NW Elders ECHO | February 13, 2024
Date of Presentation: February 13, 2024
Type: Past Presentation
Audience: Clinical Community
Program: Elders, Knowledge Holders and Culture Keepers
Keywords: #AI/AN #aian #elders #growing #growing plant love #growing plants #indigenous knowledge #indigenous ways #plant love #plant relationshiops #plant resilience #plant traditions #plants #relationships #resilience #traditional indigenous knowledge #traditions
The Northwest Elders and Knowledge Keepers ECHO session took place on February 13th, 2024. In this presentation, Maleah Nore (Tlingit Nation) discusses Growing Plant Love: Tradition, Relationships, and Resilience with the Plants Around Us.
The faculty panel and staff members for this session of the Northwest Elders, Knowledge Holders, and Culture Keepers ECHO includes:
- Jesse Beers – Cultural Stewardship Manager for CTCLUSI
- Katie Hunsberger – Behavioral Health Aide Program Manager for NPAIHB
- Dolores Jimerson – Behavioral Health Education Director for NPAIHB
- Maleah Nore – NW Elders ECHO Faculty
- Jessica Rienstra – ECHO Case Manager for NPAIHB
- Marilyn Scott – Tribal Chair at Upper Skagit Tribe
- David Stephens – ECHO Clinic Director for NPAIHB
- Birdie Wermy – Behavioral Health Program Manager for NPAIHB
- Alison Whitemore – LCSW & RPT (Round Valley Indian Tribes)
Recording:
Presented by:
Maleah Nore
Maleah Nore is a member of the Tlingit Nation from Wrangell, Alaska. She is currently pursuing her Masters Degree in Public Health at the University of Washington, and is a faculty panel member for NPAIHB’s behavioral health themed ECHOs. Previously, Maleah worked at NPAIHB as the Tribal Health – Reaching out InVolves Everyone (THRIVE) Suicide Prevention Project Coordinator at NPAIHB, where she provided technical assistance, training, and data dissemination efforts for the tribes of the Pacific Northwest, as well as and coordinated the annual THRIVE Suicide Prevention Conference for Youth. Maleah has a B.A. in Psychology and a minor in Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies from Dartmouth College. She has been involved in grassroots and non-profit violence prevention for over five years. Maleah’s work focuses on bolstering resilience amongst tribal communities and youth and creating systems that effectively support people during times of distress.
Resources Provided:
Date added: February 13, 2024