Supporting the Well-Being of Indigenous Mothers and Babies

Posted January 13, 2025
By the Annie E. Casey Foundation
A native american mother cradles her newborn baby to her chest.

The Annie E. Casey Foun­da­tion will host a webi­nar, Sup­port­ing the Well-Being of Indige­nous Moth­ers and Babies With a Cul­tur­al­ly Affirm­ing Evi­dence-Based Pro­gram, from 1 to 2 p.m. ET on Feb. 112025.

Reg­is­ter for the Session

The pre­sen­ta­tion and dis­cus­sion will high­light how Fam­i­ly Spir­it, a Casey-fund­ed pro­gram of the Cen­ter for Indige­nous Health at Johns Hop­kins Uni­ver­si­ty, pro­vides evi­dence-based mater­nal home-vis­it­ing ser­vices to moth­ers with babies and tod­dlers up to age 3. The pro­gram serves moth­ers in 170 trib­al com­mu­ni­ties in 28 states. It includes part­ner­ships with pub­lic health, trib­al health and child wel­fare sys­tems and address­es both phys­i­cal and behav­ioral health.

The webi­nar is part of the Foundation’s Lead­ing With Evi­dence series, which pro­motes effec­tive and equi­table evi­dence-based approach­es in a vari­ety of settings. 

Why Is This Important?

  • Com­mu­ni­ties and sys­tems inter­est­ed in sup­port­ing mater­nal well-being through cul­tur­al­ly affirm­ing evi­dence-based prac­tice can learn from the Fam­i­ly Spir­it example.
  • Ser­vice providers can learn how Fam­i­ly Spir­it incor­po­rat­ed mul­ti­ple fed­er­al fund­ing streams to off­set the cost of imple­ment­ing this program.

Details

Time: 12 p.m. ET

Date: Feb. 112025

Pan­elists:

  • Cyn­thia Weaver, senior asso­ciate, Evi­dence-Based Prac­tice Group, Annie E. Casey Foundation;
  • Emi­ly Haroz asso­ciate pro­fes­sor, Cen­ter for Indige­nous Health, Johns Hop­kins Uni­ver­si­ty Bloomberg School of Pub­lic Health; and
  • Leonela Nel­son, research asso­ciate, Cen­ter for Indige­nous Health, Johns Hop­kins Uni­ver­si­ty Bloomberg School of Pub­lic Health.

Reg­is­ter for Sup­port­ing the Well-being of Indige­nous Moth­ers and Babies