Community Restorative Healing Project, Los Angeles, California, 2017-2018 (ICPSR 37622)
Version Date: Oct 29, 2020 View help for published
Principal Investigator(s): View help for Principal Investigator(s)
Carly Dierkhising, California State University, Los Angeles
https://doi.org/10.3886/ICPSR37622.v1
Version V1
Summary View help for Summary
The vision of the Community Restorative (CORE) Health Project was to increase awareness and availability of trauma-informed care and indigenous healing practices in the target communities for clients and families being served by the City of Los Angeles Mayor's Office of Gang Reduction and Youth Development (GRYD). Two agencies were contracted to provide either trauma-focused mental health treatment or training on indigenous healing practices to clients, families, and the community. A total of 115 individual or group therapy sessions were provided, 23 community based workshops on trauma-informed care or indigenous healing practices were offered, and 15 professional development events were attended by over 354 GRYD intervention workers or CORE staff.
Background information was collected during the initial stages of the GRYD program, and a youth's eligibility for GRYD services was determined. The Posttraumatic Screening Inventory was used to assess the presence of posttraumatic stress, exposure to a traumatic event, and whether participants should be referred for treatment. Youths were then exposed to the GRYD's Summer Night Lights program, which raised trauma awareness, taught coping strategies, and increased access to services.
Then the National Compadres Network was chosen to administer three training sessions on indigenous healing practices: La Cultura Cura, El Joven Noble, and Circle Keepers. Pre-test surveys collected demographics such as age, gender, ethnicity, and religiosity, as well as their expectations heading into training. Post-test surveys assessed how much information participants received, the usefulness of information, if training rationale made sense, and whether or not participants planned to use what they had learned. After training sessions were completed, researchers conducted 10 follow up interviews with services providers and leadership from CORE.
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Access to these data is restricted. Users interested in obtaining these data must complete a Restricted Data Use Agreement, specify the reasons for the request, and obtain IRB approval or notice of exemption for their research.
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The qualitative data is not included in this release.
Sample View help for Sample
Convenience sampling
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Universe View help for Universe
Youth involved in gang intervention programming and gang intervention service providers or stakeholders in Los Angeles County.
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The Main File dataset contains participants' demographics including age, race, and gender. Employment and living situation was also collected. Results from the posttraumatic screening inventory were presented, along with whether or not clients should be referred for treatment. Data was also collected on participation in intervention.
The La Cultura Cura dataset includes participants' evaluation of La Cultura Cura trainings. Clients were asked how useful the program was, if it made sense, and their motivation to use strategies from training. Gender, age group, and ethnic identity were also asked.
The El Joven Noble dataset contains participants' evaluation of the El Joven Noble trainings. This includes program utility, changes in mindset, and likelihood of implementing program strategies.
The Circle Keepers dataset contains participants' evaluation of the Circle Keepers trainings. Clients were asked how useful trainings were, their likelihood of applying changes, and if they would carry out these changes in the near future.
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