Programs
10 Results |
Bright Horizons
Background information Bright Horizons is a brief intervention to be delivered in one 2-4 hour session that teaches cognitive restructuring, emotion regulation and problem-solving, and motivational interviewing It is designed to reduce alcohol and other substance use in youth and connect individuals with treatment This is a multi-phase mixed-methods study with qualitative interviews with Apache
Focus Area: Substance Use & PreventionYouth Development
Associated Location(s): White Mountain ApacheWhiteriver, AZ
Healing Pathways (Anishinaabe Giigewin Miikana)
The Healing Pathways Project is a community-based participatory research study involving 735 American Indian and First Nations youth and their caregivers living in the northern Midwestern United States and Ontario, Canada. The project began in 2002 with collaborations between eight reservation and reserve communities and our university-based research team. As of 2021, we have completed
Focus Area: Mental Health PromotionSubstance Use & PreventionYouth Development
Associated Location(s): Duluth, MN
My Pathway to Healing (MP2H)
Project information The goal of My Pathway to Healing (MP2H) is to test the effectiveness of this five-lesson intervention on reducing symptoms of posttraumatic stress and increase hopefulness and communal mastery among adults with recent binge substance use or suicide behavior. Background information The MP2H curriculum includes five lessons designed to address trauma, stress and
Focus Area: Substance Use & PreventionYouth Development
Associated Location(s): White Mountain ApacheWhiteriver, AZ
NativeVision
About NativeVision The mission of the NativeVision program is to empower Native American youth to realize their full (physical, mental, emotional and spiritual) potential through the promotion of physical fitness, healthy nutrition, and positive life skills. NativeVision began in 1996 as a summer sports and life skills camp for Native American youth, bringing
Focus Area: Diabetes & Obesity PreventionSubstance Use & PreventionYouth Development
Project AWARE Wildcats
The Center for Indigenous Health and Chinle Unified School District (CUSD) will launch Project AWARE Wildcats (PAWs), a program to promote mental and behavioral health and expand access to services for students. Project PAWs builds on the relationship built between the Center and CUSD as part of Project SafeSchools and the COVID-19 pandemic response efforts.
Focus Area: Mental Health PromotionYouth Development
Associated Location(s): Chinle, AZNavajo Nation