Mental Health continues to be a top priority for employers and employees across the country. Organizations have an opportunity to move toward a proactive approach to support teachers, administrators and staff by incorporating a mindset of mental fitness. Mental fitness is a combination of activities, habits, and attitudes that contribute to overall emotional health and wellness. Like physical fitness requires activity to get and stay fit and prevent health risks, mental fitness means actively doing things to manage and respond to stress and keep our emotions and mental state healthy. We will focus on how incorporating mental fitness into your organization’s culture can lead to greater workplace well-being, satisfaction and safety.
Senior Director, Workforce Health Consulting, Kaiser Permanente
Christina Bernard, MBA is passionate about the role that employers can play in supporting the health and well-being of the workforce.She oversees workforce health consulting for Kaiser Permanente in the California and Hawaii markets. Christina has 20+ years of experience in healthcare... Read More →
Senior Mental Health and Addiction Medicine Consultant, Kaiser Permanente
Caretia Silva, LCSW, LSSBB, SEP is a Licensed Clinical Social worker of 20+ years. She has been with Kaiser Permanente since 2015 as a mental health clinician, performance improvement consultant for care delivery teams and is now a National Senior Mental Health and Employee Assistance... Read More →
This session will highlight the innovative work being done at Olympic High School, a continuation school, to implement multiple learning pathways tailored to meet the diverse academic and mental health needs of students. By combining structured learning pathways with correlating mental health supports, we have created an environment where students are not only able to recover credits and succeed academically but also receive the emotional and psychological support they need. This presentation will cover the development, implementation, and monitoring processes of these pathways, with insights from our staff on how we integrate mental health services, individual counseling, and group support. Data on student progress, case studies, and challenges will be shared to inspire new approaches in addressing the holistic needs of students in alternative education settings.
Building Community, showing empathy and a degree of self-disclosure is key to earning the trust of families to understand, see the benefits of and consent to counseling and mental health services for their students. Showing how at Cerritos we have used parent workshops, presentations, and Wellness Room visits we have seen great strides in getting parents on board with mental health services and helping to break the stigma of these important servives. We educate families by providing key facts and data about mental health, describe the response to intervention and 3 tiers of mental health supports at our site, we allow for open communication, address their concerns directly, highlight positive aspects of seeking help, and community engagement. We provide a tour of our Student Wellness Room so they parents can see what we are doing to help support mental health and social emotional learning. As a community school we have partnered with local mental health agencies to bring the mental health services to our student at our school site. We also link and refer tier three cases with wrap around services if needed.
In this session, participants will explore the essential components for establishing and maintaining effective, sustainable school-based wellness programs that support both students and staff. Using the Appreciative Inquiry framework, attendees will engage in a collaborative process to envision a wellness program implementation model, along with actionable best practices that can be tailored to any school community. This interactive session will guide participants through strategies for embedding wellness into the school culture, ensuring that mental health, well-being, and long-term support are prioritized for both educators and students. Participants will leave with a clear vision and concrete steps for fostering a school environment that promotes lasting wellness for all.
Learning Goals and Takeaways: 1. Attendees will actively participate in using the Appreciative Inquiry framework to design a customized wellness program model for their school or district. 2. Participants will learn the essential elements needed to create effective, long-lasting wellness programs that support both students and staff. 3. Participants will leave with actionable best practices and strategies for embedding wellness into the fabric of their school culture, making it adaptable to their specific educational environment. 4. Attendees will be guided through creating a sustainable vision for wellness in their schools, with a focus on fostering mental health and well-being over the long term for both educators and students.
Employees in community behavioral health and education settings are regularly exposed to traumatic material. Students and clients carry trauma exposure ranging from difficult school transitions, immigration traumas, and intrafamilial violence. This manifests in school and treatment settings in increased mental health struggles and often problematic behaviors including but not limited to violence. Holding space for students and clients amidst their trauma response undoubtedly affects the good people working with them. Witnessing matriculated struggles, managing to keep milieus safe, and witnessing treatment and/or education “failures” can be a heavy weight for professionals to carry. Many training courses in trauma exposure focus on defining compassion fatigue, secondary and vicarious trauma, and exploring elements of self-care. This interactive presentation will focus on building a community of care and developing intention in navigating trauma affected systems to a place of post traumatic growth.
Presentation objectives: • Understand what makes a trauma affected system • Understand the difference between sustained trauma exposure in systems and single incident trauma • Understand how trauma exposure effects professionals in trauma affected systems • Understand meaning making and post traumatic growth • Discuss and explore intentional strategies of self-care, and to build communities of care