention; and the Postvention. The goals of the Kivalina Wellness Coalition will be fourfold: 1) For Kivalina residents to take ownership of the problem and of the solution through wellness promotion; 2) To educate residents on how to effectively and appropriately respond to people at risk of suicide; 3) To connect with other organizations and villages to create a region-wide alliance focused on increasing the quality of life in rural Alaska; and 4) To provide Kivalina residents with immediate access to prevention, treatment, and recovery services when needed. The overall indicators of success will be a reduction in both the rate of suicide and suicide attempts in Kivalina, Alaska. Other measurable objectives include: o a reduced rate of adult binge drinking; o reduced rate of children seeing violence or physical abuse firsthand; increased number of students participating in organized after-school activities; o increased number of residents with ASIST and Gatekeeper training; o increased number of community members participating in talking circles and support groups; o number of youth participating in the Kivalina Youth Council; o and increased data collection on all factors relevant to suicide prevention. Each task force will target different areas on the spectrum of suicide prevention. These task forces will consist of IRA staff, city staff, relevant agencies, health and safety officials, and community volunteers. The first year will focus on developing these task forces and creating action plans.
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| SM063471-01 | Saint Regis Mohawk Tribe | Hogansburg | NY | $198,589 | 2016 | SM-16-010 | ||||
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Title: Native Connections
Project Period: 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
Short Title: Native Connections The purpose of the Saint Regis Mohawk Mental Health Service's Native Connections program is to enhance and expand culturally-relevant programs aimed at preventing and reducing suicidal behavior and substance abuse, reduce the impact of trauma and promote mental health among The People of Akwesasne, Saint Regis Mohawk Tribe ages 24 and younger. Our guiding principle is to conduct a youth-driven and community driven approach to developing culturally relevant, integrated suicide and drug/alcohol prevention services. The Native Connections program will support expansion and improve our efforts to provide integrated training, education, and information to the youth community regarding mental health, substance abuse and suicide prevention, intervention and postvention. Our goals are to continue to provide, improve, and expand our school-based services by providing screenings, assessments, treatment, and care coordination to Native youth in Salmon River Central School District; to develop a social marketing/media campaign that will reach youth where they learn about information on social media; and to develop and expand services to increase our outreach to Mohawk youth who are attending area schools of higher education to address their behavioral health needs so they may be more likely to remain in school and graduate. We will conduct community readiness and community needs assessment involving our youth, their families, and community while working closely with our partners. The Native Connections grant will assist the Saint Regis Mohawk Mental Health Services to develop and implement strategies aimed enhancing provision of relevant education, increasing youth help seeking behavior, reducing the stigma of being a consumer of mental health and/or substance abuse, and ultimately, saving our youths' lives from substance abuse and suicide.
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| SM063471-02 | Saint Regis Mohawk Tribe | Hogansburg | NY | $200,000 | 2017 | SM-16-010 | ||||
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Title: Native Connections
Project Period: 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
Short Title: Native Connections The purpose of the Saint Regis Mohawk Mental Health Service's Native Connections program is to enhance and expand culturally-relevant programs aimed at preventing and reducing suicidal behavior and substance abuse, reduce the impact of trauma and promote mental health among The People of Akwesasne, Saint Regis Mohawk Tribe ages 24 and younger. Our guiding principle is to conduct a youth-driven and community driven approach to developing culturally relevant, integrated suicide and drug/alcohol prevention services. The Native Connections program will support expansion and improve our efforts to provide integrated training, education, and information to the youth community regarding mental health, substance abuse and suicide prevention, intervention and postvention. Our goals are to continue to provide, improve, and expand our school-based services by providing screenings, assessments, treatment, and care coordination to Native youth in Salmon River Central School District; to develop a social marketing/media campaign that will reach youth where they learn about information on social media; and to develop and expand services to increase our outreach to Mohawk youth who are attending area schools of higher education to address their behavioral health needs so they may be more likely to remain in school and graduate. We will conduct community readiness and community needs assessment involving our youth, their families, and community while working closely with our partners. The Native Connections grant will assist the Saint Regis Mohawk Mental Health Services to develop and implement strategies aimed enhancing provision of relevant education, increasing youth help seeking behavior, reducing the stigma of being a consumer of mental health and/or substance abuse, and ultimately, saving our youths' lives from substance abuse and suicide.
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Short Title: Native Connections
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Displaying 35001 - 35025 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 |