Join us for a series of virtual conversations about HOPE, Healthy Outcomes from Positive Experiences.
Each 60-minute conversation will provide a brief overview of the research behind the HOPE framework, and then dive into HOPE in practice. Facilitated by experts in the field who are incorporating HOPE into their professional lives, attendees will leave these conversations with a better understanding not just of the HOPE framework, but of practical examples of what it looks like in action.
HOPE in Communities
December 6, 2021 at 3 p.m. ET.
Zoom link included in registration confirmation email.
Workshop Schedule
HOPE in Communities: Aimee Zeitz, Tammie Doebler, Allison Stephens, Amanda Winn
Monday, December 6 from 3:00-4:00 ET/Noon-1:00 PT
Register here.
HOPE in Healthcare: Gretchen Pianka, Baraka Floyd, Bob Sege, Dina Burstein
Tuesday, January 11 from 3:00-4:00 ET/Noon-1:00 PT
Register here.
Stay tuned for future conversations. Possible topics include:
- HOPE in Early Childhood
- HOPE in Education
- HOPE in Faith Communities
- HOPE in Social Services
- HOPE in Home Visiting
Workshop Faculty
Robert Sege, MD, PhD
Director, Center for Community-Engaged Medicine
Robert Sege, MD, PhD is a pediatrician at the Floating Hospital for Children at Tufts Medical Center and a Professor of Medicine at Tufts University School of Medicine, where he directs the Center for Community-Engaged Medicine. Dr. Sege is nationally known for his research on effective health systems approaches that directly address the social determinants of health. He is a Senior Fellow at the Center for the Study of Social Policy in Washington and serves on the boards of the Massachusetts Children’s Trust and Prevent Child Abuse America. He has served on the American Academy of Pediatrics’ Committee on Child Abuse and Neglect, and on its Committee on Injury, Violence, and Poisoning Prevention. He is a graduate of Yale College, and received his PhD in Biology from MIT and his MD from Harvard Medical School. Bob lives in the Boston area, where he and his wife Karen have raised three young adult children.
Dina Burstein, MD, MPH
Project Director, Center for Community-Engaged Medicine
Dina Burstein, MD, MPH, FAAP is the Healthy Outcomes for Positive Experiences (HOPE) Project Director at the Center for Community-Engaged Medicine. Dr. Burstein is an experienced physician, healthcare project designer, and leader with over twenty years of success in scientific research, grant writing, analysis, training, and clinical practice. Previously, Dr. Burstein was an Assistant Professor of Emergency Medicine at the Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University, directing injury prevention focused community outreach programming and community based research projects, as well as teaching and mentoring undergraduate, graduate, and medical students. Her aim is to enhance the well-being of individuals and the community by presenting and promoting programs while leveraging proficiency in research, care management, injury prevention and clinical effectiveness. She is a graduate of Tufts University and holds an MD and MPH from the University of Massachusetts Medical School.
Allison Stephens, PhD
Project Manager, Center for Community-Engaged Medicine
Allison Stephens started in August as a program manager for the HOPE team. Allison recently received her PhD in Biomedical Informatics from Rutgers University. Before joining the HOPE team, Allison worked at Nevada PEP (Parents Empowering Parents) as the Statewide Family Network Director working with families of children with mental health needs.
Amanda Winn, MSW
HOPE West Coast Project Manager, Center for Community-Engaged Medicine
Amanda Winn, macro-level MSW, received her degree from UC Berkeley with a joint focus on Health and Children and Families. She’s spent her professional career working at the intersection of parenting, gender, and poverty. Amanda directed a National Resource Center out of UC Berkeley’s School of Social Welfare providing training and technical assistance to providers around the country supporting families affected by substance use and/or HIV. She’s also worked extensively supporting LGBTQ+ families at the school district, medical, and community levels.
A New Jersey native and Bay Area girl at heart, Amanda currently lives in Portland, OR with her children and loves finding new waterfalls to explore.
Aimee Zeitz, MFT
Regional Director of Strategic Advancement and Project Directors, Partners in Prevention, YMCA San Diego
Aimee works with internal YMCA teams and external partners to support strengths-based, family-centered, trauma-informed, and culturally responsive services that meet the needs and preferences of communities across San Diego.
Tammie Doebler
Coalition Coordinator/Prevention Specialist, Lake of the Woods
Gretchen Pianka, MD, MPH, FAAP
Pediatrician, Resilience University, Central Maine Healthcare
Baraka Floyd, MD
Clinical Assistant Professor, Stanford University School of Medicine
Continuing Education Credits
AMA Credit Designation
This activity has been approved for AMA PRA Category 1 Credit(s)™
Nursing Credit Designation
This activity is eligible for ANCC credit, see final CNE activity announcement for specific details.
Physician Assistant Designation
This activity is eligible for AAPA credit, see final AAPA activity announcement for specific details.
Psychologist Credit Designation
This activity is eligible for APA credit, see final CEP activity announcement for specific details.
Social Worker Credit Designation
This activity is eligible for ACE credit, see final ASWB activity announcement for specific details.