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On Demand

Introduction to the Adverse Childhood Experiences Research and Trauma-Informed Care


Total Credits: 1.5 including 1.5 American Psychological Association, 1.5 Association of Social Worker Boards, 1.5 National Board of Certified Counselors

Faculty:
Sandi Capuano Morrison, MA
Course Levels:
Appropriate for All Levels
Duration:
1 Hour 25 Minutes
Format:
Audio and Video



Description

This presentation will provide attendees with an introduction to the 1997 Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs) study by Kaiser Permanente and the Center for Disease Control and the expanded use of the ACEs knowledge by various communities to incorporate the research around ACEs and resiliency into practical applications. The workshop will include discussion of various ways that communities are applying the knowledge gained from the ACEs science, including the importance of not only adverse but positive experiences in childhood. Examples of various multidisciplinary practical applications of how the ACEs science is expanding and improving the responses to child and adolescent victims through proper identification of trauma and its short, and long-term, impacts with increased understanding of the critical importance of the research around resilience. 

Handouts

Faculty

Sandi Capuano Morrison, MA's Profile

Sandi Capuano Morrison, MA Related Seminars and Products

CEO

Institute on Violence, Abuse, and Trauma (IVAT)


Sandi Capuano Morrison has worked with victims and offenders of interpersonal violence for 24 years in Colorado, Massachusetts and California. She has been with IVAT since 2008. Sandi received her Bachelor of Arts degree from the University of Colorado-Boulder in Psychology with a focus in Women’s Studies in 1996. Her commitment to domestic violence survivors began after volunteering at a battered women’s shelter as part of a course on Gandhi’s philosophy of ahimsa, nonviolent resistance, and satyagrapha.

Sandi was a victim advocate at Boulder County Safehouse and then Children’s Counselor at Alternatives to Violence domestic violence shelter before moving to Boston in 1998 and graduating from Boston College with her Masters Degree in Counseling Psychology in 2000. It was at BC that Sandi became certified as a Batterer Intervention Program Facilitator and assisted with research on the process and efficacy of offender programs. She became the Program Director of the IMPACT Batterer Intervention Program and ran offender groups for 5 years in Boston suburbs.

After moving to San Diego in 2005, Sandi managed the county-wide domestic violence and sexual assault 24-hour hotline and volunteer program and then the city of San Diego’s Rape Crisis Center at the Center for Community Solutions. In that position she was a member of both the San Diego Sexual Assault Response Team and the Sex Offender Management Council and became certified by California’s Office of Emergency Services as a Domestic Violence and Sexual Assault counselor. She was also a Trauma Intervention Program (TIP) volunteer.

Sandi serves on the Executive Committee of the National Partnership to End Interpersonal Violence Across the Lifespan (NPEIV) and is also a board member of Stop the Silence, Stop Child Sexual Abuse Inc. 

Sandi is committed to empowerment-based, survivor-informed programs & processes as well as offender accountability. She has interests in Restorative Justice, Holistic Healing, Cultural Competency, Human Rights and Social Justice.