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Community Initiated Care
Community Initiated Care is the idea that anyone in our community can have a significant impact on behavioral health outcomes. Through training, each of us can feel empowered to recognize behavioral health issues in a friend, a neighbor, or a family member and take helpful action in the moment.
What is the goal of Community Initiated Care?
The goal of Community Initiated Care is to create a community of people who know how to prevent and respond to mental health and substance use concerns in a timely and effective way. To accomplish this, a package of training options led by expert community trainers is available to Broomfield organizations and individuals. These trainings will help you recognize behavioral health issues, engage and respond appropriately to someone in need, provide community resources, and destigmatize behavioral health issues.
What trainings are offered?
There are training options in the following topic areas: mental health, youth mental health, wellness, and substance use. Trainings range from one to eight hours, and can be done virtually or in-person. Organizations, such as non-profits, businesses, religious groups, and workplaces are encouraged to sign up for a group training. Some individual training is offered.
- Mental Health First Aid (MHFA): MHFA teaches participants how to identify, understand, and respond to signs of mental illness and substance use disorders.
- Mental Health and Wellness: This training provides a framework for understanding impacts on mental health, including collective traumas, burnout, and common mental illness signs and symptoms. Participants will learn strategies for self-care and building resilience, as well as support resources in the community.
- Question, Persuade, Refer (QPR): Just as people trained in CPR and the Heimlich Maneuver help save thousands of lives each year, people trained in QPR learn how to recognize the warning signs of a suicide crisis and how to question, persuade, and refer someone to help.
- Substance Use Training: These training options will cover topics like overdose prevention, naloxone/narcan, what opioids are, and harm reduction education.
- Youth Mental Health: This training discusses mental health and youth, specifically, normalizing conversations about mental health, mental health struggles youth might experience, social pressures such as social media, and self care tips and available resources.
How do I sign up?
Complete this form to sign up for a training!
Need something sooner? Check out these opportunities from partners!
Mental Health Partners
Mental Health Partners offers multiple trainings every month for community members, including:
- Question, Persuade, Refer (QPR): Just as people trained in CPR and the Heimlich Maneuver help save thousands of lives each year, people trained in QPR learn how to recognize the warning signs of a suicide crisis and how to question, persuade, and refer someone to help.
- SafeTalk: A half-day training program that teaches participants to recognize and engage persons who might be having thoughts of suicide and to connect them with community resources trained in suicide intervention.
- Mental Health First Aid (MHFA): MHFA teaches participants how to identify, understand, and respond to signs of mental illness and substance use disorders.
- Applied Suicide Intervention Skills Training (ASIST): ASIST is a two-day interactive workshop in suicide first aid. Participants learn to recognize when someone may have thoughts of suicide and work with them to create a plan that will support their immediate safety.
Partners for Children's Mental Health - Opportunities for healthcare providers & school professionals!
- Ready to take your clinic to the next level? PCMH is recruiting new primary care practices to join the Pathway to Suicide Prevention program. Providers receive free training and consultation on implementing a youth suicide prevention care pathway.
- PCMH is hosting two five-part courses for school professionals on utilizing DBT skills with youth. Participants meet weekly and cover skills around mindfulness, managing emotions, tolerating distress, building relationships, and finding the middle path. Training dates/times (MT):
- PCMH is offering three upcoming trainings to help youth-serving professionals create safe spaces for LGBTQ youth. Training dates/times (MT):