The National Training and Technical Assistance Center for Child, Youth, and Family Mental Health (NTTAC), is a PACEs Connection partner in the important discussion of healing-centered youth engagement.
This week Joshua Smith, a juvenile justice advocate and peer support expert for NTTAC joins History. Culture. podcast hosts Ingrid Cockhren, PACEs Connection CEO, and Mathew Portell, director of education and outreach, to discuss the latest healing-centered approaches and how they are the next level of trauma-informed care.
Smith is a Washington State Certified Peer Counselor, Connecticut Connection for Addiction Recovery (CARR) Coach, and Teen Mental Health First Aid Facilitator.
NTTAC is a SAMHSA-funded initiative providing states, tribes, and communities with training and technical assistance (TTA) on childrenβs behavioral health. The organization works to ensure all young people and families get the support they need to thrive by increasing access to, effectiveness of, and dissemination of evidence-based mental health services for young people (ages 0-21) and their families, including young people experiencing serious mental illness or serious emotional disturbance (SMI/SED).
Tune in here on Thursday at 1 p.m. PT; 4 p.m. ET, for this live episode!
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