Grants and Contracts Details
Description
Neighborhood Healers: Training Black Community First Responders in Mental Health First Aid
Community first responders are members of the public, rather than professionally trained
people, who are typically the first point of contact in distress or crisis (Phung et al., 2018).
Among Black communities, where there is understandable cultural mistrust of professional first
responders (Das et al., 2020) due to documented racial inequity in the quality of service they
receive (Brooks & Hopkins, 2017), community first responders often include pastors and first
ladies (Blank et al., 2002), hair stylists and barbers (Roper & Barry, 2016), community elders,
family members, and civic organization members (Taylor & Kuo, 2019), as well as educators
(Gershenson et al., 2017; Lia, 2020). Thus, providing Mental Health First Aid training to Black
community first responders is a sustainable way to impact long term change for underserved
Black Americans. Mental Health First Aid (Jorm, 2012) is an evidence-based training for
community members, with proven efficacy in increasing mental health literacy. Through the
development of the Neighborhood Healers Fellowship program, we intend to harness the
strength of existing relationships to amplify the importance of mental health awareness and
treatment for Black people in Lexington, Kentucky. This proposal includes development and
execution of a 12-month fellowship for Black community first responders trained in Mental
Health First Aid, with an accompanying Black Mental Health Public Education Campaign to
improve mental health awareness, literacy, service initiation, and access for Black
Lexingtonians. An annual Black Mental Health Survey will serve as the evaluation mechanism
for this project.
Status | Active |
---|---|
Effective start/end date | 9/23/22 → 5/31/27 |
Funding
- Blue Grass Community Fdtn: $50,000.00
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