Author Archive

09/10-09/13: Latino Behavioral Health Institute 19th Annual Latino Conference

Latino Behavioral Health Institute
19th Annual Latino Conference
September 10 – 13, 2013

“Advancing Latino Behavioral Health:
From Margin to Mainstream”
Sheraton Los Angeles
711 S. Hope Street
Los Angeles, CA 90017

DOWNLOAD BROCHURE HERE

2013 LBHI Conference Brochure

 

PRE-CONFERENCE
September 10, 2013 – Tuesday
Registration begins at 8:00 a.m.
Introduction to Substance Abuse Treatment of LBGTT Hispanic/Latino Population
JoAnne Keatley, MSW Time: 9 a.m.– Noon
Medical Assisted Treatment
Victor Flores, MC, LAC, Darice Orobitg, PhD Time: 1 p.m. – 3 p.m.
Multicultural clinical supervision and consultation: A Latino Focus
Regina Armas, PhD, Yvette Flores, PhD Time: 9 a.m. – Noon,
1 p.m. – 4 p .m.

CONFERENCE
September 11, 2013 – Wednesday
Registration begins at 7:00 a.m.
Conference 8:30 a.m. – 5:00 p.m.
Alex Kopelowicz, MD – LBHI President – Welcome
Principal Speaker
Marvin J. Southard, DSW
Director, Los Angeles County Department of Mental Health
Principal Speaker
Luis F. Ramirez, MD
Associate Professor of Psychiatry, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio
“El amor y Jose Alfredo”
Lunch on your own
Concurrent Workshops
Complementing Evidence Based Practices with Personal and Cultural Wisdom
Christopher Camilleri, MD, Luis Orozco, MSW
Depression in Adolescents
Pedro Delgado, MD
Ecological Associations of Alcohol Outlet Density with Drunk Driving and Underage Drinking Between Latino and White Populations in Los Angeles County
Ricardo Contreras, MPH, MA, Tina Kim, PhD
Preferencias de tratamiento para la salud mental con personas de desendencia Mexicana (Spanish Session)
Tanya Sorrell, PhD
Improved Depression and Diabetes Care Management Among Older Adult Latinos
Veronica Cardenas, PhD, Consuelo Razo, RN, Elizabeth Lugo-Butler, MD
Dandole la mano a nuestro hermano: A New Approach for the Delivery of Mental Health Services to the Latino Community
Jose Salazar, DrPH, Judith Perrigo, LCSW, Gloria Sistos
Ventanillas de Bienestar- Effective Outreach and Enrollment Training Strategies for Uninsured Latinos
Frederick Sandoval, MPA
Networking
Concurrent Workshops
Risk and Protective Factors for Adolescent Suicide: An Overview
Derek Hsieh, LCSW, PhD
Project Q’s Working with Latino LGBTQ Youth: What you Really Need to Know
Cristina Torres, MS, Rebeca Grande BS
Factores que impactan la provision de servicios de salud mental en profesionales que trabajan con sobrevivientes de trauma (Spanish Session)
Teresa Celada, PhD, Veronica Chavez, PsyD
Latinos and Behavioral Research Health Participation
Bernardo Ng, MD, Denise Chavira, PhD, Alvaro Camacho, MD MPH, Maria P. Aranda, PhD, MSW
Behavioral and Mental Health: Linking Industry to the Classroom
Gustavo Loera, EdD
Eating Disorders in the Latino Community
Patricia Pitts, PhD, MFT
Curanderismo in the 21st Century
Juan Paz, MSW, DSW

September 12, 2013 –Thursday
Registration begins at 7:00 a.m.
Conference 8:00 a.m. – 5:15 p.m.
MaJose Carrasco, MPA – LBHI Board Member – Opening
Comments
Plenary Session
H. Westley Clark, M.D., J.D., M.P.H., CAS, FASAM, Invited
Director, Center for Substance Abuse Treatment (CSAT)
Concurrent Workshops
Narrative Solutions to Relational Dilemmas, Couples Therapy with Latinos
Yvette Flores, PhD, Hector Rivera-Lopez, PhD
Targeted School Violence
Tony Beliz, PhD, Maria Luz Martinez, LCSW
Latinos and Health Disparities in Substance Abuse Treatment
Erick Guerrero, PhD, Tina Kim, PhD
Experiencia de establecimientos especializados en adicciones para mujeres en el estado de Nuevo Leon
Laura Cavazos Cardenas, MD (Spanish Session)
Training and Building Cultural and Linguistic Competencies
Henry Acosta, MA, MSW, LSW, Eduardo Morales PhD
Suicidality and the Latino Psychiatric Patient
Michael Escamilla, MD, Cecilia DeVargas, MD, Richard Wagner, MD
Latino Immigration, Cultural Trauma and Cultural Complex: A Psy-choanalytic/Phenomenological Examination of the Impact of Re-peated Trauma of Immigration on the Individual and Collective Psy-che
Salvador Trevino, PhD
Lunch on your own
Concurrent Workshops
Impact of Parental Detention and Deportation on Latino Citizen Chil-dren’s Psychological Well -being: Three Case Studies
Lisseth Rojas-Flores, PhD, Marisol de Jesus-Perez, MA
Tailoring Treatment to the Unique Needs and Stressors of Hispanic Adolescents
Daniel Santisteban, PhD, Richard Cervantes, PhD
Qualitative Study: Barriers and Limitations Faced by Migrant, Un-documented and Monolingual Latinos/as When Engaged in Outpa-tient Substance Abuse Services Using a Cognitive Behavioral Ap-proach
Maria Sariol, MA, MSW, Kay Scott, LCSW-R, ACSW, CASAC
Corazon de Aztlan: La Prevencion de Abuso de Drogas y del Virus de Immunodeficiencia Humana (Spanish Session)
Juan Paz, MSW, DSW
Mental Illness in a South Border Population: Ethnic Differences in Prevalence, Use of Mental Health Services and Its Association With Traumatic Experiences
Juan Zavala, MD, Ricardo Pulido, BS, Brenda Castillo, BS
Utilization of Bilingual Supervision for Spanish Speaking Practitio-ners in a Mental Health Clinic
Veronica Chavez, PsyD, Teresa Celada, PhD, Huong Diep, PsyD
Using Social Media and Internet Technologies to Engage Latinos in Behavioral Health Services
Eduardo Morales, PhD, Carlos Valdovinos, MA, PhDc

Networking
Concurrent Workshops
Midnight-Sunrise, Grief: Loss of a Loved One
Paul Rodriguez, EdD
The Wise Latino Elder: Strengthening Our Ability to Serve as Mentors
and Teachers
Roberto Vargas, DrPH
An Existential Liberation Model for Working with Gay Latino Men
Jose Navarro, LCSW, EdD
Promoting Hope and Recovery among Latinos with Serious Mental Illness
Maria Restrepo-Toro, MS
Animo! The Westside Latino Integrated Service Management Model
Jaime Garcia, MD, Julie DeRose, MFT, Adrianne Angeles, LCSW, Elena
Fiallo, L.Ac.
Triple P: Programa de paternidad positiva (Spanish Session)
Nadia R. Jones, MFT, EdD
The Healing Music of Afro-Latinos
Melissa Shepard, MFT, Melena Francis
Registration begins at 7:00 a.m.
Conference 8:00 a.m. – 2:30 p.m.
Larry Gasco, Ph D – LBHI Board Member –
Opening Comments
Principal Speaker
Alex Kopelowicz PhD-Chief of Psychiatry-Olive View Medical
Center-”Involving Latino Families in Mental Health Treatment”
Networking
Concurrent Workshops
Providing Comprehensive Multidisciplinary Care to Childhood Cancer
Survivors
Laura Bava, PsyD, Lisl Schweers, LCSW, Kasey Rengan, RN
Strategies for Integrating Behavioral Health and Primary Care Services:
Screening, Brief Intervention and Referral to Treatment (SBIRT)
Thomas Freese, PhD, Beth Rutkowski, MPH
La Psicobiologia del Amor y El Bolero (Spanish Session)
Luis F. Ramirez, MD
Getting Organizational Buy-in for Cultural Competence and Latino
Inclusion Efforts
MaJose Carrasco, MPA
Differentiating the 3 Ds (Dementia, Depression and Delirium) with the
Anciano
Mario Rodriguez, LCSW, MPA, PhD, Carlos Rodriguez, MS, PhD
See, Believe, and Achieve: Mental Health Policy and Advocacy
Ane C. Romero, MPA
Hosted Lunch, Awards and Closing Remarks
Ed Viramontes — LBHI Board Member
HONOREE: William Vega, Provost Professor
Executive Director, USC Edward R. Roybal
Institute on Aging

DOWNLOAD BROCHURE HERE

2013 LBHI Conference Brochure

 

08/25/13: Gunther Freehill memorial service

A memorial gathering to honor Gunther Freehill 

will be held on Sunday, August 25 from 3:00 to 5:00 PM.

 
The LAGLC Village at Ed Gould Plaza
 1125 North McCadden Place
Los Angeles, CA. 90028

 (1 block east of Highland between Santa Monica Blvd. and Lexington Ave.)

The Memorial gathering will begin promptly at 3 PM in the auditorium, followed by a reception from 4:00 to 5:00 PM in the Village courtyard outside the auditorium.

Parking:

Two LAGLC staff lots, one to the south of the building and one directly across the street from the Village, will be open for your use. There is also street parking, which is metered (even on Sundays).

  • Donations in Gunther’s memory can be made to the Paradise Ride in Kauai, Hawaii (sponsored by Malama Pono Health Services). Gunther was a strong supporter and took part in the annual bike ride on a number of occasions. A check can be made out to: Malama Pono Health Services, PO Box 1950, Lihue, HI, 96766-5950 or by going to its website:http://www.Paradiseridekauai.com.
  • Donations in Gunther’s memory can also be sent to the Los Angeles Gay and Lesbian Center, by donating on the “Tribute or Memorial Gift” page of the Center’s web site (www.LAGLC.org) or by mail with a check payable to “Friends of the Center” at PO Box 51896, Los Angeles, CA, 90051-6196

Any questions, please feel free to contact Kevin Farrell at kevinfarrell527@gmail.com

Many thanks to the Los Angeles Gay and Lesbian Center for its generous donation of the auditorium, courtyard, staff time, and parking facilities in Gunther’s memory.

AIDS Activist Gunther Freehill Dead at 60 | Karen Ocamb

To those unfamiliar with the life-and-death struggles during the AIDS crisis in the late 1980s and 1990s, the name Gunther Freehill might not resonate. But for the battle-scared veterans of ACT UP/L.A.’s fights for government recognition, intervention and funding; for live-saving common sense on condoms from the Catholic Church; and the attempt to translate radical awareness that “health care is a right” into the bureaucracy of the L.A. County Office of AIDS Programs and Policy, Gunther Freehill (pictured below marching with AIDS Diva Connie Norman in a photo courtesy of Raymond Reece) was a man on the frontlines

Share this:

The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA): Key Considerations for Social Work Practice

Dear Colleagues,

The fourth entry in our Affordable Care Act (ACA)-related ShareSpot story series was just posted. “The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA): Key Considerations for Social Work Practice,” by Lucy Cordts, LCSW, with NO/AIDS Task Force offers tips for social workers about where to find relevant ACA information, how to advise clients of their options, and how to strategically engage clients in understanding the importance of this coverage. Visit ShareSpot at http://blog.aidsetc.org to read the full story and please share your thoughts.

 

Thank you,

AETC National Resource Center

 

 

Like us on Facebook

Follow us on Twitter

Watch us on You Tube

Follow our blog ShareSpot

Executive Order — HIV Care Continuum Initiative | The White House

Executive Order — HIV Care Continuum Initiative | The White House.

The White House

Office of the Press Secretary

For Immediate Release
July 15, 2013

Executive Order — HIV Care Continuum Initiative

EXECUTIVE ORDER

– – – – – – –

ACCELERATING IMPROVEMENTS IN HIV PREVENTION AND CARE IN THE UNITED STATES THROUGH THE HIV CARE CONTINUUM INITIATIVE

By the authority vested in me as President by the Constitution and the laws of the United States of America, and in order to further strengthen the capacity of the Federal Government to effectively respond to the ongoing domestic HIV epidemic, it is hereby ordered as follows:

Section 1. Policy. Addressing the domestic HIV epidemic is a priority of my Administration. In 2010, the White House released the first comprehensive National HIV/AIDS Strategy (Strategy), setting quantitative goals for reducing new HIV infections, improving health outcomes for people living with HIV, and reducing HIV-related health disparities. The Strategy will continue to serve as the blueprint for our national response to the domestic epidemic. It has increased coordination, collaboration, and accountability across executive departments and agencies (agencies) with regard to addressing the epidemic. It has also focused our Nation’s collective efforts on increasing the use of evidence-based approaches to prevention and care among populations and in regions where HIV is most concentrated.

Since the release of the Strategy, additional scientific discoveries have greatly enhanced our understanding of how to prevent and treat HIV. Accordingly, further Federal action is appropriate in response to these new developments. For example, a breakthrough research trial supported by the National Institutes of Health showed that initiating HIV treatment when the immune system was relatively healthy reduced HIV transmission by 96 percent. In addition, evidence suggests that early treatment may reduce HIV-related complications. These findings highlight the importance of prompt HIV diagnosis, and because of recent advances in HIV testing technology, HIV can be detected sooner and more rapidly than ever before.

Based on these and other data, recommendations for HIV testing and treatment have changed. The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force now recommends that clinicians screen all individuals ages 15 to 65 years for HIV, and the Department of Health and Human Services Guidelines for Use of Antiretroviral Agents now recommends offering treatment to all adolescents and adults diagnosed with HIV.

Furthermore, ongoing implementation of the Affordable Care Act provides a historic opportunity for Americans to access affordable, quality health care. The Act is expanding access to recommended preventive services with no out-of-pocket costs, including HIV testing, and, beginning in 2014, insurance

companies will not be able to deny coverage based on pre-existing conditions, including HIV. Starting October 1, 2013, Americans can select the coverage that best suits them through the new Health Insurance Marketplace, and coverage will begin January 1, 2014.

Despite progress in combating HIV, important work remains. Since the publication of the Strategy, data released by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention show that there are significant gaps along the HIV care continuum — the sequential stages of care from being diagnosed to receiving optimal treatment. Nearly one-fifth of the estimated 1.1 million people living with HIV in the United States are undiagnosed; one-third are not linked to medical care; nearly two-thirds are not engaged in ongoing care; and only one-quarter have the virus effectively controlled, which is necessary to maintain long-term health and reduce risk of transmission to others.

In light of these data, we must further clarify and focus our national efforts to prevent and treat HIV infection. It is the policy of my Administration that agencies implementing the Strategy prioritize addressing the continuum of HIV care, including by accelerating efforts to increase HIV testing, services, and treatment along the continuum. This acceleration will enable us to meet the goals of the Strategy and move closer to an AIDS-free generation.

Sec. 2. Establishment of the HIV Care Continuum Initiative. There is established the HIV Care Continuum Initiative (Initiative), to be overseen by the Director of the Office of National AIDS Policy. The Initiative will mobilize and coordinate Federal efforts in response to recent advances regarding how to prevent and treat HIV infection. The Initiative will support further integration of HIV prevention and care efforts; promote expansion of successful HIV testing and service delivery models; encourage innovative approaches to addressing barriers to accessing testing and treatment; and ensure that Federal resources are appropriately focused on implementing evidence-based interventions that improve outcomes along the HIV care continuum.

Sec. 3. Establishment of the HIV Care Continuum Working Group. There is established the HIV Care Continuum Working Group (Working Group) to support the Initiative. The Working Group shall coordinate Federal efforts to improve outcomes nationally across the HIV care continuum.

(a) Membership. The Working Group shall be co-chaired by the Director of the Office of National AIDS Policy and the Secretary of Health and Human Services or designee (Co-Chairs). In addition to the Co-Chairs, the Working Group shall consist of representatives from:

(i) the Department of Justice;

(ii) the Department of Labor;

(iii) the Department of Health and Human Services;

(iv) the Department of Housing and Urban Development;

(v) the Department of Veterans Affairs;

(vi) the Office of Management and Budget; and

(vii) other agencies and offices, as designated by the Co-Chairs.

(b) Consultation. The Working Group shall consult with the Presidential Advisory Council on HIV/AIDS, as appropriate.

(c) Functions. As part of the Initiative, the Working Group shall:

(i) request and review information from agencies describing efforts to improve testing, care, and treatment outcomes, and determine if there is appropriate emphasis on addressing the HIV care continuum in relation to other work concerning the domestic epidemic;

(ii) review research on improving outcomes along the HIV care continuum;

(iii) obtain input from Federal grantees, affected communities, and other stakeholders to inform strategies to improve outcomes along the HIV care continuum;

(iv) identify potential impediments to improving outcomes along the HIV care continuum, including for populations at greatest risk for HIV infection, based on the efforts undertaken pursuant to paragraphs (i), (ii), and (iii) of this subsection;

(v) identify opportunities to address issues identified pursuant to paragraph (iv) of this subsection, and thereby improve outcomes along the HIV care continuum;

(vi) recommend ways to integrate efforts to improve outcomes along the HIV care continuum with other evidence-based strategies to combat HIV; and

(vii) specify how to better align and coordinate Federal efforts, both within and across agencies, to improve outcomes along the HIV care continuum.

(d) Reporting.

(i) Within 180 days of the date of this order, the Working Group shall provide recommendations to the President on actions that agencies can take to improve outcomes along the HIV care continuum.

(ii) Thereafter, the Director of the Office of National AIDS Policy shall include, as part of the annual report to the President pursuant to section 1(b) of my memorandum of July 13, 2010 (Implementation of the National HIV/AIDS Strategy), a report prepared by the Working Group on

Government-wide progress in implementing this order. This report shall include a quantification of progress made in improving outcomes along the HIV care continuum.

Sec. 4. General Provisions. (a) Nothing in this order shall be construed to impair or otherwise affect:

(i) the authority granted by law to an executive department, agency, or the head thereof; or

(ii) the functions of the Director of the Office of Management and Budget relating to budgetary, administrative, or legislative proposals.

(b) This order shall be implemented consistent with applicable law and subject to the availability of appropriations.

(c) This order is not intended to, and does not, create any right or benefit, substantive or procedural, enforceable at law or in equity by any party against the United States, its departments, agencies, or entities, its officers, employees, or agents, or any other person.

BARACK OBAMA

07/10/13: HIV Mental Health Task Force meeting reminder & agenda

Just a quick reminder that July HIV Mental Health Task Force meeting will be on Wednesday. July 10th from 9:30am to 11:30am at LAGLC – The Village at Ed Gould Plaza – 1125 N. McCadden Place, LA, 90038

Here is the agenda: 07-10-13 MHTF agenda

If you have anything to add to the agenda, please email Susan at sforrest@bhs-inc.org or Ingrid at imarchus@dmh.lacounty.gov. Otherwise, see you there!

HA-STTP (HIV, Substance Abuse & TraumaTraining Program): We are accepting applications for five scholars for a 2 year mentorship

click here to download the recruitment flyer:  HA-STTP Recruitment Flyer FINAL 7 8 13

wyatt

Getting to Wellness: A Roadmap for Improving the Health of Transgender Individuals in Los Angeles County

Getting to Wellness: A Roadmap for Improving the Health of Transgender Individuals in Los Angeles County

In response to HIV prevention priorities conveyed by the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health’s Division of HIV and STD Programs (DHSP), the UCLA Center for HIV Identification, Prevention and Treatment Services (CHIPTS) recently convened an independent time-limited consortium to identify best practices and potential models to address the health and wellness needs of transgender people in Los Angeles County.

Building upon foundational work previously conducted by others in the transgender and service provider communities, the CHIPTS Transgender Consortium developed a report that outlines the status of transgender health and wellness, particularly with respect to HIV disease; provides an overview of some of the services available to transgender people in Los Angeles County; and describes opportunities to both strengthen and transform Los Angeles County’s response to the health and wellness needs of transgender people.

Please download the full report: Getting to Wellness: A Roadmap for Improving the Health of Transgender Individuals in Los Angeles County

07/30/13: Improving Suicide Prevention for the Military and Their Families

Webinar: Improving Suicide Prevention for the Military

SAMHSA E-mail Updates sent this bulletin at 07/08/2013 07:10 AM EDT

United States Department of Health and Human Services, Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration - A Life in the Community for Everyone: Behavioral Health is Essential to Health, Prevention Works, Treatment is Effective, People Recover
Webinar: Improving Suicide Prevention for the Military and Their FamiliesTuesday, July 30, 2013 | 2–3:30 p.m. Eastern Time

This webinar will provide an overview of the risk factors of suicide associated with service members, veterans, and their families. Resources and strategies to help those in crisis will be discussed. The webinar will also include a review of a comprehensive suicide prevention plan and offer examples of what states, communities, and organizations are doing to reduce suicide among military personnel. A question-and-answer session will follow the presentations.

Featured Presenters:

  • Julie Ebin, Ed.M., Senior Prevention Specialist, SAMHSA’s Suicide Prevention Resource Center
  • Casey Olson, Prevention, Response, and Outreach Strategic Initiatives Program Manager, National Guard Bureau
  • Luana J. Ritch, Ph.D., Nevada Policy Academy State Team Leader, Quality Assurance Specialist III, Veterans and Military Families, Nevada Mental Health Services

Register for the Webinar

If you have any questions about your registration, please contact Lisa Guerin, Administrative Assistant, at 518-439-7415, ext. 5242, or by email at lguerin@prainc.com.

Become a SAMHSA Facebook Fan! Follow SAMHSA on Twitter! Subscriber to SAMHSA's YouTube Channel! View SAMHSA's latest photos on Flickr! Subscribe to our New Publications RSS Feed! Visit the SAMHSA Dialogue Blog Publications   |   SAMHSA News   |   |   Contact Us
United States Department of Health and Human Services, Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration Substance Abuse & Mental Health Services Administration
1 Choke Cherry Road  |  Rockville, MD 20857  |  1-877-SAMHSA-7 (1-877-726-4727)  |  http://www.samhsa.gov  |  PrivacySAMHSA is a public health agency within the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Its mission is to reduce the impact of substance abuse and mental illness on America’s communities.

7th Annual Summit The Total Woman: HIV and Beyond | Séptima Tratamiento de VIH Conferencia Annual Mujer Completa: Mas alla del VIH

(more…)

07/14/13: Transvisible at Outfest | Bamby Salcedo’s Story

Anyone who has ever come to our annual TranSolutions training knows Bamby Salcedo. We know her as an excellent educator in HIV, substance abuse, youth, and trans- related issues. She has been a great friend, a participant, and supporter of the HIV Drug & Alcohol Task Force for over a decade. Please show up to learn more about one of our local icons.
transvisible

bottom