The 2019 Population Health Learning Collaborative Webinar Series 

Introducing the Comprehensive Strategy Map Template for Minimizing and Addressing Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACES)

Now Available On Demand


Read what webinar participants had to say (from the post-webinar surveys)

“This was fabulous...”

“This webinar was not only very helpful, but full of hope. Thank you.”

“A valuable presentation of ordering systems thinking.”

“This was an exceptional training on ACEs, Prevention and Building Resiliency, I am looking forward to all the great resources!!”

“This is exactly what I was looking for in terms of a tool to assist our agency in strategic planning for population health!”

“This is all great information for our collaborative to continue to move forward on our journey.”

“This work is fantastic, and exactly what our nation needs to address some complex social issues!”

“This was a great webinar. A big thank you to Bill for his work and provided resources. I look forward to sharing this with our ACEs Team and looking into doing some great work and education with Strategy Maps!”

“I think this is very valuable information that focus not only on program outcomes, but expand trauma-informed practices in all sectors as a strategy to increase coalitions capacity to address ACEs and collaboration to unify strategies and data that will make sense in organizing action.”

“This is an excellent tool to help us ground our ACEs initiative and gain assistance from multiple agencies as we build the map.”

“Excellent material for a long-term approach to having organizations and community trauma informed.”

“Exciting to know there’s skilled help available to help tackle these very complex multi-sector systemic issues—at a low cost.”

(Additional testimonial quotes found further down on this page.)



The Feature Presentation:  Introducing the ACEs and Resilience Strategy Map Template

Presented by Bill Barberg, President & Founder, InsightFormation, Inc.

Bill will be introducing the initial draft of the comprehensive strategy map template for addressing ACEs and increasing resilience in communities.  In collaboration with several clients, including the Michigan Health Improvement Alliance (MiHIA), Henry Ford Health Systems, several health departments in Washington and California, Bill is leading the development of this template, following the model he led for developing the strategy map template for the opioid, heroin and fentanyl crisis.  This presentation will explain the power and value of a strategy map template and will walk through the details of this initial iteration of the template.   He will also invite participants to be part of a program over the next several months to be a part of refining and building on the this framework with more details. 

This 6-minute video provides a preview of Bill’s presentation.



Product Showcase:  The Compassion Project  -- Social Emotional Learning for Elementary Schools

Presented by: Erin McClintock, Head of Impact, Social and Emotional Learning  at EVERFI

 Erin will introduce a way for healthcare stakeholders to support part of a comprehensive approach to ACEs and positive youth experience by partnering with schools to equip them to enhance the Social Emotional Learning of elementary school students.   She will provide inspiring details of how The Compassion Project tools freely provided by EVERFI (thanks to generous financial support from LinkedIn CEO, Jeff Weiner)  can be integrated into schools.

 This 11-minute segment from the October webinar provides some background and context for this part of the webinar.   This is ideal to share with people in your community who are involved with ACEs and resilience.  

 

 


About Bill Barberg  

Bill is the President & Founder of InsightFormation.  He has been consulting and training on community strategy management to help address complex social issue for the past 12 years, frequently speaking at national and regional conferences.  He authored the chapter on “Implementing Population Health Strategies” for the book, “Solving Population Health Problems through Collaboration” (Routledge, 2017).  In 2018, He received the “Health System Transformation Award” from Communities Joined in Action, a national association of coalitions working to improve community health and improve health equity that has members in 45 states. He received that award for his work in helping communities address the opioid crisis, and he’s now using the same approach to help communities better minimize and address Adverse Childhood Experiences.

 

About Erin McClintock 

Erin is a social-emotional learning expert with a passion for prevention, well-being, and digital technology.  She critically explores the intersections that exist between diversity, equity, and inclusion, mental health, interpersonal violence, digital wellness, and substance abuse, and how to best utilize technology to make an upstream impact on the collective betterment of our world.   Erin has a Ph.D. in media psychology from Fielding Graduate University and a Masters of Education (M.Ed) in mental health counseling from Cambridge College. 

 

More accolades from the post-webinar survey:

“This seems like the structure and template that recent studies have attempted to describe; a tracking tool to organize ACEs strategies. A tool needed quickly to capture all of the buzz around ACEs. It's ground-breaking efforts!”

“This was a great webinar. A big thank you to Bill for his work and provided resources. I look forward to sharing this with our ACEs Team and looking into doing some great work and education with Strategy Maps!”

“I think this is very valuable information that focus not only on program outcomes, but expand trauma-informed practices in all sectors as a strategy to increase coalitions capacity to address ACEs and collaboration to unify strategies and data that will make sense in organizing action.”

“This is an excellent tool to help us ground our ACEs initiative and gain assistance from multiple agencies as we build the map.”

“The tool of the Strategy Map for ACEs looks promising for our Collaborative. Because ACEs and mental health in general are complex social problems, this could help us chunk out areas to strategize and focus efforts more efficiently.”

“This is wonderful work.”

“Now that our non-profits are sharing the "language of ACE's and resiliency, it would/ will be very helpful to develop strategy maps for our endeavors. Thanks!”

“This information and opportunity is so timely for our community. Thank you for your work in this area and your commitment to helping coalition's address ACES in effective, culturally competent ways. I am looking forward to learning more and hopefully our coalition will be selected to be part of the ongoing project.”

“Excellent material and presentation.”

“Awesome information!!! We are interested in becoming an ARRCC pre-launch participant.”