Community resilience Archives - CMBM https://cmbm.org/impact/impact-stories/impact-story-category/community-resilience/ Just another WordPress site Thu, 06 Apr 2023 14:47:36 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.3 Sonoma Community Resilience Collaborative https://cmbm.org/impact/impact-stories/impact-story/sonoma-community-resilience-collaborative/ https://cmbm.org/impact/impact-stories/impact-story/sonoma-community-resilience-collaborative/#respond Tue, 27 Sep 2022 18:13:55 +0000 https://cmbm.test/?post_type=case-study&p=17520 The post Sonoma Community Resilience Collaborative appeared first on CMBM.

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In October 2017, the Tubbs Fire consumed 5,600 structures and took 22 lives, devastating Sonoma County, California. In 2018, a local CMBM Faculty member—Adair Look, MD—invited CMBM to join local community organizations in exploring ways the community could heal and rebuild with increased resilience. After a successful CMBM workshop, these local organizations joined CMBM in creating the Sonoma Community Resilience Collaborative, designed to spread comprehensive tools for healing, strengthen communal ties, and prevent the progression of stress and trauma into more serious chronic conditions.

How we worked in Sonoma County

The Sonoma Community Resilience Collaborative is training 300 community members in CMBM’s comprehensive model of self-care and group support, enabling them to serve tens of thousands of children and adults across the county through Mind-Body Skills Groups, workshops and individual or classroom work. Over 200 individuals are already working with thousands of people in Sonoma County, many of whom lost their homes or businesses in the 2017 wildfires. Half of the participants from the second cohort serve Sonoma’s Latinx community, many of whom run Mind-Body Skills Groups in Spanish. From county jails, to schools, to health centers, CMBM’s model is being implemented widely across Sonoma County.

Our impacts

The Sonoma County service providers who participated in CMBM’s training have, according to standardized scientific scales, experienced:

  • decreased stress, anxiety, and depression
  • increased hope for the future
  • increased feelings of self-assurance, happiness, and serenity

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Healing in Haiti https://cmbm.org/impact/impact-stories/impact-story/healing-in-haiti/ https://cmbm.org/impact/impact-stories/impact-story/healing-in-haiti/#respond Tue, 27 Sep 2022 18:11:12 +0000 https://cmbm.test/?post_type=case-study&p=17529 The post Healing in Haiti appeared first on CMBM.

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With generous support from Don deLaski and the deLaski Family Foundation, CMBM has been helping Haitians build healthy, resilient communities since 2010. Developed in response to the 2010 earthquake and Hurricane Matthew in 2016, our nationwide program is a model for working in the aftermath of natural disaster.

How we worked in Haiti

Under the leadership of Country Director Linda Delmont Métayer, MA, MPH, The Center for Mind-Body Medicine (CMBM) has brought our life-changing model of self-care and mutual support to more than 250,000 children and adults across Haiti. Some 40,000 thousand have participated in 10-week long Mind-Body Skills Groups. This program has been delivered by 300 Haitian clinicians, educators, and community leaders, whom CMBM has trained in its groundbreaking model of psychological self-care and group support. These service providers have integrated the model into 120 organizations nationwide, including schools, hospitals, clinics, orphanages, churches, Vodou peristyles, and community organizations.

Our impact

The Center for Mind-Body Medicine’s program in Haiti is one of the world’s largest, most effective programs for psychological trauma-relief and resiliency-building. We have worked with the most vulnerable members of the Haitian population—including orphans, widowed mothers, enslaved children, survivors of gender-based violence, and incarcerated children and adults. We have also received urgent requests from the Ministry of Health to train all physicians, nurses, and other health professionals working in primary care. The Haitian National Police and National Prison System have also asked us to train police officers, counselors, social workers, and corrections officers. Bishop Pierre-Andre Dumas, head of the Diocese of Anse-À-Veau and Miragoâne and the Episcopal Commission for Catholic Education, has also asked us to extend our program throughout areas most affected by Hurricane Matthew.

 

250,000

children and adults served

40,000

participants in 10-week long Mind-Body Skills Groups

8,000

children and adults supported with emergency relief after Hurricane Matthew

300

clinicians, educators, religious, and community leaders trained in our model

120

partner organizations currently participating in our program

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Kosovo https://cmbm.org/impact/impact-stories/impact-story/kosovo/ https://cmbm.org/impact/impact-stories/impact-story/kosovo/#respond Thu, 22 Sep 2022 18:14:38 +0000 https://cmbm.test/?post_type=case-study&p=17466 The post Kosovo appeared first on CMBM.

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The 1998 armed conflict in Kosovo was the culmination of decades of geopolitical tension in the Balkans. The ensuing refugee crisis and crumbling of health infrastructure made the need for population-wide healing evident to CMBM Founder and CEO, Dr. James S. Gordon. Kosovo was selected as the pilot program for CMBM’s innovative use of mind-body medicine for trauma relief and building resilience.

How we worked in Kosovo

Beginning in 1998, CMBM Faculty trained more than 600 Kosovar clinicians and educators over a five-year period. To sustain care for the entire population of two million Kosovar, we established permanent operations in the region with Country Co-Directors Afrim Blyta, MD, PhD, and Jusuf Ulaj, MD. They, alongside 15 Faculty, provide supervision to CMBM trainees using our model in Kosovo’s community mental health centers.

Our impact

The program in Kosovo has evolved into a pillar of the nation-wide Community Mental Health system. The first randomized controlled trial (RCT) of any intervention with war-traumatized children and the first RCT of a successful, comprehensive mind-body approach with any traumatized population were published in the Journal of Clinical Psychiatry in 2008, showing highly significant and lasting changes in symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).

 

2,000,000

children and adults served

600

health and education professionals trained in our model

15

gifted and committed local faculty members

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Houston After Hurricane Harvey https://cmbm.org/impact/impact-stories/impact-story/houston/ Thu, 22 Sep 2022 17:45:36 +0000 https://cmbm.test/?post_type=case-study&p=17459 The post Houston After Hurricane Harvey appeared first on CMBM.

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Hurricane Harvey was one of the costliest tropical cyclones in America’s history, leaving Houston and the surrounding areas with $125 billion in damages. All of the Houston Metroplex’s 7 million residents were impacted by the massive storm, and continue to require emotional and psychological healing.

How we worked in Houston

CMBM reached out to program graduates in the area and received an immediate response from Gwen Brehm, M.Ed., LPC, the Founder and Executive Director of Houston’s Center for Mind Body Health. Brehm reached out to friends and colleages, and leading Houston-based behavioral health and social service organizations—the Institute for Spirituality and Health (ISH), the Menninger Clinic, Houston Galveston Institute, the Jung Center, Compassionate Houston, and Healing Circles Houston—to create the Greater Houston Healing Collaborative (GHHC).

In late November 2017, with funding provided by the Greater Houston Community Foundation’s Hurricane Harvey Relief Fund and The Rotary Club of Houston District 5890, the Collaborative began organizing a community-wide trauma relief and resilience building program for persons impacted by Hurricane Harvey in the City of Houston and Harris County, Texas.

Our impact

Trainees have integrated our model into their work in local hospitals and clinics, schools, community-based organizations, and houses of faith, reaching over 10,000 Houstonians. GHHC-trained facilitators have focused on heavily-impacted areas across Houston, including Kashmere Gardens, Bear Creek, Bellaire, Meyerland, Third Ward, Katy, Pasadena, VA hospitals, and the Felony Mental Health Court, among many others. The GHHC is organizing as a permanent body, creating a charter for membership and structuring to provide long-term, sustainable mind-body programs and future disaster responses.

10,000

traumatized children and adults reached

120

physicians, nurses, counselors, educator, and spiritual leaders trained in our model

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Broward County https://cmbm.org/impact/impact-stories/impact-story/broward-county/ https://cmbm.org/impact/impact-stories/impact-story/broward-county/#respond Thu, 22 Sep 2022 16:38:42 +0000 https://cmbm.test/?post_type=case-study&p=17445 The post Broward County appeared first on CMBM.

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At a glance

Following the tragic 2018 shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas (MSD) High School, we collaborated with Broward County Public Schools (BCPS) and Children’s Services Counsel (CSC) to implement a comprehensive trauma relief program for MSD students and their families, and for teachers and staff. We are now bringing CMBM’s comprehensive trauma relief to the entire district (270,000 children, and 30,000 employees), and are working with Broward Schools to create an ongoing program of wellness to promote sustainable transformation. Meanwhile, MSD students have founded and continue to lead a peer-to-peer program of self-care and mutual support. This Mind Body Ambassadors club is a model that is being emulated in numerous schools throughout the district.

The challenge

In the aftermath of the February 14, 2018 shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School (MSD) that killed 17 students and faculty, Broward County Public Schools (BCPS) shared with CMBM the urgent need for a community-wide stress and trauma-relief response.

BCPS Superintendent Robert Runcie invited CMBM to host trauma-relief workshops in Broward, and in July 2018, with the generous support of the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative, CMBM and BCPS officially launched the Comprehensive Wellness Program for Broward County Public Schools. The Children’s Services Council of Broward County joined the effort in 2019, helping expand our program beyond the school system and into the community.

Our approach

Since 2018, we have brought CMBM’s transformational model of self-awareness, self-care, and group support to Broward County. Peer counselors, teachers, parents, and community service providers have spread our model across Broward’s classrooms, clinics, suicide hotlines, community centers, synagogues, and individual and family counseling sessions. Students at Marjory Stoneman Douglas have also started a pioneering Mind-Body Medicine Peer Counseling Program and can become Mind-Body Ambassadors in the Mind-Body Club, started by MSD teacher Diane Wolk-Rogers.

Today, we continue to bring CMBM’s transformational model to Broward County. Mind-body medicine techniques have been integrated into classrooms, clinics, suicide hotlines, community centers, houses of worship, and individual and family counseling sessions throughout the county. Students at MSD have also participated in a pioneering Mind-Body Medicine Peer Counseling Program and Mind-Body Ambassadors Club, an after-school program started by MSD teacher Diane Wolk-Rogers and MSD parent Ellen Fox-Snider.

Our impact

CMBM—alongside the 650 Broward peer counselors, teachers, parents, and community service providers we’ve trained since 2018—have shared our model with over 51,000 children and adults in Broward County. We’ve documented statistically-significant decreases in levels of stress and depression, and improvements in burnout, compassion fatigue, and secondary trauma amongst those in Broward County.

Testimonials from the Comprehensive Wellness Program in Broward County Public Schools demonstrate our model’s ability to provide relief, increase hopefulness, and improve community connections between the thousands of students, parents, educators, and community members who have participated.

  • Students and faculty present during the February 14th shooting report feeling calmer and more in control thanks to their newfound support system.
  • Youth leaders who have participated in the popular Mind-Body Medicine Peer Counseling Program have also expressed an increased sense of well-being, agency, and purpose.
  • Peer Counselors have led some 85 classroom presentations that have impacted over 1,000 students at Marjory Stoneman Douglas.
  • Upon completing our training, students are excited to support one another, engage in dialogue about their trauma, and share the life-long self-care skills they’ve learned with their friends and classmates.

51,000

children and adults served

650

Broward peer counselors, teachers, parents, and community service providers trained in our model

18

gifted and committed local faculty members Certified in our model

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Building Resilient Communities in Gaza https://cmbm.org/impact/impact-stories/impact-story/building-resilient-communities-in-gaza/ https://cmbm.org/impact/impact-stories/impact-story/building-resilient-communities-in-gaza/#respond Thu, 21 Apr 2022 20:45:39 +0000 https://cmbm.test/?post_type=case-study&p=483 The post Building Resilient Communities in Gaza appeared first on CMBM.

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With parallel programs in Gaza and Israel, we are helping communities address the population-wide trauma that comes with war and violence. Since 2005, we’ve partnered with more than 200 organizations to train over 1,500 Palestinian clinicians, educators, and community leaders to bring healing tools to 280,000 Gazan children and adults. Through our current initiative, Hope and Healing for Gaza Schools, we are training educators to integrate our mind-body approach into curricula and daily routines. Our aim is to make self-care and mutual support an essential part of the educational experience of all 250,000 children in Gaza’s public school system.

The challenge

With 5,936 residents per kilometer, Gaza is considered to be one of the densely populated areas in the world. Unemployment has reached 47% with 56% of residents living in poverty, and 64% experiencing food insecurity. The housing inventory in Gaza is insufficient to meet the needs of the current population, and is periodically destroyed by ongoing war and conflict in the region. The power outage crisis continues to plague Gaza with most residents living without electricity for up to 12 hours per day. Living in Gaza is a daily challenge. Thriving requires unimaginable fortitude and resilience.

Partnering to co-create solutions

Since 2005, The Center for Mind-Body Medicine has trained more than 1500 Palestinian clinicians, educators, and community leaders in its model of psychological self-care and group support. These trainees have brought the CMBM approach to more than 280,000 children and adults. Some 70,000 have participated in 10-week Mind-Body Skills Groups. Children and adults are regaining a sense of calm in the midst of chaos, and learning to transform their despair into hope.

Under the direction of Country Director, Dr. Jamil Atti, CMBM’s Gaza program is actively engaged in building population-wide systems of support in partnership with the Ministries of Health, Education and Social Welfare as well as 200 local and international NGOs.

CMBM’s model emphasizes ongoing self-care and mutual help in a safe and supportive small group environment. We begin by teaching clinicians, educators, and community leaders to use the techniques of mind-body medicine (several kinds of meditation, guided imagery, biofeedback and Autogenics) and self-expression in words, drawings, and movement in a small group setting. They learn to deal with their own stress, trauma and burnout. We then teach them to use the CMBM model with the populations they serve. We provide ongoing support and supervision as they successfully integrate our model into their work with children and adults. The model is rooted in hope and has been a reliable and sustainable force for healing in Gaza for over 17 years.

Most recently, CMBM completed a pilot program in Gaza, fully integrating mind-body skills into ten local schools. Teachers, school staff and children of all ages learned to draw their emotions, pause to take a few deep breaths when feelings become overwhelming, and use meditation and guided imagery to calm the physiological response to stress, manage difficult emotions and improve focus and concentration.

Testimonies and qualitative evaluations of students, teachers and school administrators reflect remarkable transformations including improved exam scores, decreased physical aggression between students, and improved teacher-student relationships. Additionally, CMBM worked with the United Nations Office for Program Services (UNOPS) providing trauma-relief services for families living in homes that were damaged or destroyed during recent hostilities.

Healing and Hope 3

I benefited from the mind-body skills a lot. I’m no longer afraid nor nervous during exams. I get stressed and unable to focus, but now I practice the breathing exercises and am able to focus…

– NOUR, CMBM AMBASSADOR

With a robust team of 25 faculty living in Gaza, CMBM has been a nimble and pro-active partner in addressing both historical and present trauma. Our deep roots and sustained presence in the region has earned the trust and support of local residents, government sectors, and the NGO community. In the midst of ongoing chaos, thousands of children and adults are regaining a sense of calm and learning to transform their despair into hope.

280,000

children and adults served

1500+

clinicians, educators, and community leaders trained

25

gifted and committed local faculty members

39,000

children and their parents served living in UN shelters during the 2014 war

Learn more about our work in Gaza

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