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Episode 3: Resiliency in Schools: Building and Sustaining Partnerships

Promoting Resilience

Release Date: 10/06/2020

Season 2, Episode 4: The Impact of Violence on Cancer Risk Factors for Marginalized Populations show art Season 2, Episode 4: The Impact of Violence on Cancer Risk Factors for Marginalized Populations

Promoting Resilience

Host, Dr. Catherine Cerulli, a professor of Psychiatry at the University of Rochester, is joined by her guests, Ash B. Alpert, MD, MFA, a Hematologist and Medical Oncologist and an AHRQ T32 Post-Doctoral Fellow in Health Services Research at the Brown University School of Public Health and Sabrina Jamileh Sayegh, a queer and nonbinary third-year medical student at the University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry. Dr. Alpert and Sabrina share insights regarding their research to understand and address cancer risk factors as a result of violence for multiply marginalized...

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Season 3, Episode 1: Understanding Perinatal Child Parent Psychotherapy: Taking a Culturally Informed Approach to Implementation show art Season 3, Episode 1: Understanding Perinatal Child Parent Psychotherapy: Taking a Culturally Informed Approach to Implementation

Promoting Resilience

Host, Dr. Catherine Cerulli, a professor of Psychiatry at the University of Rochester, is joined by her guest, Donna Walck, PhD, a therapist at Mt. Hope Family Center where she has practiced for 15+ years. Dr. Walck shares her expertise using Perinatal Child Parent Psychotherapy (P-CPP), an evidence-based trauma-informed therapeutic model for children ages birth to five years and their parents/caregivers. By exploring P-CPP and how it has been integrated into Project PROMISE, part of our TRANSFORM Research Center, Drs. Cerulli and Walck discuss the goals and delivery methods for administering...

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Season 2, Episode 3: “You can’t take away the hurt, but we can minimize the damage”: Using Trauma Informed Care in Law Enforcement show art Season 2, Episode 3: “You can’t take away the hurt, but we can minimize the damage”: Using Trauma Informed Care in Law Enforcement

Promoting Resilience

Host, Dr. Catherine Cerulli, a professor of Psychiatry at the University of Rochester, is joined by her guest, Moses Robinson. Moses has been a police officer with the Rochester, NY City Police Department since 1985, was a school resource officer for 21 years, and is currently a community liaison officer. His time on the force has taught him the value of forming relationships with people including children in schools, victims of violence, and offenders, some who have been victimized themselves. Through Moses work as a school resource officer, he learned that building relationships with...

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Season 2, Episode 6: Reimagining the Child Welfare System: Encouraging Families to Thrive show art Season 2, Episode 6: Reimagining the Child Welfare System: Encouraging Families to Thrive

Promoting Resilience

Host, Dr. Catherine Cerulli, a professor of Psychiatry at the University of Rochester, is joined by her guest, Mical Raz, MD, PhD, MSHP, the Charles E. and Dale L. Phelps Professor in Public Policy and Health at the University of Rochester, where she also works as an internal medicine physician at Strong Memorial Hospital in Rochester, NY. Dr. Raz explores themes of Poor Parenting vs. Poor Parents, mandatory reporting, Child Protective Services being used as a surveillance tool rather than a support tool, and how we can reframe and reimagine these systems. The war on poverty isn’t a new...

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Season 2, Episode 5: Using Evidence Based Research to Reduce Teen Pregnancy show art Season 2, Episode 5: Using Evidence Based Research to Reduce Teen Pregnancy

Promoting Resilience

Host, Dr. Catherine Cerulli, a Psychiatry professor at the University of Rochester, is joined by her guest, Justin Russotti, Ph.D., a licensed clinical social worker and child maltreatment researcher. Dr. Russotti’s research focuses on the intersection of development and mental health specific to teen pregnancy. Child maltreatment is the strongest predictor of teen pregnancy and survivors are twice as likely to experience adolescent childbirth as opposed to those who do not experience childhood abuse and neglect. Dr. Russotti discusses his research with the Mt. Hope Family Center. He found...

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Season 2, Episode 2: Empowering People Living with Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder show art Season 2, Episode 2: Empowering People Living with Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder

Promoting Resilience

Host, Dr. Catherine Cerulli, a professor of Psychiatry at the University of Rochester, is joined by her guest, Christie McGee Petrenko, Ph.D., a clinical psychologist and Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder (FASD) researcher. FASD represents a range of conditions associated with prenatal alcohol exposure. Studies have documented that in the US 2-5% of the population have FASD, or one in 20, and as many as 80-90% of people go undiagnosed or misdiagnosed. This impacts their lives in challenging ways including growth delays, learning and behavioral problems, and struggling with ADHD, anxiety, or...

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Season 2, Episode 1: Supporting Child Protective Services Through Medical Consultation Services show art Season 2, Episode 1: Supporting Child Protective Services Through Medical Consultation Services

Promoting Resilience

Host, Dr. Catherine Cerulli, a professor of Psychiatry at the University of Rochester, is joined by her guest, Nila Bragg, MSN, CPNP, a certified pediatric nurse practitioner and a Medical Consultant for the New York City Administration for Children’s Services (ACS). ACS’s mission is to protect and promote the safety and well-being of New York City’s children. As part of that work, child protective specialists from ACS conduct investigations to determine what is needed to best keep the children safe. For instance, to help keep families together, child protective specialists often connect...

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Episode 7: Beyond Crisis Care: Supporting Youth and Helping them Thrive show art Episode 7: Beyond Crisis Care: Supporting Youth and Helping them Thrive

Promoting Resilience

Host, Dr. Catherine Cerulli, a professor of Psychiatry at the University of Rochester, is joined by her guest, Elaine Spaull, Executive Director of The Center for Youth in Rochester, New York, to discuss the Center’s work as they care for youth and families. Highlighted are real life stories of people who have faced trauma that led them to seek support from the Center. Also discussed throughout the episode is how trauma and neglect in childhood can affect people into adulthood.

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Episode 6: Childcare in the Court System and a Life-Long Passion for Foster Care show art Episode 6: Childcare in the Court System and a Life-Long Passion for Foster Care

Promoting Resilience

Host, Dr. Catherine Cerulli, is joined by guest, Eileen Whitney, to discuss how children and families involved in the court system are supported in a court based daycare program and barriers they face. Eileen also discusses her life-long passion of being a foster mom and how foster care benefits kids.

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Episode 5: Anonymity Through Technology: Empowering Kids to Reach Out About Abuse show art Episode 5: Anonymity Through Technology: Empowering Kids to Reach Out About Abuse

Promoting Resilience

Dr. Catherine Cerulli, Psychiatry Professor at the University of Rochester, is joined by Dr. Laura Schwab Reese, Public Health Assistant Professor at Purdue University, to discuss national talk, text, and chat lines that respond to child abuse. The importance of these technologies is discussed as they can directly respond to children using tools they use daily. Also, Dr. Schwab Reese has identified ways to improve how counselors relate to kids when using these services to build greater trust and autonomy.

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Host, Dr. Catherine Cerulli, a professor of Psychiatry at the University of Rochester, is joined by her guest, Dr. Shaun Nelms, to talk about how schools can build resiliency in youth and grow partnerships with families and community-based agencies. By meeting the youth’s basic needs, we can improve health, prevent child abuse and neglect, and break intergenerational trajectories of poverty and violence. Dr. Nelms is the superintendent of East Upper and Lower Schools, a unique partnership between the New York State Education Department, Rochester City School District, and University of Rochester, where he is charged with creating a replicable school reform model that can transform the way we think about schools as centers for public health promotion. Please check out the following links from Dr. Nelms:

Adverse Childhood Experiences: https://www.rochester.edu/warner/cues/wp-content/uploads/2019/09/PYRCH-Year-Three-Summary.8.28.19.pdf

Family Group/Restorative Practices: https://www.rochester.edu/warner/cues/restorative-practices/

Bullying: https://www.rochester.edu/warner/cues/bullying/

Transforming East:  https://youtu.be/hmqSKpNbN5s

Family and Community Engagement: https://vimeo.com/395096234

Sound engineering and music by Joe Hagen. (Recorded August 2020)