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The New Voice of SUD: Let’s Grow Together

The New Voice of SUD: Let’s Grow Together

By Southeast ATTC

SATTC is always looking to “Level Up”. This podcast is a way to engage the community in a fresh, new way to have candid conversations on the amazing work we do surrounding substance use, behavioral health, and opioid use disorder.
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Coffee Break w/ Lora Wills: NCPC and The "New" Look

The New Voice of SUD: Let’s Grow Together Dec 03, 2019

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17:42
Coffee Break w/ Celene Craig: Flipping the Script on the Voice Behind the Mic

Coffee Break w/ Celene Craig: Flipping the Script on the Voice Behind the Mic

Coffee Break !!

Time to catch a cup of hot joe on the latest at Southeast ATTC.

This bonus episode will highlight SATTC staff member, Celene Craig, MPH, MS, as we flip the script on the voice behind the mic of our podcast. We will discuss why is it important to have a multifaceted approach to public health issues and how having a niche in addiction can better assist future physicians and healthcare professionals.

Sponsorships: off for this episode

Jun 07, 202121:47
S2 E5: Serving Marginalized Communities X Impacts of IPV

S2 E5: Serving Marginalized Communities X Impacts of IPV

In this episode, we focus our attention on substance use coercion including the common forms, the effects on survivors, and how providers address the needs equitably by integrating services. Our conversation suggests that integrated services uniquely benefit survivors and are associated with decreased substance use and experiences of violence. We highlight this topic as new resources have been released from the National Center on Domestic violence, Trauma, and Mental Health in late 2020.

Resources:

Our Guest

Gabriela Zapata-Alma, LCSW, CADC, Director of Policy and Practice on Domestic Violence and Substance Use, National Center on Domestic Violence, Trauma & Mental Health | GZapata.Alma@NCDVTMH.org

Gabriela Zapata-Alma, LCSW, CADC, is the Director of Policy and Practice on Domestic Violence and Substance Use at the National Center on Domestic Violence, Trauma, and Mental Health, as well as a senior lecturer and coordinator of the addiction training program at the University of Chicago’s School of Social Service Administration. Gabriela brings over 15 years of experience supporting people impacted by structural and interpersonal violence. Currently, Gabriela's author's best practices provide trauma-informed policy consultation to advance racial equity, as well as capacity building related to serving marginalized communities impacted by violence, trauma, and other social determinants of health, nationally, and internationally.

Mar 29, 202150:32
S2 E4: Addiction Equity X Policy Progression

S2 E4: Addiction Equity X Policy Progression

In this episode, we focus our attention on recognizing the 10th anniversary of the Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act (MHPAEA) and the Kennedy-Satcher Center for Mental Health Equity in the Satcher Health Leadership Institute at Morehouse School of Medicine. The collaboration jointly released “Evaluating State Mental Health and Addiction Parity Statutes,” with 32 states receiving a failing grade for statues designed to ensure equal access to mental health and addiction treatment.

We spoke to Megan on the next steps, broke down some jargon, and defined the basics of Addiction Equity. We promote and raise awareness on how to be involved in the addiction community to garner policy change in the Southeast. 

Resources: 

Evaluating State Mental Health and Addiction Parity Statutes: A Technical Report

The Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act

YelloPain - My Vote Don't Count (A civics lesson via hip hop song)

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ABOUT OUR GUEST

Megan Douglas, JD is the Director of Health Policy for the National Center for Primary Care (NCPC) and an Assistant Professor in the Department of Community Health and Preventive Medicine at Morehouse School of Medicine (MSM) in Atlanta, GA. Megan is a licensed attorney whose research focuses on studying how laws and policies can be used to improve health and eliminate health disparities. She has expertise in health information technology, Medicaid, primary care, behavioral health, and health equity. Megan is also the course director for the Health Policy and Advocacy rotation, offered to MSM medical students and residents, which teaches them about the policymaking process and ways to leverage clinical experience to inform policy. 

Megan received her law degree from Georgia State University (GSU) College of Law, where she interned with the Supreme Court of Georgia, the Georgia Hospital Association, and the Health Law Partnership (HeLP), a medical-legal partnership assisting low-income patients of Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta with legal needs that impacted their health. After graduation, Megan became a joint fellow with the Satcher Health Leadership Institute’s Health Policy Leadership Fellowship program at MSM and the Georgia Leadership Education in Neurodevelopmental and Related Disorders (LEND) program at GSU. Megan serves on the Advisory Council for HeLP and the Community Advisory Council for the Center for Leadership in Disability at GSU.

Jan 14, 202142:47
S2 E3: Parenting Through Your Recovery Journey

S2 E3: Parenting Through Your Recovery Journey

In this episode, we have the pleasure of speaking with Technology Transfer Specialist and President and CEO of Inentional Begginnings, LLC, Sharon Hesseltine. We turn our attention to the stigma and barriers that women face while parenting or pregnant while being challenged with substance use disorder (SUD). Sharon highlights her personal journey as a mother while plowing through her road to recovery. She also debunks some common myths of being pregnant with a SUD.  Listeners will get a overview of her newest project, "Providing Peer-Based Recovery Support Services for Pregnant and Parenting Families".  ============================================== About our guest, Sharon Hesseltine, BSW Sharon is the President and CEO of Intentional Beginnings Consulting & Training, a small non-profit with the mission of strengthening organizations and individuals serving those who experience substance use disorders, adverse childhood experiences (ACEs), and trauma. Sharon received her Bachelor of Science in Social Work from Southern Illinois University in 1981, and in 2011 completed a two-year post-graduate Certificate in Infant and Early Childhood Mental Health from the University of Minnesota. For over 30 years Sharon has worked in Public Health and specialized in early childhood development, women’s health, and addiction. Her career has ranged from providing direct services to women through managing two sober living residences to designing and facilitating statewide and local collaborative initiatives that call on her skills in public policy, strategic planning, cross-sector collaboration, program assessment, and marketing. She is a national trainer, Technology Transfer Specialist, and facilitator for multiple organizations including the Hazelden Betty Ford Foundation, the Addiction Technology Transfer Centers (ATTC), and the Opioid Response Network. In 2018, Sharon took the lead in developing SUD specific training for Peer Support Specialists and Supervisors for the Commonwealth of Kentucky. Sharon is passionate about reducing the stigma associated with addiction and developing the capacity of communities, organizations, and individuals to better meet the needs of individuals with substance use disorders. With her husband, Scott Hesseltine, she currently resides in Louisville, KY.
Dec 09, 202033:33
S2 E2: Crossing the Prevention Bridge to Treatment and Recovery: The SUD Equity Journey

S2 E2: Crossing the Prevention Bridge to Treatment and Recovery: The SUD Equity Journey

This episode is a product of the Southeast TTC Critical Thought Leaders Collaboration.

In this episode, we have the pleasure of speaking on health equity/health disparities from the lens of innovation and how to connect substance use prevention to treatment/recovery efforts. We speak with Nicole Augustine on how the environment can pose barriers and challenges for organizations to properly serve. 

Furthermore, we have a chance to discuss a national discussion (Addiction and Prevention Technology Transfer Center collaboration) surrounding emerging issues around COVID-19 and social determinants of health (SDH) for the substance use prevention, treatment, and recovery workforce. The initial listening session framed the ongoing and emerging issues and subsequent strategic discussions to engage key communities, the intent was to gather strategies and resources to identify emerging best practices that can support underserved and/or communities of color.

Nicole also introduces her position and future projects of purpose. 


Check out the COVID and SDH national discussion here

Learn More about Addiction Technology Transfer Center (ATTC)

Learn More about Prevention Technology Transfer Center (PTTC)

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BIO

Nicole Augustine, MPH, MCHES, CSAPC has been working in the field of prevention since 2001.  She has a Master of Public Health degree from The George Washington University School of Public Health.  As a prevention consultant, she has several years of experience facilitating prevention education curriculums and providing technical assistance to coalitions in the development of environmental strategies.  Nicole is a passionate prevention provider, committed to supporting initiatives designed to address the complex substance use issues affecting our society.  Additionally, Nicole is committed to seeing an increase in the number of credential prevention professionals, as a means of ensuring the delivery of evidence-informed practices.

Nov 19, 202057:08
S2 Ep1: The New Normal: Ethnic Sensitivities and SUDs

S2 Ep1: The New Normal: Ethnic Sensitivities and SUDs

Welcome back and we are glad you returned! This is the opening episode of the new 2nd season. 

This episode will feature, Joy Ssebikindu, LPC graduate from Vanderbilt University (BA, Sociology and Child Development) and MEd in Clinical Mental Health counseling. We speak on health disparities in the southeast, the African American substance use disorder (SUD) treatment and recovery experience. As well as, the role of faith-based communities in recovery, and levels of care.

Joy comes with over a decade of professional experience in working with children, adolescents, adults, and their families at all levels of care (ranging from inpatient to outpatient clinical care).  As a Licensed Professional Counselor, she specializes in working with individuals, couples, and families who have issues with communication, family transitions including divorce, trauma, depression, anxiety, substance use, and disordered eating/eating disorders.  Currently, as a Treatment Placement Specialist with Acadia Healthcare, she walks every day in her passion. "I'm not here to keep you from freaking out. I'm here to be with you while you freak out, or grieve or laugh or suffer or sing. It is a ministry of presence. It is showing up with a loving heart."  This mantra sits at the core of all that Joy Ssebikindu does, both personally and professionally.

Oct 02, 202049:13
S1 Ep8: Opening a Window Of Opportunity
Dec 30, 201927:54
S1 Ep7: Minority to Priority : Lessons Learned
Dec 16, 201950:37
Coffee Break w/ Lora Wills: NCPC and The "New" Look
Dec 03, 201917:42
S1 Ep6: Back to the Basics!
Nov 12, 201928:24
S1 Ep5: The Unheard
Oct 25, 201933:05
S1 Ep4: Right Care, to the Right Person and the Right Time
Oct 16, 201930:48
Coffee Break w/ Dawn Tyus : A Seat at the Table for Communities of Faith

Coffee Break w/ Dawn Tyus : A Seat at the Table for Communities of Faith

Coffee Break !!

Time to catch a cup of hot joe on the latest at SATTC. 

This bonus episode will highlight SATTC's Faith Initiative, "Let's Have the Conversion : One Voice, One Mission" with SATTC Director Dawn Tyus, M.Ed, LPC. We will discuss also why is it important to have communities of faith at the table when discussing SUDs. 

Sep 30, 201910:57
S1 Ep3: Being Apart of the Solution
Sep 27, 201931:15
S1 E2: YouTube as Your Innovator
Sep 27, 201925:50
S1 Ep1: Millennial Magic
Jun 25, 201920:28