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El proyecto piloto se hizo realidad gracias a la colaboración de las organizaciones participantes (aliados) Futures Without Violence, Alianza Nacional de Campesinas, Líderes Campesinas, RAND y la Red de Proveedores de Servicios de Salud para Migrantes (MCN por sus siglas en inglés) y el apoyo de la iniciativa ACEs Aware de California a través del programa piloto UCLA-UCSF ACEs Aware Family Resilience Network (UCAAN). Una encuesta reciente de la Universidad de California en Merced sobre la salud de los trabajadores agrícolas reveló que el 87% de los encuestados tuvieron al menos una experiencia adversa en la infancia. Para abordar estas experiencias adversas es fundamental que se eduque a la población de trabajadores agrícolas, se detecten las ACEs y que los centros de salud ofrezcan una respuesta adecuada a quienes la necesiten mediante intervenciones basadas en evidencia científica. Sin embargo, hoy en día, las acciones educativas y de detección de las ACEs que se están haciendo con un enfoque cultural no están llegando a las comunidades de trabajadores agrícolas en California. NACES tenía como meta crear más oportunidades donde los trabajadores agrícolas pudieran informar a los centros de salud sobre sus preferencias para detectar y responder a las ACEs, aumentar las acciones educativas sobre este tema en las comunidades de trabajadores agrícolas, crear alianzas entre los centros de salud comunitarios (CHCs por sus siglas en inglés) y las líderes campesinas y, en última instancia, mejorar el acceso a la atención médica. Este proyecto tiene dos componentes: i) el componente comunitario que se presenta en este reporte y; ii) el componente clínico que examina cómo los resultados y las recomendaciones del componente comunitario impactaron las acciones de alcance comunitario, la educación y la respuesta de los centros de salud para abordar las ACEs. El componente comunitario se dividió en dos fases. La Primera fase consistió en la evaluación del entrenamiento de las líderes campesinas y, la Segunda fase, en la evaluación de las pláticas o entrenamientos facilitados por las líderes campesinas (peer-led farmworker training en inglés).

Families Talking Together (FTT) is an evidence based program designed to help Latino parents better communicate with their children and teens about healthy relationships, sex, contraceptive use, and preventing pregnancy.  Dr. Vincent Guilamo-Ramos, the creator of the program and co-director of the Center for Latino Adolescent and Family Health at New York University’s Silver School of Social work, along with Planned Parenthood Los Angeles and Visión y Compromiso, recently enlisted 25 promotores (community health workers) from three communities in California with high rates of teen pregnancy and high percentages of Latinos in an effort to help Latino parents address teen pregnancy. Over a four-day period, the 25 promotores were trained to deliver the FTT intervention.  In the next two months, the promotores will deliver the intervention to 250 families in California.  The National Campaign wishes to recognize and thank Dr. Guilamo-Ramos, PPLA, and Visión y Compromiso for their work on this innovative and important project. 

The FTT intervention—both the community health worker curriculum and parent materials---are available online, free of charge.  

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Presentations by Pacific Northwest Agricultural Safety and Health Center (PNASH): 

 

1. Age Considerations: Impacts on Pesticide Exposure and Health Outcomes

2. How to Identify the Products Your Patients are Exposed to

3. Reporting, Surveillance, Legal Aspects of Pesticide Related Illnesses

4. The Work to Home Pesticide Exposure Pathway: How to Protect Pregnant Women and Children (English and Spanish)

5. Chronic Health Effects of Pesticide Exposure

This is an MCN online course.  The primary objective is to ensure clinicians serving migrant and underserved communities are aware of general childhood agricultural safety and health concerns. This will be accomplished in a way that increases the clinicians’ ability to provide effective healthcare to their patients by assessing and understanding agricultural health risks.

This resource from the California Department of Public Health provides facts, information for health professionals,  data and surveillance, vaccine, and prevention.

Este recurso del CDC ofrece una visión general de la tos ferina , también conocida como Whooping Cough. Los temas incluyen síntomas , propagación, la tos ferina en los EE.UU. y las medidas de prevención.

This resources provides an overview of Pertussis, also known as the Whooping Cough. Topics include symptoms, how its spread, Pertussis in the US and prevention measures.

This resource from the CDC provides an overview of Pertussis, also known as the Whooping Cough. Topics include symptoms, how its spread, Pertussis in the US and prevention measures.

This hour long webcast features Jennie McLaurin, MD, MPH – a former medical director of a migrant and community health center and a pediatrician with over 20 years of practice serving farmworker and immigrant populations.

 

An interactive lead case study by Susan Buchanan, MD, Linda Forst, MD, MPH, and Anne Evens, MS.

California Department of Public Health offers numerous bilingual educational materials regarding childhood lead poisoning prevention.

Founded by singer/songwriter Paul Simon and pediatrician/child advocate Irwin Redlener, MD in 1987, The Children's Health Fund (CHF) works nationally to develop health care programs for the nation's most medically underserved population - homeless and disadvantaged children. CHF brings medical care and essential services directly to underserved children in rural and urban communities via Mobile Medical clinics (doctor's offices on wheels) and fixed site clinics. Moreover, CHF has become a major national advocacy voice on behalf of all children, and has inspired special federal legislation designed to help create innovative Children's Health Projects throughout the United States. The Children's Health Fund's website contains a lot of useful information, which would undoubtedly benefit your audience. 

The purpose of the National Maternal and Child Oral Health Resource Center (OHRC) is to respond to the needs of states and communities in addressing current and emerging public oral health issues. OHRC supports health professionals, program administrators, educators, policymakers, and others with the goal of improving oral health services for infants, children, adolescents, and their families.

Public health program designed to ensure early detection of eye conditions in babies. Member optometrists provide a free comprehensive infant eye assessment to children younger than one year.

Professional education for healthcare providers on health risks for adolescent farmworkers.

HRSA/HAB has developed a new 24-hour clinical consultation service, the National Perinatal HIV Consultation and Referral Service (Perinatal Hotline). This service provides 24-hour advice from HIV experts on indications and interpretations of HIV testing in pregnancy as well as consultation on treating HIV-infected pregnant women and their infants. The Perinatal Hotline (888-448-8765) and the PEPline (888-448-4911) are both available 24 hours, seven days per week. The Warmline (800-933-3413) is available 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. (EST) Monday through Friday.

Free video called “Lo Mejor Para Su Bebe”, which covers infant care and breastfeeding.

CDC Childhood Lead Poisoning Prevention Program - offers screening, research and surveillance information.