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Tagged With "Health"

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REGISTER NOW AND SAVE! 2020 Child Health, Education, and Care Summit, February 3, 4, 5, 2020 [apps.ccfc.ca.gov]

2020 Child Health, Education, and Care Summit Hotel Irvine Irvine February 03, 2020 - February 05, 2020 Room Block Sold Out We invite you to join us for another outstanding Summit at the beautiful Hotel Irvine in Irvine, California, on February 3–5, 2020. The Summit theme, “Equity in Action: Elevating Children, Families, and California’s Workforce,” represents the natural evolution of this statewide event – from building partnerships, to promoting collective impact, to providing leadership...
Blog Post

Release of 2018 In-Hospital Breastfeeding Data [cdph.ca.gov]

By California Department of Public Health, Maternal, Child & Adolescent Health, October 2, 2019 The California Department of Public Health (CDPH), Center for Family Health is pleased to announce that the 2018 in-hospital breastfeeding data have been posted to the CDPH In-Hospital Breastfeeding Initiation Data website . We encourage all hospitals to utilize these data to integrate Quality Improvement (QI) efforts within the perinatal unit to ensure policies and practices are supportive of...
Blog Post

Researchers Call for Quality-Improvement Changes in Medi-Cal Plans [chcf.org]

By Xenia Shih Bion, California Health Care Foundation, October 7, 2019 California should move swiftly to improve the quality of care in the managed care plans that serve 80% of Medi-Cal’s nearly 14 million enrollees, according to researchers at the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF). Led by Professor of Medicine Andrew Bindman, MD, with support from CHCF, the researchers examined 41 quality measures and found that more than half of the quality measures stayed the same or declined...
Blog Post

Resilient Communities are Healthy Communities

Judy Robinson ·
Resilient Communities are Healthy Communities…what’s good for health is good for climate!” Authored by: Judy Robinson and Sara Jensen Carr, Design 4 Active Sacramento Climate change directly threatens the health and well-being of California’s nearly 40 million people. Without intervention at the local, regional, and state scales, these dangers will only become more pronounced in coming years. The Safeguarding California Plan devotes an entire public health chapter to these risks, stating:...
Blog Post

Resilient Communities are Healthy Communities

Judy Robinson ·
Resilient Communities are Healthy Communities…what’s good for health is good for climate!” Authored by: Judy Robinson and Sara Jensen Carr, Design 4 Active Sacramento Climate change directly threatens the health and well-being of California’s nearly 40 million people. Without intervention at the local, regional, and state scales, these dangers will only become more pronounced in coming years. The Safeguarding California Plan devotes an entire public health chapter to these risks, stating:...
Blog Post

Childhood Trauma Linked to Poor Health. Can Parents Find Help in Stanislaus County [modbee.com]

By Chrisanna Mink, The Modesto Bee, February 25, 2020 Aguilar is tall with the lean, athletic physique of a soccer player, casually confident and with a magnetic smile. It’s hard to imagine that a little more than a year ago, the 14-year-old was suffering with ticks that caused his head and neck to jerk to the side, incapacitating headaches and sometimes, body twitches. His body was trying to cope with mental distress after witnessing the frightening event of a gang member threatening to...
Blog Post

City of Gonzales Receives Culture of Health Prize, National Recognition [montereyherald.com]

By James Herrera, Monterey Herald, November 12, 2019 Recognized for pursuing innovative ideas and bringing partners together to rally around a shared vision of health, the city of Gonzales was chosen to receive the 2019 Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Culture of Health Prize of $25,000, and were part of a panel which shared its accomplishments in a live, nationwide webcast on Tuesday. “It’s such a great feeling to be here amongst other cities and to know how competitive it was and to be the...
Blog Post

Coping As A Community: COVID-19 - Zoom Webinar with Dr. Andres Sciolla

Bonnie Berman ·
DATE: Thursday, April 9, 2020 TIME: 12:00PM Many people have questions about ways to cope with stress experienced during the COVID-19 pandemic. In response to this, the UC Davis Office for Health Equity, Diversity and Inclusion has organized a weekly webinar series focused on Inclusive Practices, Holistic Health and Wellbeing. Please join me and Dr. Andres Sciolla, MD as we discuss Stress, Trauma and Resilience this Thursday, April 9, 2020 at 12 PM via Zoom. You can register at...
Blog Post

Counting on Community Symposium 2019 Highlights

Danielle Anderson ·
We are excited that this year the Children’s Mental Health Summit partnered with First 5 Humboldt’s ACEs/Resilience Project, the 0 to 8 Mental Health Collaborative and the Child Abuse Prevention Coordinating Council to bring such an amazing opportunity to our community. The collaboration involved in planning this event demonstrates the richness of partnerships present in Humboldt County. Our collective goal was to provide knowledge, strategies and networking opportunities to practitioners,...
Blog Post

County Gets $2.145 Million Grant for Public Safety Mental Health Co-response [noozhawk.com]

By Gina DePinto, Noozhawk, October 1, 2019 The Santa Barbara County Executive Office has announced the Santa Barbara County Sheriff’s Office and the Department of Behavioral Wellness have been awarded $2,145,000 over three years ($715,000/year) to staff and support two law enforcement-mental health co-response teams for the county. One or more co-response teams will serve North County. Staffing includes two crisis intervention-trained Sheriff deputies and two clinician positions from...
Blog Post

County Moves Forward With Plan for Behavioral Health Hubs [voiceofsandiego.org]

By Lisa Halverstadt, Voice of San Diego, October 29, 2019 County supervisors voted unanimously on Tuesday to move forward with efforts to create a network of behavioral health hubs and crisis units countywide, starting in North County and central San Diego. The goal is to shift the county’s mental health system from one overtaxed by emergency room visits and hospital stays to a more efficient chronic care system that helps patients stabilize before they fall into crisis. “It’s not just one...
Blog Post

COVID-19 and Boys and Men of Color, Their Families and Communities: A Spotlight on Health Disparities [shfcenter.org]

From Alliance for Boys and Men of Color, May 11, 2020 Alliance for Boys and Men of Color in partnership with California Funders for Boys and Men of Color and Executives’ Alliance for Boys and Men of Color invite you to join a video conversation. Join advocates on the front lines and philanthropy for an in-depth look at how leaders are working to mitigate health disparities during COVID-19 and are addressing the systemic racism that has led to the harrowing inequities our communities are...
Blog Post

COVID-19: Mental health and well-being for ourselves and our children [news.berkeley.edu]

By Yasmin Anwar, Berkeley News, April 17, 2020 The intense social isolation, stress and uncertainty surrounding COVID-19 is shaping up to be its own mental health pandemic. Already, spikes in post-traumatic stress disorder are being documented among vulnerable populations, health workers and other front-line personnel. In the latest in a series of Berkeley Conversations: COVID-19 live webcasts, UC Berkeley psychologists Dacher Keltner , Sonia Bishop and Frank Worrell offered advice on how to...
Blog Post

California Woman is Unable to Get Insurance - So She Took Her Health Into Her Own Hands [fresnobee.com]

By Yesenia Amaro, Center for Health Journalism, October 24, 2019 A red bandana holds back Judit Garcia’s hair as sweat stains become visible on her pink shirt. Her face and arms are sweaty, and she looks tired. But she’s not giving up. Almost an hour after beginning her workout, the 42-year-old Raisin City resident is still keeping up with all the steps in her Zumba class in the neighboring rural town of Caruthers. It doesn’t help that it’s a very hot evening in the Central Valley, and the...
Blog Post

Californians Want Better Mental Health Care. Can the State Deliver? [calhealthreport.org]

By Claudia Boyd-Barrett, California Health Report, February 25, 2020 California’s top health priority should be making sure that people who need mental health treatment can get it, over 90 percent of respondents said in a recent poll. More than half of those surveyed by the California Health Care Foundation said their communities do not have enough mental health providers to meet the need. People of color often feel the lack of access more acutely, researchers found, with 75 percent of black...
Blog Post

Can Behavioral Health Entrepreneurs Finally Break Through? [chcf.org]

By Rachel Lee, California Health Care Foundation, September 20, 2019 In California, nearly two out of three adults with a mental illness do not receive mental health services, and only 1 out of 10 adults with a substance use disorder receives any kind of treatment. These gaps in care have drawn the attention not only of policymakers, but also health technology investors and entrepreneurs. Last year, health tech start-ups, including Quartet Health, Lyra Health, and Pear Therapeutics, raised...
Blog Post

CCBHC UPDATE: $200 Million in Expansion Grants Now Available [thenationalcouncil.org]

By William Glanz, National Council for Behavioral Health, January 15, 2020 Clinics across the nation are now eligible to apply for Certified Community Behavioral Health Clinic (CCBHC) Expansion Grants, according to new guidelines outlined this week in a funding opportunity announcement by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA). The National Council has strongly advocated for increased funding for the Expansion Grant program. We’ve also been a vocal advocate...
Blog Post

Health care for 7 in 10 CA children funded by Medicaid or CHIP

Olivia Kirkland ·
Proposed cuts and changes to public health insurance programs would have a disproportionate effect on California kids compared with kids in the nation as a whole.
Blog Post

Health Care System Accepting New Math: Housing = Health [chcf.org]

By Xenia Shih Bion, California Health Care Foundation, November 18, 2019 In the course of a single year, a homeless man named Steve in Phoenix, Arizona, visited the emergency room 81 times. Only 54 years old, Steve is coping with a daunting array of medical conditions: multiple sclerosis, cerebral palsy, heart disease, and diabetes. Because of his health and reliance on emergency rooms, his medical costs averaged about $13,000 per month that year. Thanks to an innovative housing program run...
Blog Post

Health Equity Policy Platform for COVID-19 Response and Recovery

Mai Le ·
From Human Impact Parters: A COVID-19 Public Health Response & Recovery Policy Platform Decades of underinvestment in our public infrastructure and neoliberal policies that gutted protections for working people, our healthcare, and our wider safety net are vividly exposing their consequences. People of color — most harshly Black, Latinx, and Native people — are disproportionately experiencing the consequences of these conditions. In this context, directly impacted communities are naming...
Blog Post

Health in All Policies for a Stronger Recovery [changelabsolutions.org]

By Nadia Rojas, Tina Yuen, and Rebecca Johnson, ChangeLab Solutions, May 21, 2020 Throughout this blog series, we have discussed individual policy areas in which local governments can respond to the pandemic, including housing and utilities , paid leave protections , protections for food workers , repealing 911 nuisance laws , and equitable enforcement strategies . However, these policies are just the beginning of what local governments can do to address the complex, wide-ranging problems...
Blog Post

Hospitals prepare for wave of mental health disorders among their workers [latimes.com]

By Del Quentin Wilber, Los Angeles Times, May 6, 2020 Nurse Camille Davis has watched more than 30 patients die from coronavirus infection, and has sobbed while holding her phone close to them so loved ones could say their goodbyes. Her long drives home are filled with worry about transmitting the disease to her 8-year-old son. “I had a colleague who wanted to quit, it was too much for her, and I told her, ‘We can’t quit. We have to keep working until we get sick,’” said Davis, a nurse at...
Blog Post

Housing The Homeless Cuts State's Health Care Burden [kpbs.org]

By Matt Tinoco, KPCC, November 5, 2019 The reality of California’s homeless crisis is that there is little social safety net to catch the very poorest residents before they fall to the streets. As more than 100,000 people find homes on California’s sidewalks, roadways and parks, the costs mount for local and state governments. Nowhere is this more acute than the state’s public health care system. Medi-Cal covers many homeless people’s escalating health needs as they become sicker while...
Blog Post

How COVID-19 Impacts Children’s Mental Health

Lori Turk ·
Mental health among children and youth is already a concern. In 2018, there were 41,087 hospital discharges for mental health issues among California youth ages 5-19, a 38% increase in the last decade . With the emergence of COVID-19, children with existing mental health issues must endure the added burden of a pandemic. Children often rely on schools to provide mental health services, but school closures have made it difficult to access and preserve the quality of these services. Historical...
Blog Post

How To Recover From Psychological Aftershocks Of Lockdown During Mental Health Awareness Month [forbes.com]

Carey Sipp ·
By Bryan Robinson, May 1, 2020 May is Mental Health Awareness Month. It has been observed in the United States since 1949, reaching millions of people. There is no better time than the month of May, 2020 to highlight the importance of helping people re-adjust from the aftermath of the earth-shattering pandemic that has thrown so many of us off the normal course of our personal and professional lives. That includes first responders and all the medical personnel also suffering from PTSD and...
Blog Post

Hundreds from Humboldt Came Together for the Third Town Hall on ACEs

Danielle Anderson ·
On November 21st, 2019 we had the pleasure of welcoming California's Surgeon General, and ACEs Champion, Dr. Nadine Burke Harris to Humboldt County for the third town hall event on ACEs and resilience hosted by Senator Mike McGuire and First 5 Humboldt. This event was an opportunity for the community to come together again to deepen awareness of the impacts of ACEs on our children and families, and what has been done over the years to address and prevent childhood adversity at local and...
Blog Post

'I'm Not OK': First Responders Learn to Embrace Help for Mental Health During Symposium [bakersfield.com]

By Ema Sasic, Bakersfield.com, October 22, 2019 When a medical call came in on June 24, 2015, to assist an intoxicated man at a trolley station, San Diego firefighter Ben Vernon thought it would be a routine situation. He had been on this type of call several times in the past, so he was not too worried. Arriving on the scene, however, tensions started to rise between a bystander and several security guards, and a fight broke out. [ Please click here to read more .]
Blog Post

Invent Health: bringing mental healthcare closer to the patient [vator.tv]

By Steven Loeb, Vator, May 14, 2020 "That’s the best case scenario, in the U.S., with insurance; think about the rest of the world, it’s even worse," she said. The question is then, how to cut that down, a topic which was broached by Vasan and the rest of the panel, which included Alon Matas (Founder and president of Betterhelp), Brian Garrett (Co-founder & Managing Director, Crosscut Ventures), and David Bond (Director of Behavioral Health, Blue Shield of California – Promise Health...
Blog Post

INVITE: Mental Wellness Micro Healing Pop-up -- Mental Health Awareness Day - May 10

Gigi Annino ·
In recognition of Mental Health Awareness Day , please stop by our Trauma Transformed Healing Pop-up at the T2 Center in Oakland, CA. WHEN: Thursday, May 10th TIME: 12:00pm – 4:00pm WHERE: Trauma Transformed Center, 1035 22nd Avenue, #14, Oakland, CA. Please consider carpooling as parking is limited at times. WHAT: Healing and wellness activities DIY crafting "Spa" inspired snacks and drinks And more! Drop in and stay as long as you like between 12-4pm. RSVP: ...
Comment

Re: Opinion: All Doctors Should Practice Trauma-Informed Care [calhealthreport.org]

Rosanne Gephart ·
All health care providers should practice trauma informed care.
Comment

Re: State of Our Health 2020 Breakfast - Sponsorship Opportunities

David Dooley ·
Advancing Parenting's parenting norms bumper stickers make great giveaways! www.advancingparenting.org
Comment

Re: COVID-19: Mental health and well-being for ourselves and our children [news.berkeley.edu]

Marino Aragón ·
Hi. Can you please share this resource for fathers with your list. Attached you will find the flyers in English and Spanish. Thank you. [cid:image003.png@01D61956.3A2B5AD0]< https://www.childrensinstitute.org/ > Marino Aragón Fatherhood Specialist Children's Institute 2121 W Temple St, Los Angeles, CA 90026 Ph: 213-260-7737 | Ext: 8237 childrensinstitute.org< https://www.childrensinstitute.org/ > The materials and information in this email are confidential and may contain...
Comment

Re: A Conversation with California's First Surgeon General Nadine Burke Harris

Vincent J. Felitti, MD ·
Presumably this will be televised or videotaped for Internet viewing. What are the details on that?
Comment

Re: A Conversation with California's First Surgeon General Nadine Burke Harris

Karen Clemmer ·
Great question! I just reached out to UCB and requested the info - hope to hear back soon. Thanks for the nudge! Karen
Comment

Re: Mental Health Care Could Get Easier for New Moms Under New California Rules [capradio.org]

Barbara Jones Stern ·
Here is a possibility for well trained Doulas both for the birth and postpartum periods to provide much needed support--both practical and emotional.
Comment

Re: Hospitals prepare for wave of mental health disorders among their workers [latimes.com]

Edgar alfaro McField ·
On Wed, May 6, 2020 at 10:31 AM ACEsConnection < communitymanager@acesconnection.com> wrote:
Comment

Re: Hospitals prepare for wave of mental health disorders among their workers [latimes.com]

Nora Baladerian ·
It is SO IMPORTANT to do daily self care: Here are 3 videos that demonstrate how to reduce anxiety/fear, strengthen the immune system, and eliminate anger/ and frustration. I am a psychologist specializing in working with individuals and families with I/DD. These three short videos demonstrate how to reduce the conditions listed above using Thought Field Therapy. This is an evidence based therapy, approved by SAMHSA, that I have used for 2 decades to heal trauma, anger, rage, depression,...
Comment

Re: California has Begun Screening for Early Childhood Trauma, But Critics Urge Caution [sciencemag.org]

David Dooley ·
Screenings alone won't prevent adverse childhood experiences. Physical, sexual, verbal, and psychological child abuse as well as a host of other parenting behaviors and practices generally recognized as not supporting and/or disrupting the healthy development of children are such a serious problem that the solution requires a public health approach that employs primary prevention...something Vincent Felitti, co-author of the ACE Study, has repeatedly called for.
Comment

Re: More Adolescents Seek Medical Care for Mental Health Issues [californiahealthline.org]

David Dooley ·
I wonder if there hasn't been a general decline in the quality of parenting? And that it's having a devastating impact on children, families, and communities.
Comment

Re: 1/3 of CA children who need mental health treatment fail to receive it

Lisa Frederiksen ·
Thanks so much for compiling and sharing this information.
Comment

Re: ACEs and Our Day with Dr. Vincent Felitti

Lisa Frederiksen ·
Learning of the ACEs Study was hugely helpful to my "true" recovery from bulimia.
Blog Post

Mental Health Awareness: When Suffering Is Not an Illness

Lori Chelius ·
When I was an adolescent and young adult, I struggled with depression. As I reflect back on that time, so much of what I was experiencing was deeply tied to coming to terms with my sexuality. Growing up in the 1980’s in a relatively conservative town, I was closeted (even to myself) until I was a young adult. The pain and fear of being different, of not belonging, of being judged or rejected for who I was more than my adolescent brain could wrap its conscious head around.
Blog Post

Advancing Racial Equity Webinar Series [apha.org]

By Tia Taylor Williams, American Public Health Association, May 2020 Alarming disparities within the COVID-19 pandemic — such as higher hospitalizations and death rates among African Americans — are sadly predictable and highlight the urgent need to address the root causes of health inequities. APHA is hosting this four-part webinar series to give an in-depth look at racism as a driving force of the social determinants of health and equity. The series will explore efforts to address systems,...
Calendar Event

Racism: The Ultimate Underlying Condition

Blog Post

Community as Medicine: Generating Resilience (and Funding!) via Clinic-Community Integration 2.0

Elizabeth Markle ·
Healthcare professionals are exhausted. And it doesn’t have to be this way. I’m a psychologist by training, and I study Intentional Community. Quite literally, community shaped by design, rather than by default or by drift. My experience is that in the fields of mental health and primary care, providers are asked, and heroically trying, to meet unmeetable needs – to single-handedly generate and deliver enough care, resources, support, and (yes) even love – to meet the needs of our patients...
Blog Post

Schools should encourage but not require students to wear face covering, draft guidance says [edsource.prg]

By Louis Freedberg, EdSource, May 28, 2020 Students should be encouraged but not required to use face coverings when California schools reopen for classroom instruction, according to a draft of “interim guidance” from the state obtained by EdSource. However, all staff should use face coverings, according to the document, which sources familiar with it say was drawn up by the California Dept. of Public Health in collaboration with the governor’s office. That is only one of the numerous issues...
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