New Orleans Youth Contribute to the Global Landscape of Adolescent Mental Health

While there is a growing focus on mental health impacts among adolescents, we have little information about these impacts or how we can intervene, and there is even less data on a global scale. This quarter, through our partnership with the Global Early Adolescent Study (GEAS), we conducted research with youth in New Orleans to discuss their mental health and emotional well being. The data will contribute to UNICEF’s 2021 State of the World’s Children (SOWC) report. To learn the key themes and see direct quotes from youth that participated in the conversations, follow the link below.

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Iman ShervingtonComment
Ida Did Not Flood New Orleans: But Residual Katrina Tears Could Drown Us

Yes, Ida is not Katrina, and luckily New Orleans did indeed ‘hold the line’ this time. In spite of the infrastructure failure resulting in power and Internet service outage, the levees held and the city did not flood. However, the internal landscape, the internal psyche of many New Orleanians has been broken by the irony of another devastating hurricane occurring on the anniversary of Katrina. Read on for lessons learned from Katrina to COVID to Ida, and what’s needed for our ongoing resilience and well-being.

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Iman ShervingtonComment
Join our Louisiana Youth for Health Justice (LYHJ) Council!

We recently received funding from the Packard Foundation to deepen and build upon past and existing efforts to create an environment favorable to comprehensive sexuality education (CSE) and continue to expand the number of youth in Louisiana who have access to medically accurate, age and developmentally appropriate, gender-transformative, and trauma-responsive sexuality education and resources that promote reproductive justice. To achieve that, we’re creating a Louisiana Youth for Health Justice Council. Read on for qualifications and how to apply.

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Iman ShervingtonComment
Get to Know Black Women First - Improving Care and Treatment Services for Black Women Living with HIV

In partnership with Priority Health Care (PHC), IWES was selected as one of 12 sites across the country to participate in a national study funded by the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA). Through our local initiative, Black Women First - Care and Treatment Services (CATS) NOLA, we seek to understand how using several strategies at the same time to change clinic culture and increase patient support and access to services will impact the health and wellbeing of cis- and transgender Black women living with HIV. Read on to learn more about our work to support Black women living with HIV.

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Iman ShervingtonComment
Louisiana Legislative Wins & Black Maternal Mental Health Week

This year our Maternal and Child Health (MCH) team has been diligently working to bring research, collaboration and policy together to improve Louisiana’s maternal and infant health outcomes. As a result of our efforts and those of our partners, ten out of the thirteen bills and resolutions the group either recommended or supported passed during the legislative session! This quarter also included Black Maternal Mental Health Week (July 19-25), where we took the opportunity to shed more light on maternal mental health and our advocacy efforts. Learn more about our legislative wins and our reflections on Black Maternal Mental Health Week here.

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Iman ShervingtonComment
This Meeting Is A Protest!

In today’s climate, so much is done for young people without involving young people. When talking about the needs of youth, rarely do we as adults truly listen to their experiences and opinions directly from them. This issue led to the initial inspiration for “Lift Every Voice,” a roundtable discussion for teens, hosted by teens, and supported by IWES health educators. Through funding from Teen Health Mississippi, four members of IWES’ Youth Leadership Council used this platform to speak openly and honestly about the pressing problems facing young people in 2020. Excerpts from this profound conversation are being released in a new limited series, This Meeting Is A Protest! Check out the article to learn more.

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Get to Know our Catapult National Youth Advisory Board Interns!

In our last quarter’s blogs, you learned a bit about our Catapult Study, IWES’ local implementation of the Global Early Adolescent Study (GEAS) conducted in partnership with Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. Another major component of this endeavor is a National Youth Advisory Board (NYAB), which we’re excited to introduce you to today! Take a moment to get to know some of our interns in their own words below!

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Youth Share Their Experiences Amid COVID-19 in Catapult Study Focus Group Series

As a sub-study of IWES’ greater Catapult Study, our local implementation of the Global Early Adolescent Study (GEAS) conducted in partnership with Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health and collaborating research teams around the world, the IWES Research and Evaluation division engaged adolescents ages 11-16 in a special series of conversations about their experiences amid the COVID-19 pandemic. Four focus group discussions were held with middle and high school students to better understand the specific challenges brought on by the pandemic as well as the implications for their emotional well-being and academic success. To find out what they learned in this process, check out the blog here.

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Iman ShervingtonComment
Hurricane Katrina, 15 Years Later

Each year on August 29 we remember and reflect upon Hurricane Katrina as we are reminded of the ongoing struggle to heal as individuals and a community. In this blog post we explore what we’ve learned and where we need to grow 15 years following the historic and tragic event. Join us in honoring the legacy of those that were lost, but will never be forgotten.

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Rheneisha RobertsonComment
Introducing: The MORE Project

Allow us to introduce you to The MORE Project, an initiative designed to: prevent HIV transmission, increase trauma-informed HIV screening and improve access to services for people living with HIV; reduce violence against women and support women to reduce harm from intimate partner violence (IPV); and promote social norms that protect against IPV by engaging men in workshops and curricula examining traditional gender norms. Find out why we went with “MORE” and how you can get involved here.

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Iman ShervingtonComment
Introducing BY-LA 2.0: IWES’ newest iteration of adolescent health programming

We’re happy to announce that on Tuesday, June 30th, IWES was named as one of 49 organizations across 26 states that received a grant award under the Health and Human Services’ Office of Population Affairs’ Optimally Changing the Map for Teen Pregnancy Prevention (Tier 1) initiative. Building upon 10 years of providing adolescent health education and as a three-time awardee of grant funding under the federal teen pregnancy prevention (TPP) initiative, IWES is setting out to implement a scaled-up, re-imagined version of its trauma-informed Believe in Youth - Louisiana (BY-LA) program—BY-LA 2.0. Learn more here.

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Iman ShervingtonComment
Program Updates due to COVID-19

The COVID-19 pandemic has caused IWES programs to discover new strategies to deliver our services and programming for an indefinite time. Therefore we have made changes in all of our departments in order to heed local, state, and national guidelines and still deliver quality programming. Read on to get an update on each program and how we are doing the work. This page will be updated periodically as the situation develops.

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Collective for Healthy Communities: Trauma-informed training for the community

Our Collective for Healthy Communities (CHC) program is excited to continue providing direct services to members of the New Orleans community. Over the past few years, CHC has partnered with various groups in New Orleans to facilitate group and individual mental health services. One of our current partners is Hotel Hope, “a nonprofit, interfaith organization that provides housing to women and their children while guiding them to self-sufficiency and self-empowerment through intensive case management in a safe and loving atmosphere.” Find out more about the partnership in this article.

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Iman ShervingtonComment
In That Number is Back and Ready for Action

For the newest iteration of our powerful In That Number campaign, we are focusing on the education, criminal justice, and healthcare/hospital sector and how they can be trauma-informed. For our call-to-action, we believe a crucial first step is to have trauma-informed training for mental health professionals. Read on to learn more about our current campaign and what you can do.

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Iman ShervingtonComment
Visual AIDS’ 2019 Day With(out) Art - Still Beginning: A response to the ongoing HIV epidemic featuring Sian Green

In the summer of 2019, IWES staff created a short film entitled i’m still me for Visual AIDS’ 2019 Day With(out) Art series, Still Beginning. i’m still me profiles the experiences and activism of Sian Green, an African American woman living with HIV that is a member of IWES’ HIV Testing & Prevention program’s Community Advisory Board as well as a Peer Advocate. Read on to learn more about i’m still me.

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Iman ShervingtonComment
New Orleans Childhood Trauma Task Force Releases Findings in New Report

On August 9th, 2018 it was resolved that New Orleans would seek to become a more compassionate and trauma-informed city. The New Orleans Children and Youth Planning Board (CYPB) was tasked with creating a year-long Task Force that would examine the issues surrounding Childhood Trauma and provide the City with recommendations to address them. On October 17th, 2019, CYPB Executive Director Karen Evans, Dr. Sanders and Dr. Shervington made a brief presentation to the City Council before handing over the 200+ page report. Find out more in this blog.

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Iman ShervingtonComment
Well, What Happened After That?

Our latest narrative short film And What Happened After That? premiered at this year's 30th Annual New Orleans Film Festival in the Louisiana Shorts: Right Place, Wrong Time block. A question that we received multiple times was, “Well, what happened after that, and when can we watch it again?” Don’t worry, we’re always devising ways to bring you more high quality, realistic, and culturally resonant films, with health-focused information sprinkled in between the entertaining parts!

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Iman ShervingtonComment