2015 ivc program for submission 11.11.2015 final · 1 20 we have outlined objectives to highlight...

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We have outlined objectives to highlight the goals of this conference. We hope they provide a helpful framework for engaging in today's workshops and talks. 1. Learn definitions for intimate partner violence, interpersonal violence, and structural violence. 2. Understand that many forms of violence are interconnected. 3. Learn how clinicians can address violence (intimate partner violence, child abuse, sexual assault, lifetime trauma) with patients. 4. Describe how racism, violence, and oppression can aect health and health outcomes. 5. Describe at least one way we as students, future providers, and/or as a society can prevent violence and trauma through advocacy, education, outreach and partnerships. The Chancellors Endowment Fund The Chancellor’s Endowment Fund (CHEF) is dedicated to supporting educational and community service activities and events. More information: http://clubs.ucsf.edu/chef-funding UCSF Deans Oces We would like to thank the following UCSF oces for their commitment to creating a safe learning community for students and their support of the 15th Annual Interpersonal Violence Conference: Graduate Division, Dean’s Oce School of Dentistry, Dean’s Oce School of Medicine, Dean’s Oce School of Nursing, Dean’s Oce School of Pharmacy, Dean’s Oce UCSF Sexual Violence Prevention & Response, Campus Advocacy, Resources, and Education (CARE) for Sexual Assault and Gender-based Violence The CARE Advocate provides free, confidential support to any UCSF aliate including students, staand faculty who have experienced interpersonal violence such as sexual assault, dating/intimate partner violence, sexual harassment or stalking. Services are available to people of all genders and the incident does not have to be recent nor does it have to have occurred on campus. More information: https://shpr.ucsf.edu/confidential-care-advocate Futures Without Violence The Futures Without Violence, formerly known as Family Violence Prevention Fund, works to prevent violence within the home, and in the community, to help those whose lives are devastated by violence because everyone has the right to live free of violence. More information: www.futureswithoutviolence.org OUR SPONSORS CONFERENCE OBJECTIVES

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We have outlined objectives to highlight the goals of this conference. We hope they provide a helpful framework for engaging in today's workshops and talks. 1.  Learn definitions for intimate partner violence, interpersonal violence, and

structural violence. 2.  Understand that many forms of violence are interconnected. 3.  Learn how clinicians can address violence (intimate partner violence, child abuse,

sexual assault, lifetime trauma) with patients. 4.  Describe how racism, violence, and oppression can affect health and health

outcomes. 5.  Describe at least one way we as students, future providers, and/or as a society

can prevent violence and trauma through advocacy, education, outreach and partnerships.

The Chancellors Endowment Fund The Chancellor’s Endowment Fund (CHEF) is dedicated to supporting educational and community service activities and events. More information: http://clubs.ucsf.edu/chef-funding UCSF Deans Offices We would like to thank the following UCSF offices for their commitment to creating a safe learning community for students and their support of the 15th Annual Interpersonal Violence Conference:

Graduate Division, Dean’s Office School of Dentistry, Dean’s Office School of Medicine, Dean’s Office School of Nursing, Dean’s Office School of Pharmacy, Dean’s Office

UCSF Sexual Violence Prevention & Response, Campus Advocacy, Resources, and Education (CARE) for Sexual Assault and Gender-based Violence The CARE Advocate provides free, confidential support to any UCSF affiliate including students, staff and faculty who have experienced interpersonal violence such as sexual assault, dating/intimate partner violence, sexual harassment or stalking. Services are available to people of all genders and the incident does not have to be recent nor does it have to have occurred on campus. More information: https://shpr.ucsf.edu/confidential-care-advocate Futures Without Violence The Futures Without Violence, formerly known as Family Violence Prevention Fund, works to prevent violence within the home, and in the community, to help those whose lives are devastated by violence because everyone has the right to live free of violence. More information: www.futureswithoutviolence.org

OUR SPONSORS

CONFERENCE OBJECTIVES

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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS  

Advisers Leigh Kimberg, MD

Elizabeth McLoughlin, ScD

Conference Coordinators Peace Esonwune

Ilana Garcia-Grossman Katherine Gladwin

Kara Harvill Jolene Kokroko Emma Lantos

Jera Lewis Olivia Park

Kadia Wormley

Volunteers School of Medicine

Steffani Campbell, Matthew Crimp, Kafi Hemphill, Sarah Koser, David Lee, Erin McCreary, Amanda Onyewuenyi, Samantha Sahi,

Marcus Theus, and Madeline Tiee

School of Nursing Regina Dagher, Kate Horton, and Mike Sweeney

School of Pharmacy

Jaime Vasquez

Special Thanks To Barbara Smith, Kathy Chew, Judy Flannery, Noel Baronia, Tina Novero, Alyssa Nip, and all the UCSF Community Members

who shared their survivor stories with us

NOTES  

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THANK YOU TO OUR SURVIVOR PANELISTS   SCHEDULE OF EVENTS  

8:00 – 8:30am Registration and Breakfast MS Lobby 8:30 – 9:50am Welcome and Keynote Address Cole Hall 10:00 – 10:50am Panel Cole Hall 11:00 – 11:50am Breakout Session I

Markita Mays HSW 300 Rhodessa Jones HSW 301 Orchid Pusey HSW 302 Chris Stewart HSW 303

11:50 – 12:30pm Lunch MS Lobby 12:30 – 1:00pm UCSF CARE Advocate Cole Hall

Mandatory Reporting

1:10 – 2:40pm Provider Training Pharmacy HSW 300 Physical Therapy HSW 301 Dentistry HSW 302 Nursing HSW 303 Medicine Cole Hall

2:40 – 3:00pm Coffee Break HSW Lobby 3:00 – 3:50pm Breakout Session II

Joan Zweben & Danette Barnett HSW 300 Ivan Corado HSW 301 Emberly Cross HSW 302 Julia Orellana HSW 303

4:00 – 5:00pm Survivor Panel Cole Hall 5:00 – 5:30pm Closing Remarks Cole Hall

We thank you for your courage and bravery in sharing difficult stories. Your experiences, reflections, and insights will impact and inform how we interact with and support the diverse communities we serve now and in the future.

Confidential CARE Advocate, Denise Caramagno Campus Advocacy, Resources, and Education (CARE) for Sexual Assault and

Gender-based Violence (415) 502-8802

[email protected] https://shpr.ucsf.edu/confidential-care-advocate

Student Health & Counseling http://studenthealth.ucsf.edu

(415) 476-1281

Medical Student Well-Being Program http://meded.ucsf.edu/wellbeing

(415) 476-0468

Faculty and Staff Assistance (415) 476-8279 [email protected]

https://hr.ucsf.edu/hr.php?org=c&AT=cm&S=Faculty+and+Staff+Assistance

It can be very challenging to be fully immersed in discussions on trauma and violence. If you need to step away at any point throughout the day, you may go to our meditation and relaxation space in S-178.

UCSF RESOURCES

MEDITATION AND RELAXATION SPACE

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WELCOME LETTER  

November 14, 2015 Dear UCSF students, colleagues, and friends, For the fifteenth consecutive year, the students of UCSF present their annual domestic violence prevention conference today. This year, they have broadened its scope to all interpersonal violence. The student organizers have worked tirelessly to bring you a day full of information and pathos. Given the statistics, chances are good that some people in attendance have felt these hurts some time in their lives. It is also probable that many of our patients hope that we can help them to stop the violence that they endure. We need to be both healer and healed. The Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics takes pride in supporting this work. We know that students from medicine, nursing, dentistry, pharmacy, and physical therapy attend the conference, as well as colleagues and friends from other schools in the area and in the community. This multi-disciplinary conference reinforces the benefits which follow when we share information and resources about interpersonal violence among the different health professions involved in patient care. We are confident that all our patients will benefit from your presence today and in the years to come. Have a good and fruitful conference. Sincerely, Robert A. Hiatt, MD, PhD Professor and Chair, Department of Epidemiology & Biostatistics Associate Director of Population Sciences UCSF Helen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center

JULIA ORELLANA Breakout Description: In this session we will discuss: 1) How violence in our communities has a profound effect not only on the immediate victim but also on their families and communities they live in, 2) How trauma and violence have become their own recognized epidemic, and 3) What we can do to help prevent the victims, their friends, and families from continuing the cycle of violence.

Bio: Personally speaking, my life has been filled with violence, abuse, loss, and uncertainty. Due to many of my life experiences, I decided to give back to the community and hopefully make a difference. For the past fifteen years, I have been serving my community by providing direct services and advocacy to high risk youth and their families . As a longtime resident of San Francisco, and at one point a troubled youth, I know firsthand what it is to be a part of a marginalized community. Even more importantly, I have come to understand the need for advocacy among the youth and their families in this city.

BREAKOUT SESSION II  WRAPAROUND PROJECT HSW-303

Breakout Sessions

SafeStart

Blia  Moua  is  the  Program  Manager  of  the  SafeStart  Collabora<ve,  a  program  of  the  San  Francisco  Child  Abuse  Preven<on  Center.    Blia  received  a  Master’s  in  Social  Work  degree.    She  has  been  working  with  families  in  various  capaci<es  for  over  10  years.    She  manages  the  SafeStart  collabora<ve;  provides  paren<ng  classes;  offer  parent  

educa<on  workshops;  facilitate  parent/child  skill  building  groups;  and  provides  therapy  for  domes<c  violence  survivors  and  for  families  with  young  children  exposed  to  violence.    

Talk  descrip1on:  Recent  research  shows  that  young  children  who  witness  violence  are  vulnerable  to  many  issues  including  developmental  delay,  aggression,  behavioral  disorders,  depression,  anxiety,  low  self-­‐esteem  and  self-­‐confidence,  inability  to  react  appropriately  to  stress,  and  later  tendency  towards  violence  as  adolescents.      •  Learn  about  types  of  violence  including  domes<c  violence  and  

community  violence.  •  Learn  about  research  regarding  exposure  to  violence  including  

symptoms  that  may  be  affec<ng  a  child.  •  Learn  about  what  makes  children  resilient  to  the  effects  of  

exposure  to  violence.  •  Learn  about  community  resources  that  are  available.  

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A NOTE FROM THE COORDINATORS  

November 14, 2015 Dear Colleagues and Friends, Violence is a health care issue that affects every aspect of a person’s physical, mental, and emotional health. In terms of scope and impact, violence is a public health crisis. Violence in our communities takes many forms, including intimate partner violence, sexual assault, child abuse, elder abuse, bullying, suicide, community violence, and structural violence. When taken as a whole, these various forms of violence impact our communities across genders, cultures, and socioeconomic classes. As health care providers, we must learn to recognize and address the emotional, physical, and social consequences of violence. This year’s theme, Healing Trauma: Addressing Systems of Violence, is intended to examine the interconnectedness of different forms of violence, how these connections affect patients and communities, and how we can transform our care to promote healing. We offer suggestions for how to start conversations about violence with our patients and community to stop the perpetration of violence. We seek to answer these questions: How can we communicate to our patients that we view experiences with violence and trauma as an important aspect of their health? How can we provide the most sensitive and effective care to patients who have previously or are currently experiencing some form of violence? How can we engage with our colleagues around this issue? What role can we play in the prevention of violence on a larger scale? Our mission for this conference is to build a greater awareness and knowledge base for current and future healthcare providers, as well as members of the community, on issues of violence. We aim to discover ways in which we can work together to end violence. Calling on experts in our community who have worked tirelessly to support this effort, we hope this conference sheds light on the many complexities and nuances of violence - and leaves you walking away with a sense of how and where you can intervene as a healthcare provider. Ultimately, we aspire to bring forth in you a spirit of change, a desire to know more, and a commitment to apply what you know to your practice. Respectfully, Coordinators of the 2015 Interpersonal Violence Conference Students for the Prevention of Violence

IVAN CORADO Breakout Description: Manalive is a program committed to helping men stop violence to themselves, their intimate partners, and their communities. Manalive’s first program was at Marin Abused Women’s Services in Marin County, CA in 1984. Today the work of Manalive continues in programs all over the country and internationally.

Bio: Ivan M. Corado-Vega is with Five Keys Charter Schools and Programs and works in the Reentry Pod at SF County Jail 2. As an In-Custody Case Manager, he works to prepare men reentering the community by providing services in the "Five Keys" (Community, Family, Recovery, Employment, Education). He is trained as a Manalive™ Batterer Intervention Program facilitator, Thinking for a Change facilitator (T4C), Cognitive Behavior Intervention for Substance Abuse facilitator (CBISA), youth developer, case manager, and 12 step principal group leader. Ivan's work also includes community organizing with a focus on violence intervention in the Mission District.

EMBERLY CROSS, JD, MSW Breakout Description: The criminal and civil legal systems are tools in the safety toolkit for survivors of domestic violence, sexual assault, and stalking.  They are not one-size-fits-all, and they are not the remedy for every survivor.  In this session, attendees will learn about what the civil and criminal legal systems can offer to survivors, as well as the pros and cons of different options.  You will also learn

how to make meaningful referrals to survivors who want to pursue legal remedies. Bio: Emberly Cross has been the Coordinating Attorney at the Cooperative Restraining Order Clinic in San Francisco since 1996, helping survivors of domestic violence, sexual assault, and stalking obtain restraining orders and child custody and support orders. Emberly served two terms on the California Judicial Council’s Family and Juvenile Law Advisory Committee and currently sits on the Administrative Office of the Court’s Violence Against Women Education Project Planning Committee. She obtained her law degree and her Master's of Social Work degree from the University of Michigan.

BREAKOUT SESSION II  MANALIVE HSW-301

INTERPERSONAL VIOLENCE AND THE LAW HSW-302

Healing Our Communities from Community Trauma: Increasing Resilience and Building Capacity to Prevent and Address Trauma-Related Violence HOWARD PINDERHUGHES, PhD Dr. Howard Pinderhughes is an Associate Professor in the Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences, University of California, San Francisco. He is the author of Race in the Hood: Conflict and Violence Among Urban Youth, which examines the dynamics of racial violence in New York City. Dr. Pinderhughes has conducted research on youth violence and violence prevention in the Bay Area

communities of the Mission District, BayView Hunters Point, Visitacion Valley and the Western Addition in SF, East and West Oakland and the Iron Triangle in Richmond since 1989. Dr. Pinderhughes worked with the Prevention Institute and Alameda County to produce the Alameda County Blueprint for Violence Prevention and with the City and County of San Francisco to co-author their Comprehensive Violence Prevention Plan in 2007. For the past 10 years, Dr. Pinderhughes has been a lead partner with the UNITY Initiative (Urban Networks to Increase Thriving Youth), a CDC funded initiative on violence prevention in the 45 largest cities in the United States. In that capacity he has worked with Boston, Cleveland, Chicago, Minneapolis, Seattle, Oakland, Baltimore and Los Angeles on their development and implementation of comprehensive violence prevention plans. Additionally, he served as the Director of Education and Outreach and Co-PI for the Center on Culture, Immigration and Youth Violence Prevention which is one of the CDC’s Academic Centers of Excellence in Youth Violence Prevention. Currently, Dr. Pinderhughes is working on a Kaiser funded study of the impact of violence on communities around the nation and has developed a groundbreaking framework to understand community trauma and inform strategies to reduce violence and increase community resiliency. Dr. Pinderhughes’ forthcoming book, Dealing With Danger: How Inner-City Youth Cope with the Violence that Surrounds Them, examines how urban youth in the Bay Area experience various types of violence and the effects of trauma from exposure to interpersonal and structural violence on both these youth and their communities.

6   15  

KEYNOTE ADDRESS  HEALING OUR COMMUNITIES FROM COMMUNITY TRAUMA

JOAN ZWEBEN, PhD Breakout Description: This session will focus on sexual assault in the military and how the VA offers a model for screening, assessment, treatment, and coordination of care. We will discuss clinical issues and interventions, including a case example.

Bio: Joan E. Zweben, Ph.D. is Executive Director, East Bay Community Recovery Project in Oakland and a

Clinical Professor of Psychiatry at UCSF. She has been a part time psychologist at the San Francisco VA Medical Center for over 40 years. One of her specialties is women’s treatment, and she has written extensively on that subject.

DANETTE BARNETT, ASW Bio: Ms. Danette Barnett is a veteran, who has over 20 years of experience working nationally as a Certified Sexual Assault Crisis Counselor and an advocate to end sexual assault. She is currently a mental health social worker for the San Francisco VA Health Care System, Drug and Alcohol Treatment Clinic and the Military Sexual Trauma Coordinator. Her experience spans from

counseling adolescents involved in the sex trade, working and volunteering as a sexual assault crisis

counselor, and serving as a child advocate and community educator bringing awareness inside schools, hospitals, and correctional institutions. Ms. Barnett co-founded a child and family safety center, taking an active role as the family advocate and lead forensic interviewer. She has provided expert testimony for survivors of sexual assault/abuse during legal proceedings and has instructed for the National Child Protection Training Center for Forensic Interviewers. Ms. Barnett broadened her field work by interning at the VA Trauma Recovery Program focusing on veterans that experienced Military Sexual Trauma and/or Combat related trauma.

BREAKOUT SESSION II  SEXUAL ASSAULT IN THE MILITARY HSW-300

7  14  

MARKITA MAYS, LCSW Markita Mays is currently on staff with the UCSF/SFGH Child Trauma Research Program. As staff, Markita provides clinical services to children and families in the community, clinical didactics and supervision to Pre/Post Doctoral and Post Master clinicians, and is a trainer for the dissemination of Child-Parent Psychotherapy. Markita earned her BA in Human Biology at Brown University, with

an emphasis on Africana Studies and her Master’s degree in Social Work, focusing on Children, Youth, and Families from California State University, East Bay. She has special interests in children of incarcerated parents and in cultural issues involving family/community empowerment. As an African American, Markita is committed to understanding the intersection and intergenerational patterns of race and trauma for African American families and communities.

ORCHID PUSEY Orchid Pusey is the Associate Director of Asian Women’s Shelter (AWS) and has been on staff at AWS for fourteen years. From 2002 – 2010, she led a national training and technical assistance program in the domestic violence field focusing on language access, organizational development and sustainability, aligning anti-oppression values with infrastructure and practice,

addressing human trafficking, building programs for LGBTQ survivors and communities, and community engagement to end violence related to sex, gender, or sexuality. Orchid also led the development of Asian Women’s Shelter’s Anti-Trafficking Program, Transforming Silence Into Action national network, and Multi-Lingual Digital Storytelling Project. Orchid believes in making anti-violence work accessible, empowering, compassionate, cross-issue, and strategic. She grew up living back and forth between rural Pennsylvania and Beijing, P.R. China. She speaks Mandarin and English fluently, enjoys several other languages to varying degrees of proficiency, and holds a Bachelor’s degree in Social Anthropology and a Master’s degree in Linguistics.

PANEL  PROVIDER TRAINING   HAI-AU LUU, PHARMD Hai-Au graduated from UCSF School of Pharmacy in 2011 and joined SF General Hospital as a psychiatric pharmacist in 2012. Her professional interests include management of metabolic side effects of atypical antipsychotic medications, injectable antipsychotics in acute agitation, and stigma/treatment of mental illness in the Asian- American population. Originally from southern

California, she is excited to be at SFGH every day because every day is different and feels fortunate to get to work with so many amazing and dedicated providers, as well as such the diverse patient population. Her hobbies include reading and singing.

ELIZABETH McLOUGHLIN, ScD Elizabeth McLoughlin, ScD has worked in injury prevention since 1973, beginning at the Shriners Burns Institute in Boston. In 1984, she earned a doctorate from Johns Hopkins University with a concentration in injury prevention. Her major concentrations have been in the prevention of youth violence and domestic violence, burns prevention, motorcycle helmet laws, injury data systems, and

survivor advocacy. Regarding violence prevention, she coordinated the Academic Fellowship program of the California Wellness Foundation’s Violence Prevention Initiative (1993-2003), assisted the health initiatives of the Family Violence Prevention Fund (1990-2000), served on two National Academy of Science’s Committees (the Assessment of Family Violence Interventions, 1994-1996, and the Future of Injury and Violence Prevention, 1997-1999), and as chair of the CDC’s Subcommittee on Family and Intimate Violence from 1994-1997.

PHARMACY HSW-300

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PANEL  JILL ZAWISZA Jill Zawisza has been working in the violence against women movement since 1996. She started her work as a volunteer with Ventura County’s only SART (Sexual Assault Response Team). Since then, she has directed numerous domestic violence and sexual assault programs, including a Batterer’s Intervention Program, a domestic violence shelter and an array of supportive counseling and therapy programs for survivors. Jill is currently the Executive

Director at W.O.M.A.N., Inc. and is proud to work alongside a diverse team of leaders. Jill and the team at W.O.M.A.N., Inc. seek to co-create collaborative and empowering spaces for all survivors of domestic violence and their loved ones. When not at work, Jill can be found wine tasting with her partner Dan, or watching Bill Murray movies with her dogs Lou and Chuck.

PROVIDER TRAINING   AMBER FITZSIMMONS, PT, MS, DPTSc Amber Fitzsimmons is an assistant professor in the department of physical therapy and rehabilitation sciences and department of anatomy. Her research interests include workplace learning initiatives and interprofessional education in the clinical setting. As course director of Psychosocial Aspects in Physical Therapy, Amber feels passionately about the importance of being a primary resource for

patients and clients who are victims of abuse.

ANNA LOEB, MD, MPH

Anna Loeb is a third year resident in the Department of Family & Community Medicine at UCSF.  As a medical student at UCSF, she was an organizer of the Domestic Violence Awareness Conference in previous years, and is excited to be returning.  She also completed an MPH in Maternal and Child Health at UC Berkeley where her research focused on intimate partner violence among adolescents.  Prior to medical school, she worked at the Legal Aid

Society of San Mateo County as the Project Coordinator of the Family Advocacy Program, where she often worked with survivors of domestic violence.

TAYLOR DEVENS, PHARMD, AAHIVP, BCPS, CGP Taylor Devens graduated from University of Connecticut School of Pharmacy in 2009 and currently works as a geriatric clinical pharmacist at Laguna Honda Hospital since 2013.  He currently volunteers as a pharmacy preceptor at UCSF for ambulatory care and also volunteers at Magnet in Castro as an HIV/STI test counselor working with gay, bisexual, MSM, and transgender male

identifying populations. His primary interests include infectious disease, HIV in aging populations, and PREP education. 

PHYSICAL THERAPY HSW-301

PHARMACY HSW-300

9  12  

RHODESSA JONES Breakout Description: Rhodessa will discuss her methodology in utilizing the performing arts to address issues of trauma in the rehabilitation process for female inmates, and working with a variety of disenfranchised populations. Bio: Rhodessa Jones is Co-Artistic Director of the acclaimed San Francisco performance company

Cultural Odyssey. She is an actress, teacher, director, and writer. Ms. Jones is also the Director of the award winning Medea Project: Theater for Incarcerated Women and HIV Circle, which is a performance workshop designed to achieve personal and social transformation with incarcerated women and women living with HIV. Rhodessa just received the Theatre Practitioner Award presented by Theater Communications Group during July 2015. The award recognizes “a living individual whose work in the American theatre has evidenced exemplary achievement over time and who has contributed significantly to the development of the larger field.”

MARKITA MAYS, LCSW Breakout Description: Courageous Conversations: Exploring Race through Strategic Dialogue. Introducing a strategy to engage, sustain, and deepen interracial dialogue about race in order to deinstitutionalize racism and understand racial disparities. The strategy lifts the unconscious veil of color blindness and silence and requires professionals to develop their color consciousness in a way that is humane and productive. Participants

will reflect on the utility of the strategy for their professional settings and the necessary infrastructures needed to embed such a strategy. Bio: Please see the panel section for Markita’s bio.

BREAKOUT SESSION I  

EXPLORING RACE THROUGH STRATEGIC DIALOGUE HSW-300

MEDEA PROJECT HSW-301

PROVIDER TRAINING   LEIGH KIMBERG, MD Dr. Leigh Kimberg is a Clinical Professor of Medicine at UCSF and Program Director of the Program in Medical Education for the Urban Underserved (PRIME-US) in the UCSF School of Medicine. She is the Intimate Partner Violence and Family Violence Prevention Coordinator for the San Francisco Department of Public Health (SFDPH) and

serves on the San Francisco Family Violence Council. Dr. Kimberg founded LEAP (Look to End Abuse Permanently) to develop intimate partner violence prevention, screening, and treatment programs in healthcare settings, most especially in safety net clinics in San Francisco. LEAP’s website (www.leapsf.org) is used by clinics locally and nationally. Recently, Dr. Kimberg received a federal to fund ARISE (Aspire to Realize Improved Safety and Empowerment.) ARISE will transform our San Francisco Health Network primary care system through innovative community partnerships to ensure that we deliver the promise of life-saving assistance to our patients and families who are affected by interpersonal violence (IPV). Dr. Kimberg attended Harvard Medical School and did her primary care/internal medicine residency at San Francisco General Hospital, UCSF. She has practiced primary care for over 20 years, caring for uninsured and underinsured patients who suffer from high burdens of trauma, mental illness, and substance use disorders. She is profoundly grateful for the privilege of practicing compassion and healing through healthcare and hopes you will care for yourself while caring for others.

MEDICINE Cole Hall

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ORCHID PUSEY

Breakout Description: How can there be a power difference in same-gender relationships? Can women use violence not just in retaliation and self defense, but as primary aggression and dominance? What does ending homophobia have to do with preventing LGBTQ intimate partner violence? Abuse and violence happen in LGBTQ relationships

and communities with as much frequency and severity as in straight ones. But often, abuse is minimized, discounted, or silenced due to myths and assumptions in social networks as well as systems responses. In this breakout session we will examine some of these myths and assumptions, as well some unique dynamics within LGBTQ relationship violence. Our goal will be to enhance our critical understanding of intimate partner violence within social contexts of marginalization, and build more practical skills to recognize and respond to it. Bio: Please see the panel section for Orchid’s bio.

CHRISTOPHER C. STEWART, MD, MA, FAAP Breakout Description: Breakout session topics include: 1) Very brief review of child abuse recognition and reporting issues for health care professionals, 2) Understanding the relationship of DV/IPV to child abuse, 3) Consideration of the long-term health consequences of child abuse and other adverse events, and some things we can and should be doing about them.

Bio: Christopher Stewart is a Professor of Pediatrics at UCSF, and board certified in child abuse pediatrics. Dr. Stewart received his MD degree from Harvard University and completed his residency training in pediatrics at UCSF. Dr. Stewart does child abuse consultations for San Francisco County hospitals, as well as consultation and testifying for San Francisco Child Protective Services and the District Attorney’s office. Dr. Stewart runs a child abuse rotation for medical students, as well as residents. He has given numerous lectures and has administered training programs in child physical and sexual abuse in international settings, including training on forensic sexual abuse evaluations in the Eastern Democratic Republic of Congo.

BREAKOUT SESSION I  IPV IN LGBTQ RELATIONSHIPS HSW-302

CHILD ABUSE AND DV: A SPECTRUM OF ADVERSE EVENTS HSW-303

PROVIDER TRAINING   NANCY KWON HSIEH, DDS, MS Nancy Kwon Hsieh, DDS, MS was born and raised in Los Angeles. She fell in love with the Bay Area while attending UC Berkeley where she majored in psychology. She graduated with honors from the University of the Pacific School of Dentistry here in San Francisco in 2002. Dr. Hsieh completed her pediatric training at UCSF where she was Chief Resident. During her residency, she continued her

education and received a Master in Orofacial Science. Dr. Hsieh has won national and local awards for her research which involved educating dentists on recognizing the signs and symptoms of DV. She has also published her research in the Journal of the American Dental Association. Her passion is treating children and making it a fun and memorable experience. She also enjoys spending time with her husband and two daughters. She is a Diplomat in the American Board of Pediatric Dentistry and is an active member of the American Dental Association, American Academy of Pediatric Dentists, California Society of Pediatric Dentists, and SF Dental Society. She currently is an adjunct professor at the University of the Pacific.

LISA MIHALY, RN, MSN, FNP Lisa Mihaly is a family nurse practitioner and Assistant Clinical Professor in the UCSF School of Nursing. She currently works at the Women’s Community Clinic, where she is helping the Clinic build a new primary care practice – as well as providing reproductive health care to women of all ages. Her clinical practice has focused on high-risk adolescents and young adults. Her areas of

interest include risk reduction in high-risk adolescents and health education of young adults newly responsible for managing their own health needs. Prior to becoming a nurse practitioner, Mihaly worked for 15 years in the public policy arena on behalf of families at local, state, and federal levels—including work with the Children's Defense Fund and the Family Violence Prevention Fund. Her interest in family and IPV continues to include the policy-level issues and the needs of specific clients in the health care setting. She has conducted trainings on IPV for health care providers, child welfare staff, policy makers, and DV shelter staff. She received an undergraduate degree in European History from Harvard College and RN and MSN degrees from UCSF.

DENTISTRY HSW-302

NURSING HSW-303