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CALIFORNIA ACES ACADEMY - ACES PANEL PRESENTATION | May 13 [avahealth.org]

 

2021-04-22 (36)

Thursday, May 13, 2021 | 12:00 pm - 1:30 pm (PT)

Our multidisciplinary team has developed a training program to help health care trainees learn how to better address the sequelae of childhood trauma in their adult patients. We will describe the history of this program and our experiences from over 800 simulated patient encounters.

○ Describe development of an ACEs training program for health trainees caring for adult patients

○ Describe the components of the Professional ACEs Informed Training for Heath (PATH) model

○ Demonstrate case development and logistics of simulation in TIC training


Meet the Presenters

Martina Jelley, MD, MSPH, FACP

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Dr. Jelley is a Professor in the Department of Internal Medicine and the Julian Rothbaum Chair in Community Health Research at the University of Oklahoma School of Community Medicine in Tulsa where she also serves as the Assistant Dean for Clinical Research. Dr. Jelley’s interests include intimate partner violence (IPV) and adverse childhood experiences, focusing on the adult health effects of these problems. Her work in the field of trauma began early in her career as she was seeing many patients who were suffering due to current or past abuse and wanted to learn how to help these patients and teach medical students and residents about the issues. Dr. Jelley is working with a multidisciplinary team at OU, using simulation to help trainees in several health programs improve their skills in counseling adult patients with childhood trauma histories. In 2008, Dr. Jelley was awarded a Governor’s Commendation for Victim Services. She is a member of the Board of Directors of the Academy on Violence and Abuse, the Society of General Internal Medicine’s Physicians Against Violence interest group, and a member and previous chair of the Oklahoma Domestic Violence Fatality Review Board.


Julie Miller-Cribbs, MSW, PhD

unnamed (1)Julie has a bachelor’s degree in Psychology from Colorado College, a master’s degree in social work from the University of Chicago and received her Ph.D. from Washington University George Warren Brown School of Social Work. Prior to her academic career, she worked for seven years as an Emergency Room Social Worker at a Level-One trauma facility and with urban families and youth at social service agencies in Chicago and St. Louis. Julie joined the OU faculty in 2006 as the Assistant Director in Tulsa and is currently serving as the Oklahoma Medicaid Endowed Professor in Mental Health and the Director of the Anne and Henry Zarrow School of Social Work. She is also the director of Social Simulation at OU-Tulsa and a Research Associate in the OU School of Community Medicine where she spends time developing social simulation training for social workers, medical students and other health professions as well as a number of community organizations and professionals.

A Tulsa native, Julie is married to Henry, a High School English teacher at Union Public Schools and has two children Carly and Cole. She is a proud Oklahoman who is known for her commitment to both the profession of social work and working to solve the complex array of social problems present in our State.


Fran Wen, PhD

unnamed (2)Dr. Wen is a Professor in the Department of Family and Community Medicine at the University of Oklahoma’s School of Community Medicine in Tulsa, Oklahoma. She holds the Founders of Doctors’ Hospital Endowed Research Chair in Family Medicine and is Director of Research for her department. Dr. Wen is a clinical health psychologist, and has a practice specializing in stress management and cognitive-behavioral therapy for adults. She has worked in academic primary care for over 15 years, and has presented at over 60 professional conferences on behavioral health, social determinants of health, and building research capacity. Her research focuses on the health effects in adulthood of adverse childhood experiences (ACEs), and on training health care professionals to work with adults affected by ACEs. Dr. Wen has been a member of the ACEs team of the University of Oklahoma-Tulsa since 2012. She has contributed to over a dozen grant-funded educational, research, and program projects. She was principal investigator of a NIH-funded project examining older adults’ refusal to use home- and community-based services. She is currently leading the implementation of a Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) funded medical student education grant awarded to University of Oklahoma College of Medicine which is being implemented on both the Oklahoma City and Tulsa campuses.


2020-10-01 (2)

Click the button to register for this Webinar from the CALIFORNIA ACES ACADEMY.

For questions about registration, please email Kelly Flugum at kelly.flugum@cirinc.org.

For questions about CALIFORNIA ACES ACADEMY, please email Nicole Taylor at nicole@avahealth.org

Click HEREto find out more about the CALIFORNIA ACES ACADEMY.

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  • 2020-10-01 (2)

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Our presenters have trained over 800 health care professionals who serve at all levels of care. These simulations with trained actors have helped implementation of ACEs work in health care. Skills acquired include introducing  concepts of ACEs and toxic stress to families , explaining  ACES screening results and the effects of toxic stress, and making treatment plans and interventions.

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