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Bilingual Rural Mental Health Lead


El Futuro, Inc.


Location

North East England | United Kingdom


Job description

Would you like to join a growing, compassionate team of people who share a vision for a brighter future? El Futuro is the leading provider of behavioral health treatment to Latino families in North Carolina. Our mission is to nurture stronger familias to live out their dreams.

El Futuro is currently hiring a full-time Rural Mental Health Lead, prefer Outpatient Therapist, but not required. This position provides leadership and support to the Siler City clinical program and actively participates in supporting El Futuro’s goal to increase mental health services for underserved Latinos in rural counties, through relationship building with community leaders in Chatham and surrounding counties. Outpatient Therapist’s provide direct services to individuals and families to reach treatment goals in an ethical, high-quality, evidence-based, and culturally informed approach.

This position is located in the Siler City clinic, working remotely two days per week and in the Siler City clinic three days per week providing services in-person. Therapists ensure 8 hours of client appointments per week are scheduled after 4:00pm, and must be available for Friday morning meetings, 9:00-11:00am (mostly virtual).

The full-time annual salary for this position starts at $64,000.00 and will pro-rated if the candidate prefers a work schedule less thank 37.5 hours per week. Employees who work 30 hours per work or more are eligible for El Futuro benefits, including employer paid medical, dental, vision, life, short-term disability, and long-term disability; 403B matching; generous PTO and paid holidays; paid parental leave; and stipend and paid time off for professional development.

ESSENTIAL FUNCTIONS
The Rural Mental Health Lead Outpatient Therapist performs a wide range of functions including, but not limited to the following:

Rural Mental Health Lead Functions:

Outpatient Therapist Functions:

EDUCATION and/or EXPERIENCE

KNOWLEDGE, SKILLS, ABILITIES

In addition to Outpatient Therapist:
Demonstrated skills in program or project management.
Ability to manage multiple tasks and priorities while affording attention to detail and
organization.
Ability to collaborate well and communicate effectively with team members.
Ability to self-motivate and take initiative.
Strong consultation, assessment, triage, crisis and case management skills.

To apply, submit your cover letter and resume to [email protected].

El Futuro is an Equal Opportunity Employer and does not discriminate in its employment decisions on the basis of any protected category. El Futuro is committed to diversity, equity, and inclusion. We believe we are most impactful when people with a wide range of backgrounds, experiences, and identities come together with common purpose. We encourage candidates from all backgrounds to apply.

Organizations that serve Spanish-speakers will meet more National CLAS Standards and “provide effective, equitable, understandable, and respectful quality care and services.” This aims to increase trust, reduce fear that mental health treatment will result in deportation/hurt immigration status, and address barriers to care to reduce underutilization of mental health services by Latine people.

Communities

Latine community members will experience increased awareness of mental health resources. This awareness will be the result of community education that normalizes the way stress and trauma affect us, decreases stigma related to mental illness and mental health services, and helps connect clients to appropriate resources. Success would mean that more Latine community members experience positive mental wellbeing, whether they are using effective self care skills, getting support from a promotor or peer support specialist, or getting access to a culturally responsive clinician or family navigator.

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Implementation Science

Implementation science is the study of how evidence-based programs can be embedded to maximize successful outcomes (Kelly and Perkins, 2012).

Technical Assistance

Technical Assistance and Consultation is training, information sharing, and/or support in applying techniques to improve the capacity of a program, organization or system to achieve specific goals.

Service Providers

Providers will have greater self-knowledge and awareness of how their culture impacts their communication style and how it may generate biases. Providers will increase their ability to be culturally responsive and have an expanded awareness of their clients’ values, customs, and traditions in assessment and goal setting to help clients adaptively heal while coping with racism.

Clients

Clients will engage in culturally and linguistically responsive services to support their mental health, allowing them to achieve their goals. Culturally responsive services and services provided in a language the client speaks may result in fewer missed appointments, greater client retention, and increased success in treatment.

Alvely Alcántara, LCSW is a first generation Dominican immigrant raised in New York City. She is a Licensed Clinical Social Worker in the state of North Carolina with eight years experience providing mental health therapy to the Latinx/Hispanic community, specializing in the treatment of anxiety, trauma, and family dynamics. Alvely utilizes a holistic, somatic based approach to treating mental health, focusing on what each client needs. Alvely is the founder of the Latinx Healing Collective, composed of ten local Latinx therapists providing mental health treatment to the Latinx community. She is also the founder/co-host of a podcast for Latinx/Hispanic listeners in which topics are discussed to deconstruct the stigma of mental and emotional wellness. As a therapist, she believes that one of the most important things she can do for her clients is to teach individuals to identify and change unhealthy thought patterns and develop self-compassion and self-awareness. Alvely is the owner of a private practice, Rooted Healing Therapy, PLLC located in Raleigh-Durham, N.C.

Rossy C. Garcia, MEd

Rossy C. Garcia, MEd is a school counselor in the Wake County Public School System. Prior to becoming a school counselor in 2015, she spent 15 years in the Biotech and Environmental industries. She is an active member of the NC School Counselor Association where she’s served as part of the Delegate Assembly and NBCC committee. As a first generation college student she is passionate about helping Latinx students access post-secondary education while maintaining emotional and mental health.

Katy Sims, MD

Katy Sims, MD attended Davidson College for her undergraduate degree and is now a fourth year Psychiatry resident at UNC School of Medicine. Katy’s dedication to psychiatry comes out of her realization that whole-body health often has to start with sound behavioral health — you can’t work on someone’s diabetes if they’re too depressed to make lifestyle changes. She especially likes working with Spanish-speaking populations because of how much being able to deliver treatments in their native language means to these clients.

Everardo Aviles, LCSW, LCAS (Eve) is a Child and Family Therapist in Winston Salem NC. He lives in Ruffin NC with his wife and their four children. He immigrated to NC from Mexico at the age of nine. His work focuses on providing trauma informed treatment, as well as treatment for sexually reactive behaviors; to clients 5-17 years of age.

As a medical anthropologist and social work researcher, Dr. Gulbas ’ research embodies interdisciplinarity through the integration of applied theories of health and human development with qualitative and ethnographic methodologies. Her work seeks to understand how people—children, families, and providers—navigate complex sociocultural landscapes in the pursuit of mental health. Most of her work, to date, focuses attention on developing more robust interpretations of suicide risk. With funding from the National Institutes of Mental Health, this body of research has contributed to advancements in theoretical and empirical knowledge of the broader contexts within which youth suicide risk is situated.

R. Gabriela Barajas-Gonzalez is a developmental psychologist and an assistant professor of Population Health at NYU Grossman School of Medicine. Dr. Barajas-Gonzalez is the principal investigator of a study that examines the impact of immigration-related threat and stress on school communities. She earned a PhD in developmental psychology from Columbia University and hold a BA in human biology from Stanford University. Dr. Barajas-Gonzalez is the daughter of Mexican immigrants and a first gen college student.

Dr. Parra-Cardona is an Associate Professor in the Steve Hicks School of Social Work (SHSSW) at the University of Texas at Austin. At the SHSSW, he serves as Coordinator for Mexico and Latin American initiatives. He also serves as Area Director for Research at the UT Austin Latino Research Institute. Dr. Parra-Cardona’s program of research is focused on the cultural adaptation of evidence-based parenting interventions for low-income Latinx populations in the US and Latin America.

Bianka Reese, PhD, MSPH

Bianka Reese, PhD, MSPH is a research scientist and program evaluator specializing in adolescent and young adult sexual and reproductive health. Her previous research in the experiences of Latinx LGBTQ+ youth stems from her work as the Research and Evaluation Manager at SHIFT NC (Sexual Initiatives For Teens), where she led largescale evaluations of multilevel, community-based sexual health promotion initiatives and research projects aimed at elevating the voices of diverse youth in North Carolina. Dr. Reese is currently the Senior Research Strategist at Creative Research Solutions, LLC, an award-winning national evaluation, research, and assessment firm.

Tania Connaughton-Espino, MPH

Tania Connaughton-Espino, MPH is an independent researcher focused on adolescent and young adult sexual and reproductive health. Her interest in the experiences of Latinx LGBTQ+ youth stems from her previous work with SHIFT NC (Sexual Initiatives For Teens), where she led the training and evaluation department, conducted capacity-building workshops for youth serving professionals including on the topic of how to be more affirming of LGBTQ youth, and from her extensive experience working with the Latinx population in NC.

Maru Gonzalez, EdD is an Assistant Professor and Youth Development Specialist in the Department of Agricultural and Human Sciences at North Carolina State University. Her areas of inquiry include youth development with a focus on activism, social justice, and the experiences of LGBTQ+ young people across familial, school, and community contexts.

Nayeli Y. Chavez-Dueñas, PhD received her doctorate in Clinical Psychology from the APA accredited program at Southern Illinois University at Carbondale. She is a Professor at The Chicago School of Professional Psychology (TCSPP) where she serves as the faculty coordinator for the concentration in Latinx Mental Health in the Counseling Psychology Department. She is the Co-Director of the IC-RACE Lab (Immigration Critical Race and Cultural Equity Lab). She has co-authored two books: (a) Cultural Foundations and Interventions in Latinx Mental Health: History, Theory and within Group Differences (with Hector Y. Adames) published by Routledge Press and (c) Ethics in Psychotherapy and Counseling: A Practical Guide, 6th Ed. (with Kenneth S. Pope, Melba J.T. Vasquez, Hector Y. Adames) published by Wiley. Her research focuses on colorism, skin-color differences, parenting styles, immigration, unaccompanied minors, multiculturalism, and race relations. She has earned a number of awards including the 2018 American Psychological Association (APA) Distinguished Citizen Psychologist Award. To learn more, please visit Dr. Chavez-Dueñas’ lab at

Hector Y. Adames, PsyD

Hector Y. Adames, PsyD received his doctorate in Clinical Psychology from the APA accredited program at Wright State University in Ohio and completed his APA pre-doctoral internship at the Boston University School of Medicine’s Center for Multicultural Training in Psychology (CMTP). Currently, he is a licensed psychologist and a Professor at The Chicago School of Professional Psychology, Chicago Campus and the Co-Director of the IC-RACE Lab (Immigration Critical Race and Cultural Equity Lab). Dr. Adames has co-authored or co-edited several books including (a) Cultural Foundations and Interventions in Latinx Mental Health: History, Theory and within Group Differences (with Nayeli Y. Chavez-Dueñas) published by Routledge Press, (b) Caring for Latinxs with Dementia in a Globalized World published by Springer, (c) Ethics in Psychotherapy and Counseling: A Practical Guide, 6th Ed. (with Kenneth S. Pope, Melba J.T. Vasquez, Nayeli Y. Chavez-Dueñas) published by Wiley, and (d) Succeeding as a Therapist: How to Create a Thriving Practice in a Changing World (with Nayeli Y. Chavez-Dueñas, Melba J.T. Vasquez, Kenneth S. Pope) published by the American Psychological Association (APA). He has earned several awards including the 2018 Distinguished Emerging Professional Research Award from The Society for the Psychological Study of Culture, Ethnicity, and Race, a Division of APA. To learn more, please visit Dr. Adames’ lab at

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COVID-19 clinic closure

Following recommendations from public health professionals, the El Futuro offices will be closed until further notice. If you need to speak to your provider, please dial their extension.

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