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Displaying 1 - 25 out of 35
Award Number | Organization | City | State | Amount | Award FY | NOFO | |||
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SP020332-05 | RICHLAND SCHOOL DISTRICT 2 | COLUMBIA | SC | $125,000 | 2018 | SP-14-002 | |||
Title: DFC
Project Period: 2014/09/30 - 2019/09/29
The coalition will prevent and reduce youth and substance abuse by implementing the following strategies: As a coalition, we have found that when we listen, our youth will tell us things that we had no idea was occurring.
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SM061742-05 | WEST VIRGINIA STATE DEPT HLTH/HUMAN RSCS | CHARLESTON | WV | $736,000 | 2018 | SM-14-008 | |||
Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention
Project Period: 2014/09/30 - 2019/09/29
The State of West Virginia will build upon the success of the Adolescent Suicide Prevention and Early Intervention (ASPEN) project and use committed and collaborative partnerships to work across a wide array of agencies and disciplines in order to make suicide prevention a core priority. Specifically, the project will: Increase access and availability of services in existing behavioral health centers by utilizing telehealth and satellite offices; provide for a referral system of preferential appointments for youth, subpopulations and their families; assist in acquiring health insurance; incorporate comprehensive evidence-based protective measures that expand universal prevention messages of hope and help at the regional level; improve identification, referral and engagement interventions for youth and transitioning youth aged 10-24 in increasing the number of youth and youth-serving agencies implementing screening and gatekeeper trainings; reduce the number of completed suicides and attempt survivors providing for protective, caring follow-up services for attempt survivors and their families; and build the capacity of follow-up services.
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SM061734-05 | WASHINGTON STATE DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH | TUMWATER | WA | $735,980 | 2018 | SM-14-008 | |||
Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention
Project Period: 2014/09/30 - 2019/09/29
SUICIDE PREVENTION WORKS! Is a multi-faceted youth suicide prevention program for areas with high rates of suicides and suicide attempts. The key program component is a suicide attempt surveillance approach that allows for follow-up after the emergency department (ED) discharge of a suicidal youth within 48 hours. This component is complemented by clinical services, gatekeeper training, and media campaigns. The prompt ED follow-up is made possible by an order from the county public health officer, declaring a self-harm attempt coming to the attention of the hospital emergency department to be a notifiable condition, requiring a report to the public health department within 24 hours of the ED discharge. During the ED stay, the patient and family will be provided with education about warning signs of suicide and means restriction. As part of a thorough discharge process, signed consents will be obtained. This will allow for the involvement of an outreach specialist to ensure continuity of care after discharge. This same process will be applied to discharges from inpatient hospitalizations. After discharge, the patient and family will engage in outpatient mental health and/or chemical dependency services.
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SP021397-10 | ELEVATE, INC. | JACKSON | WI | $125,000 | 2018 | SP-14-002 | |||
Title: DFC
Project Period: 2015/09/30 - 2019/09/29
The Coalition will prevent and reduce youth substance use by implementing the following strategies: Strengthen and build capacity of the Coalition to increase the number of members that play a critical role in the success of the Coalition and build Leadership Team as a foundation for guiding coalition actions and continue to develop capacity of the Leadership Team.
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SP023000-05 | TEXAS HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES COMMISSION | AUSTIN | TX | $1,626,000 | 2018 | SP-14-004 | |||
Title: SPF-PFS
Project Period: 2016/09/30 - 2019/09/29
The Texas SPF-PFS proposes to: 1) build emotional health, and prevent the onset and reduce the progression of substance abuse, especially underage drinking among youth (12-20); and prescription drug misuse and abuse among youth (12-25); 2) reduce substance abuse-related consequences in Texas communities; 3) build prevention capacity and infrastructure at the state and community levels; and 4) redirect and realign funding to support a statewide, coordinated prevention efforts. The project will build on its original SPF SIG and expand its existing prevention infrastructure to carry out these goals.
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SM061749-05 | SOUTH DAKOTA STATE DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL SERVICES | PIERRE | SD | $736,000 | 2018 | SM-14-008 | |||
Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention
Project Period: 2014/09/30 - 2019/09/29
The populations of focus include youth who have made a suicide attempt or expressed suicidal ideation at an emergency department or inpatient psychiatric unit, youth attending institutions of higher learning, immigrant youth, LGBTQ youth, youth at K-12 school districts, American Indian youth in the juvenile justice system and military family members and veterans. The project strategies include: 1) Partnering with hospitals to provide extended follow-up support services to youths admitted to emergency departments and inpatient psychiatric units for suicide attempts or suicidal ideation. 2) Partnering with three institutions of higher learning to introduce a crisis texting program for students and training staff in identifying, supporting and connecting students at risk. 3) Providing training to clinical service providers on assessing, managing and treating at risk youth. 4) Providing training to youth serving organizations to identify and refer youth at risk. The objectives of the project include: 1) Improving the continuity of care and follow-up with youth identified at risk for suicide discharged from emergency departments and inpatient units. 2) Increasing the number of staff at juvenile justice programs, colleges, universities, high schools and middle schools that are trained to identify and refer youth at risk for suicide. 3) Increasing the number of clinical service providers (behavioral health providers and health professionals) trained to assess, manage and treat youth at risk for suicide. 4) Increasing the number of behavioral health referrals and the utilization of behavioral health services for youth at risk by improving the system across the state. 5) Increasing the access points for youth at risk to receive assistance through a public awareness campaign, promoting the NSPL crisis line and promoting a crisis texting service.
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SP020698-05 | SOUTH DAKOTA STATE DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL SERVICES | PIERRE | SD | $1,380,000 | 2018 | SP-14-004 | |||
Title: SPF-PFS
Project Period: 2014/09/30 - 2019/09/29
The South Dakota SPF-PFS project will seek to reduce underage alcohol use by persons aged 12 to 20. The project will fund community coalitions in 12 counties to implement a range of evidence-based programs using both individual and environmental evidence-based approaches. Infrastructure support will be provided by individuals from South Dakota's SPF SIG Prevention Team, Evaluation team, State Epidemiology and Outcomes Workgroup, Advisory Council and Evidence Based Workgroup. The project will address the gap in prevention programming for minority youth--particularly American Indian and immigrant youth--who are at a higher risk for underage drinking and its negative consequences.
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TI025544-03 | SERENITY RECOVERY CENTERS, INC. | MEMPHIS | TN | $524,000 | 2018 | TI-14-005 | |||
Title: PPW
Project Period: 2016/09/30 - 2019/09/29
The Serenity Women's Healthy Life Program will capitalize on a citywide coalition to expand residential substance abuse treatment for low-income pregnant and postpartum African American women and their minor children who have multiple barriers to accessing substance abuse treatment and other support services. This project is a collaborative effort drawing on, and expanding, the substance abuse treatment expertise of the lead agency, Serenity Recovery Center, providing culturally congruent linkages to women's health and social services such as detoxification services for pregnant women as well as referral and coordination with: St. Francis Hospital Memphis; Memphis Health Center (prenatal services); Alliance Health Care Services (postpartum health services); Church Health Center (smoking cessation, wellness, nutrition, childcare and exercise) Choices, the Memphis Center for Reproductive Health (gynecological, HIV, and Hepatitis C testing and linkage to care); Hope Works (employment readiness, education, and assistance); and Hickory Hill Community Redevelopment Corporation (evidence-based child treatment services). A hallmark of the program involves the delivery and implementation of key services to provide a full recovery oriented system of care designed to the specific needs of pregnant African American women who use substances. These efforts will be coupled with wrap around case management services designed to increase access and engagement with a full continuum of culturally appropriate and gender-specific substance abuse and trauma-based services that are inclusive of detoxification, residential, out-patient, specialized co-occurring disorder and transitional housing programs. Expansion efforts will serve approximately 90 members of the target population with residential treatment services over the three-year life of this project; approximately 320 newborns, minor children, and partners will also benefit from enhanced support services.
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SP020699-05 | TENNESSEE STATE DEPARTMENT OF MENTAL HEALTH AND SUBSTANCE ABUSE SERVICES | NASHVILLE | TN | $1,380,000 | 2018 | SP-14-004 | |||
Title: SPF-PFS
Project Period: 2014/09/30 - 2019/09/29
The non-medical use rate of prescription drugs in TN has reached epidemic proportions with disastrous consequences. To this end, Tennessee's SPF-PFS Project will attempt to reverse the State's upward trend in non-medical prescription drug use among 12-25 year olds. The project will form a broad-based partnership of the Division of Substance Abuse Services (the Single State Agency), Community Anti-Drug Coalitions, Prevention Service Providers, and a statewide network of individuals dedicated to improving community health and safety. Together, they will identify, implement and evaluate evidenced-based and emerging practices to counter the policies, practices, and attitudes that currently support unsafe and destructive non-medical use of prescription drugs in this target population.
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SM061764-05 | TENNESSEE STATE DEPARTMENT OF MENTAL HEALTH AND SUBSTANCE ABUSE SERVICES | NASHVILLE | TN | $736,000 | 2018 | SM-14-008 | |||
Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention
Project Period: 2014/09/30 - 2019/09/29
The Tennessee Department of Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services (TDMHSAS) proposes Tennessee Lives Count-Connect (Connect) to reduce suicidal ideation, suicide attempts, and deaths among youth and young adults ages 10-24 by developing and implementing statewide suicide prevention and early intervention strategies, risk screening/assessment, and enhanced follow-up for 6,250 unduplicated (Year 1: 1,000; Years 2-5: 1,250/year). The focus area is the State of Tennessee, comprising urban and rural populations with multiple socioeconomic disparities (e.g., high poverty, unemployment) that contribute to high risk for suicidal ideation/behaviors among youth/young adults. Tennessee's suicide rate for the focus population (8.83) exceeds the national rate (7.57) and 111 young Tennesseans died by suicide in 2010. Among the focus population, 20% experience serious psychological distress; 8% of adolescents ages 12-17 and 11% of 18-25 year olds have had a major depressive episode; and 7% of adolescents, 4% of 18-20 year olds, and 16% of 21-25 year olds have been admitted for substance abuse treatment - all risk factors closely associated with youth suicide. Risk factors are exacerbated among subpopulations (children in state custody, juvenile justice involvement, veterans, and LGBTQ2S youth), with 50% having mental health and/or substance use disorders. Locally, suicide prevention, intervention, and follow-up resources are sparse and disjointed, and accessibility creates key service gaps for youth/young adults and their families. TDMHSAS will partner with Tennessee Suicide Prevention Network and Centerstone of Tennessee to provide suicide prevention and postvention trainings for gatekeepers (schools, law enforcement, foster care, etc.) and training for primary/behavioral health professionals.
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SM061750-05 | PENNSYLVANIA STATE DEPT/PUBLIC WELFARE | HARRISBURG | PA | $736,000 | 2018 | SM-14-008 | |||
Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention
Project Period: 2014/09/30 - 2019/09/29
Building on the Student Assistance Program in Pennsylvania schools, we will provide gatekeeper training and state of the art screening tools to appropriate school personnel and the behavioral health systems that serve these schools. Building on the work of past Campus Grants, we will organize a coalition of community college and university representatives to develop model suicide prevention plans and processes for higher education throughout the Commonwealth. Project goals and measurable objectives include: a) increasing the number of persons in schools, colleges, and universities, trained to identify and refer youth at risk for suicide, b) increasing the number of clinical service providers (including those working in schools, mental health, and substance abuse) trained to assess, manage, and treat youth at risk for suicide, c) increasing awareness about youth suicide prevention, specifically including the promotion and utilization of the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline, d) comprehensively implementing applicable sections of the 2012 National Strategy for Suicide Prevention to reduce rates of suicidal ideation, suicide attempts, and suicide deaths in their communities, and e) promoting state systems-level change to advance suicide prevention efforts in our public schools. With gatekeeper training and awareness campaigns, we plan to reach 186,000 youth over five years. With screening in schools, colleges, and primary care practices, we plan to reach approximately 26,000 indicated youth over five year. Thus, our total impact will be felt by nearly 212,000 youth across Pennsylvania.
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SM061727-05 | MUSCOGEE CREEK NATION | OKMULGEE | OK | $736,000 | 2018 | SM-14-008 | |||
Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention
Project Period: 2014/09/30 - 2019/09/29
The major outcomes of the project include: Immediately increase the number of AI youth identified as at risk for suicide; increase the number of youth referred for services; increase the number of youth who receive services; increase the number of youth-serving individuals trained to identify, refer, assess, manage, and treat at risk. The project will serve 3,000 American Indian youth over the course of the project. The target population is rural American Indians age 10-24 who are at risk for suicide or suicide behaviors. Goal 1: To increase the capacity, effectiveness, and efficiency of suicide prevention services for American Indian youth age 10-24 who reside within the area served by the Creek Nation. Goal 2: To reduce the prevalence suicide and suicidal behaviors among the at risk youth populations (10-24) in Creek Nation. Goal 3: To promote systems level change at the tribal level to embrace suicide prevention as a core strategy.
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SM061736-05 | OKLAHOMA DEPT OF MENTAL HLTH/SUBS ABUSE | OKLAHOMA CITY | OK | $730,307 | 2018 | SM-14-008 | |||
Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention
Project Period: 2014/09/30 - 2019/09/29
Project goals are to: 1. Increase suicide prevention capacity and implementation within priority counties. 2. Increase suicide prevention capacity and implementation at the state level. 3. Increase the number of youth at risk of suicide who are identified and receive mental health services. 4. Increase the number of effective and evidence-based clinical suicide prevention practices implemented. 5. Improve and expand suicide surveillance systems. The proposed service area is the state of Oklahoma and six high-risk communities. Contracted sub recipients will provide gatekeeper training, and establish an emergency department suicide attempt database with follow up consent protocol. The project will reach nearly 50,000 individuals with suicide prevention training/education (including 900 clinicians and up to 25 colleges/universities). Approximately 40 communities statewide will receive suicide postvention/prevention consultation and training. Funding will also be utilized to continue statewide suicide prevention efforts initiated with Cohort I, IV, and VI strategies. The state will develop four Regional Suicide Prevention Chapters of the State Suicide Prevention Council, gatekeeper and clinical suicide prevention training statewide, and crisis response protocol in public school systems to specifically address student death by suicide. The project is expected to reduce the rate of non-fatal suicide attempts and deaths in youth aged 10-24.
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SP020696-05 | CHEROKEE NATION | TAHLEQUAH | OK | $1,264,000 | 2018 | SP-14-004 | |||
Title: SPF-PFS
Project Period: 2014/09/30 - 2019/09/29
The Cherokee Nation (CN) is the largest federally recognized tribal nation in the United States. The CN Tribal Jurisdictional Service Area is comprised of all or part of 14 counties in northeastern Oklahoma. The Cherokee Nation Community Action Network will focus its SPF-PFS efforts on both alcohol consumption by persons ages 12-20 and prescription drug misuse and abuse by persons ages 12-25. A priority focus will center on the prevalence of binge drinking and opioid use by youth within the Tribal Oklahoma area.
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SM061753-05 | YELLOWHAWK TRIBAL HEALTH CENTER | PENDLETON | OR | $731,506 | 2018 | SM-14-008 | |||
Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention
Project Period: 2014/09/30 - 2019/09/29
Yellowhawk Tribal Health Center, a tribally operated health clinic located in Pendleton, Oregon is requesting funding from SAMHSA to implement a five year tribal youth suicide prevention project for the Confederated Tribes of Umatilla Indian Reservation (CTUIR). The project will provide a broad based program of trainings, systemic improvements to assure continuity of care and implementation of best practices, increased treatment efficacy, and culturally-attuned prevention services in collaboration with a wide range of program partners. Goal 1 - To engage the tribal community in promoting healthy and empowered individuals and families; Goal 2 - To build youth resilience by strengthening connections to community and culture through experiential learning and life skills development; Goal 3 - To strengthen the tribe's ability to prevent youth suicides and support healing of those affected by suicide; Goal 4 - To initiate system change in the delivery of behavioral health services by providing integrated preventative and follow-up care; Goal 5 To facilitate regional system change to address youth suicides through partnerships, and; Goal 6 - To collect data to facilitate program improvement and assess impact.
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SM061759-05 | PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICES | PORTLAND | OR | $736,000 | 2018 | SM-14-008 | |||
Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention
Project Period: 2014/09/30 - 2019/09/29
Oregon Public Health Division's (PHD) Caring Connections Youth Suicide Prevention Initiative capitalizes on a long history of successful public/private collaboration and Oregon's dynamic health care delivery system to reduce the burden of suicide among youth ages 10-24 by implementing comprehensive suicide prevention and early identification best practices. The Initiative targets 468,809 youth aged 10-24, with special focus on at-risk youth, which includes those that live in seven Oregon counties with a higher than national rate of youth suicide, military families, youth involved in the foster care and juvenile justice systems, Native American youth, Latino youth, and sexual minority youth. PHD's multifaceted approach for comprehensive suicide prevention and early identification includes implementation of evidence-based and best practice strategies at both the state level, and intensely at the community level. Oregon's proposal mobilizes 28 key partners, including the community mental health programs, public health, hospitals and health centers, schools, addictions and mental health clinicians, universities, juvenile justice, veteran's organizations, Tribes, and the Coordinated Care Organizations in seven counties in the Willamette Valley, Southern Oregon, Central Oregon, Northeastern Oregon, and the Portland area.
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SM061780-05 | NORTHWEST PORTLAND AREA INDIAN HLTH BD | PORTLAND | OR | $736,000 | 2018 | SM-14-008 | |||
Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention
Project Period: 2014/09/30 - 2019/09/29
Goal 1: Improve tribal suicide prevention policies and environments through coordination, collaboration, and resource sharing across tribes, departments, and programs. Goal 2: Enhance organizational systems and practices in IHS, Tribal, and Urban (I/T/U) clinics to provide suicide treatment and prevention services to 300 AI/AN youth each year. Goal 3: Develop and disseminate three culturally-appropriate social marketing campaigns (targeting AI/AN youth, LGBT youth, and young veterans) to promote healthy social norms surrounding the use of mental health services and use of the national Lifeline. Goal 4: Improve knowledge, attitudes and behaviors among 140 AI/AN youth in the Pacific Northwest using culturally-appropriate, evidence-based suicide prevention interventions (EBIs). Each year, the THRIVE project will issue 3 subcontracts with NW tribes and one subcontract with an Institution of Higher Education (Heritage University) to implement an EBIs targeting AI/AN youth in their communities.
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SP020705-05 | PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICES | PORTLAND | OR | $2,016,000 | 2018 | SP-14-004 | |||
Title: SPF-PFS
Project Period: 2014/09/30 - 2019/09/29
The Oregon SPF-PFS proposes to transform and enhance statewide prevention services to prevent or reduce consequences of underage drinking, adult problem drinking and non-medical use of prescription drugs. Utilizing the SPF model, Oregon's SPF-PFS project will focus on underage drinking among persons aged 12 to 20; on high risk drinking among 21-25 year olds; and on prescription drug misuse and abuse among persons aged 12-25. Oregon will continue to use a data driven approach to ensure project success. The State Epidemiology Outcomes Workgroup will collect and analyze alcohol and prescription drug use data with an eye toward areas of high need and low capacity across the state.
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SP021391-05 | MENTAL HEALTH AND RECOVERY BOARD OF UNION COUNTY | MARYSVILLE | OH | $125,000 | 2018 | SP-14-002 | |||
Title: DFC
Project Period: 2015/12/02 - 2019/09/29
The coalition will prevent and reduce youth and substance abuse by implementing the following strategies: In order to make decisions on impacting youth substance abuse, a sub-committee of the Coalition, including members of the Steering Committee, quarterly reviews local community indicators and annually reviews youth substance use data to monitor trends and rates of youth use.
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SP022153-10 | BUTLER COUNTY EDUCATIONAL SERVICE CENTER | HAMILTON | OH | $125,000 | 2018 | SP-14-002 | |||
Title: DFC
Project Period: 2016/09/30 - 2019/09/29
The coalition will prevent and reduce youth substance use by implementing the following strategies: enhancing the coalition's functionality through assessment, member recruitment and retention efforts and strategic planning; Build the community's capacity to modify and create program, policy and practices to reduce youth abuse of alcohol, marijuana and prescription drugs.
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SP020707-05 | NEW YORK STATE OFF ALCOHOLISM/SUB ABUSE | MENANDS | NY | $1,626,000 | 2018 | SP-14-004 | |||
Title: SPF-PFS
Project Period: 2014/09/30 - 2019/09/29
New York's SPF-PFS project will focus on two substance abuse prevention targets: 1) prescription drug misuse and abuse among persons aged 12 to 25, and 2) heroin abuse and heroin/opiate overdose prevention among persons aged 12 to 25. The State will select up to seven high need community coalitions through a competitive RFA process to implement environmental strategies in their communities to address these priority areas. The strategies will address availability, community norms, and regulation/enforcement of prescription drug misuse and abuse and of heroin use in their communities using policies, media strategies and partnerships with law enforcement.
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SM061735-05 | PUEBLO OF SAN FELIPE | SAN FELIPE PUEBLO | NM | $599,024 | 2018 | SM-14-008 | |||
Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention
Project Period: 2014/09/30 - 2019/09/29
The population of focus is American Indian (AI) male and female youth ages 10-24 years old at high-risk of suicide, with a priority population of youth who are members of military families, and those who are lesbian, gay, bisexual, or transgender (LGBT) residing at the Pueblo. Strategies include implementation of the PHQ9 as a universal screening; Mental Health First Aid and Natural Helpers for surveillance, early identification and referral; Project Venture as an outreach and engagement strategy; ALS and Wraparound as interventions; and the further development of both local and statewide Suicide Prevention Coalitions. Project goals and measureable objectives include: (1) Increase the number of persons in youth-serving organizations trained to identify and refer youth at risk for suicide; (2) Increase the number of clinical service providers trained to assess, manage, and treat youth at risk for suicide; (3) Improve Interagency Collaboration; (4) Increase the outreach, identification of risk, referral and utilization of behavioral health care services; and (5) Develop a sustainability strategy to ensure continuation of the model after grant funding ends and promote tribal system- level change. 280 people will be served annually and 1420 people will be served throughout the lifetime of KEYWAH II.
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SP022154-05 | RHA HEALTH SERVICES, INC. | ASHEVILLE | NC | $125,000 | 2018 | SP-14-002 | |||
Title: DFC
Project Period: 2016/09/30 - 2019/09/29
The Coalition serves Asheville and Buncombe County North Carolina, a community of 231,452.The goals of the coalition are establish and strengthen community collaboration in support of local effort to prevent and reduce youth substance use. The coalition will achieve its goals by implementing these strategies: by enhancing access to Partnership participation and collaboration by developing a "community talks" initiative where different events are held in strategies parts of the community specifically for people who are not currently involved with the Partnership; engaging community stakeholders that are not currently involved such as the university, community colleges, city council, and the commissioners that are largely represented in the Buncombe County area; empowering the school resource officers by providing trainings on underage drinking and how to work with youth who may be using alcohol and/or prescription drugs and their families at all 7 high schools; conducting a regular alcohol compliance checks on a random sample of alcohol outlets and events throughout the county to reduce youth access to alcohol and holding two prescription drug take backs within the county to remove unwanted/unused or expired medications from the community in order to reduce youth access to prescription drugs
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SM061741-05 | NEBRASKA ST DEPT OF HEALTH & HUMAN SERVS | LINCOLN | NE | $731,106 | 2018 | SM-14-008 | |||
Title: State/Tribal Youth Suicide Prevention
Project Period: 2014/09/30 - 2019/09/29
Goal 1: Prevent youth suicides in Nebraska --50% of licensed Nebraska clinicians are trained to assess, manage and treat youth at risk; Increase # of at risk youth identified & referred who receive services; Reduce the youth suicide rate by 50% in five years Goal 2: Standardized screening protocols are in place for youth at risk for suicide in child serving systems; 100% of K-12 public school personnel receive youth suicide prevention training; Screening protocols are implemented by regional network providers serving youth with behavioral disorders; Screening protocols are adopted by post-secondary settings (campuses, workforce development agencies, specialty services/schools). Goal 3: Nebraska communities implement culturally appropriate suicide prevention strategies; 75% of adults in Nebraska report general awareness of signs of suicide and the National Hotline. Culturally appropriate suicide prevention strategies are supported in each of the six behavioral health regions in Nebraska. LOSS postvention teams are available in each of the six behavioral health regions in Nebraska.
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SP020710-05 | COMMONWEALTH HEALTHCARE CORPORATION | SAIPAN | MP | $718,339 | 2018 | SP-14-004 | |||
Title: SPF-PFS
Project Period: 2014/09/30 - 2019/09/29
The Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands (CNMI), Commonwealth Healthcare Corporation's- Community Guidance Center, serves as the primary behavioral health prevention service entity to all the islands of the Commonwealth. The Commonwealth will use its SPF-PFS funds to carry out three main goals: 1) Prevent or reduce consequences of underage drinking and adult problem drinking; and of drinking and driving, among persons ages 12-20; 2) Reduce prescription drug misuse and abuse among persons ages 12-25; and 3) Collaborate with other behavioral health prevention areas utilizing the five steps of the SPF process in partnerships throughout the islands.
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