Skip to main content

California PACEs Action

Trauma Transformed launches regional effort in San Francisco Bay Area

San Francisco War Memorial Green Room

Nearly 300 impassioned and committed people crowded into the Green Room at the San Francisco War Memorial and Performing Arts Center last week to launch Trauma Transformed. Known as T2, the regional effort – representing the San Francisco Department of Public Health and seven Bay Area counties – is funded by a four-year, $4-million grant from the U.S. Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA).

 

Youth, families, health directors and public health leaders from the seven counties participated in the celebration. San Francisco Mayor Ed Lee committed to partnering with communities to break the cycle of intergenerational trauma and poverty.

 

SF Mayor Ed Lee addresses the T2 gathering

Dr. Nadine Burke Harris emphasized how understanding the research about adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) are the basis for understanding trauma.

 

Louise Rogers, San Mateo health chief, accounting the tragic stories of systems-involved youth and the county’s process of responding to their trauma, said, “It all starts with local stories.”

 

Esta Soler, president of Futures Without Violence, and Dr. Nadine Burke Harris, Center for Youth Wellness

Toni Tullys, Santa Clara Behavioral Health dept. director, urged leaders to “get out of the way” and “support resources for community based organizations, families, and young people.”

 

Alex Briscoe, director of Alameda County Health Care Services, heralded the regional center to be the “holy grail of behavioral health,” and a “tool for racial justice,” yet only if done humbly and carefully. “Trauma-informed care is not just a response to pathology, but a social justice issue”, he noted.

 

Elaine Hernandez, youth who told story of her ACEs and resilience through dance and the written wordNational youth leader Sinead Anderson, a member of Youth in Mind, founded and steered by youth affected by the mental health system, bluntly told the crowd : “I am ACEs.” What doesn’t work to help troubled youth, she said, were truancy laws that put parents in jail, and “home hospitals” that prescribes pills for youth with clinical depression, but no support. Her recovery, she said, came about through developing safe, stable relationships with adults and peers; gaining knowledge about her history through African-American studies classes; and advocacy.

 

Citing trauma as the language of feeling and behavior in her work with families, Dr. Alicia Lieberman, director of the UCSF Child Trauma Research Program, said, “Through broken hearts we can transcend pain.”

 

Michelle Campbell-Mateo, speaking on behalf of traumatized families, said, “I am the evidence.” She told her story of coming from a generation that had been traumatized, and how she very passed some of that trauma to her daughter. She advocated for more peer educators and family resilience coaches.

 

Screen Shot 2015-11-03 at 1.01.43 PMClifton Hicks, founder of Urban-Based Adventures and a psychiatric social worker for the San Francisco Department of Public Health, said, “Interventions don't matter if kids and families don’t feel felt.” He recounted stories of families constantly relocating in search for a sense of community, and called for regional conversations on trauma outside of silos. 

 

Lynn Dolce, curriculum developer and trainer for the San Francisco Department of Public Health’s Trauma-Informed Systems Initiative, wrapped up the ceremonies by asking those attending to commit to four precepts: be open, promote healing, trust each other, and collaborate.

 

“The regional trauma center is an opportunity for the San Francisco Bay Area to create a state and national model for collaboration and change,” she said.

 

For more info please see attached T2 summary, T2 Launch Event Program, T2 Launch Event Speaker Bios, and visit T2 online at www.t2bayarea.org

 

Correction to original post: Toni Tullys, Santa Clara Behavioral Health dept. director spoke on behalf of Rene Santiago, Santa Clara County Health and Hospital System deputy director.

Attachments

Add Comment

Comments (6)

Newest · Oldest · Popular

Fantastic Alicia. I have spoken to Susan from Youth in Mind about this as well. Very exciting. We are going to go coast to coast with this! I've been sharing the T2 model widely with my colleagues here.

It's a very unique SAMHSA grant! The original grant was a collaboration between 7 regional county behavioral health directors. Check out the summary attached in the original post for more info...

Copyright © 2023, PACEsConnection. All rights reserved.
×
×
×
×
Link copied to your clipboard.
×