Community Conditions that Strengthen Families

Record Description

Developed by the Center for the Study of Social Policy, the Strengthening Families Protective Factors Framework impacts how child- and family-serving programs operate and support healthy development and well-being. This brief highlights survey findings from organizational partners and members of the Strengthening Families National Network that may use the framework in their own community-based approaches. The survey results capture their viewpoints on community conditions that support child and family outcomes, including equal access to essential/basic needs, social support and connection, racial and social justice, and a change in the “social contract” toward involving community in bettering child and family well-being.

Record Type
Combined Date
2020-11-30T19:00:00
Source
Region
City/County
Publication Date
2020-12-01
Section/Feed Type
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Boosting Digital Literacy in the Workplace

Record Description

Previous research from the National Skills Coalition described the extent of a digital skills gap among U.S workers, noting that one in three workers had few or no digital skills. Building upon the Coalition’s earlier work, this brief outlines the work’s emerging lessons, drawing on interviews with business leaders, workforce and education practitioners, and public officials. In addition, the brief identifies opportunities to foster the development of effective approaches to address the skills gap and to expand the adoption of innovative strategies to increase digital literacy.

Record Type
Combined Date
2020-11-30T19:00:00
Source
Region
City/County
Publication Date
2020-12-01
Section/Feed Type
Latest Information from Network (Home)

Employment Help for the Most Vulnerable: Adapting the Individual Placement and Support Model in a Crisis

Record Description

This research-to-practice brief discusses implementation of the Individual Placement and Support (IPS) employment model by the Family Service League in New York and Asian Human Services in Chicago during the COVID-19 pandemic. The IPS model was initially developed to provide employment services to individuals with serious mental illness, but is now used for a broader range of populations who have significant barriers to employment. Four core components of the IPS model are rapid job search, coordination between employment services staff and mental health providers, identification of client preferences in the types of jobs, and smaller caseloads for case workers. According to interviews with organization leaders, IPS implementation included embracing remote communications and video conferencing, offering initial help to the most vulnerable to support their health and safety, developing new employment plans, and actively matching employees and employers.

Record Type
Combined Date
2021-01-03T19:00:00
Source
Region
City/County
Publication Date
2021-01-04
Section/Feed Type
Latest Information from Network (Home)

Caring for Mental Health in Communities of Color During COVID-19

Record Description

This blogpost presents a Q&A with Yolo Akili Robinson, Executive Director and founder of Black Emotional and Mental Health Collective (BEAM). The interactive discussion covers how health inequities in communities of color have become exacerbated due to the COVID-19 pandemic, causing increased stress and negative mental health impacts. Also discussed is how BEAM has adapted its approach to addressing mental health challenges in these communities by providing families with resources to support themselves, as well as advice for community health workers who might be overwhelmed by the crisis.

Record Type
Combined Date
2020-05-04T20:00:00
Source
Region
City/County
Publication Date
2020-05-05
Section/Feed Type
Latest Information from Network (Home)

Resilience for Trauma-Informed Professionals: Protecting Ourselves From Secondary Traumatic Stress

Record Description

This webinar recording available for purchase from the American Psychological Association offers evidence-based techniques developed to promote preparedness, resilience, and effective coping when exposed to trauma-related materials.

Key learning objectives include:
• How to distinguish between secondary traumatic stress, vicarious trauma, and compassion fatigue and those factors that convey risk or resilience.
• Ways to recognize coping strategies in real time after exposure to trauma-related material or traumatized individuals.
• How to identify effective self-regulation strategies after encountering trauma-related material.

Record Type
Combined Date
2020-08-07T08:00:00
Source
Region
City/County
Publication Date
2020-08-07
Section/Feed Type
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Compassion Resilience Toolkit for Health and Human Services Leaders and Staff

Record Description

This compassion resilience toolkit webpage features the importance of incorporating compassion resilience (the ability to maintain one’s well-being while interacting compassionately with individuals who are suffering) in the health care field and highlights its many positive impacts on clients, providers, and organizations. The toolkit describes fatigue in each of the four sectors of the Wellness Compass model (Mind, Spirit, Strength and Heart), offers guidance on strategies to help build compassion resilience, and provides worksheets to rank levels of self-care in each of these sectors. It provides specific resources for leadership and includes combined activities for leadership and staff.

Record Type
Combined Date
2020-01-01T19:00:00
Source
Region
City/County
Publication Date
2020-01-02

The Vicarious Trauma Toolkit

Record Description

This U.S. Department of Justice’s Office for Victims of Crime webpage discusses vicarious trauma and contains suggestions for coworkers and supervisors who may be experiencing vicarious trauma, as well as family members of victim service providers and first responders, who are also often affected by work-related trauma exposure. The webpage also highlights the Vicarious Trauma Toolkit (VTT), which introduces a new model for examining and conceptualizing the impact of vicarious trauma and the reactions and experiences of victim service providers and first responders. Included on the webpage is a sample of the 500 tools and resources from the VTT Compendium of Resources, which covers Education and Awareness, Prevalence and Risk Factors, and Impact. These resources are intended to support those working in victim services, emergency medical services, fire services, law enforcement, and other allied professions.

(See also Resources on "domestic violence" in the Resource Library)

Record Type
Combined Date
2020-01-01T19:00:00
Source
Region
City/County
Publication Date
2020-01-02
Section/Feed Type
Latest Information from Network (Home)

Preventing Compassion Fatigue: Honoring Thyself

Record Description

This July 2016 webinar, hosted by the National Resource Center on Domestic Violence, focused on methods of compassion fatigue management, encouraged self-care, and aimed to renew participants’ passion for their work. The webinar also provided valuable tools that caregivers can use to identify the warning signs of compassion fatigue as well as to help in developing techniques for self-care. One of the tools is a compassion fatigue symptoms checklist which covers physical, psychological, emotional, spiritual, and professional symptoms that caregivers might encounter.

Record Type
Combined Date
2016-07-15T08:00:00
Source
Region
City/County
Publication Date
2016-07-15
Section/Feed Type
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Designing Better Programs for Young Parents and Families: Insights from the Southeastern Cohort on Young Parents and Families

Record Description

This report covers lessons learned from the first phase (January 2020 to September 2020) of the Southeastern Cohort on Young Parents and Families. The Cohort is an initiative aimed at enhancing and aligning programs, policies, and systems to better support young parents (ages 18-24) and their families in Georgia, Kentucky, and South Carolina. The report presents findings on four key areas: understanding and engaging young parents, continuous improvement through data and feedback, service collaboration and alignment, and service delivery adaptations during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Record Type
Combined Date
2020-11-15T19:00:00
Source
Region
City/County
Publication Date
2020-11-16
Section/Feed Type
Latest Information from Network (Home)

Job Training for Youth with Justice Involvement: A Toolkit

Record Description

This toolkit offers steps on how the juvenile justice and workforce development systems can collaborate to serve youth with justice involvement. The toolkit includes a review of evidence-based practices in youth workforce development, an examination of how the public workforce system is funded under the Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (WIOA), examples of how to utilize WIOA-funded services for better outcomes for youth with justice involvement, and steps that could be taken to form interagency partnerships between the juvenile justice and workforce development systems.

Record Type
Combined Date
2020-11-30T19:00:00
Source
Region
City/County
Publication Date
2020-12-01
Section/Feed Type
Latest Information from Network (Home)