Addressing Our Bias when Working with the LGBTQ+ Community Part I: Identifying Our Bias and its Impact on Our Work

The UT at Austin Steve Hicks School of Social and National Hispanic and Latino Mental Health Technology Transfer Center is hosting a 3-part webinar series Addressing our bias when working with the LGBTQ+ Community. This webinars series is a basic level educational event for school mental health providers, teachers, school personnel, and school administrators.

 

LGBTQ communities face health disparities linked to stigma, discrimination, and denial of their civil and human rights. LGBTQ individuals have higher rates of psychiatric disorders, substance use, violence, and suicide and may encounter lack of acceptance by their family members and the society which affects their mental health and personal safety. This webinar series will be served to explore how bias impact our worldview and the work with the LGBTQ population, to identify health disparities among LGTBQ population, and to explore interventions to create a safe space and minimize the impact of implicit bias.

 

Learning Objectives:

  • Understanding implicit bias concepts and implications.
  • Reflect on our social identities and worldview.
  • Recognize how bias impacts daily life when interacting with social identities.
  • Apply strategies to minimize the impact of biases.

 

Who should attend? This is a basic level workshop designed for mental health providers, school mental health providers, and school administrators.

 

presenterspicture

About the presenter:

Jesús Ortega, LMSW –Director, Office of Diversity, Equity and Inclusion - Dell Medical School at UT Austin- is originally from Venezuela. Jesús has worked for economic, social and environmental justice almost all his professional life. Mr. Ortega moved his organizing and advocacy efforts working with marginalized immigrants communities of color from NY to Texas over 15 years ago. Mr. Ortega, hold the position of Executive Director at Out Youth, an LGBTQ youth organization in Austin. Jesús later started working with the Austin Stress Clinic’s Batters Intervention Program, as a facilitator of psycho-educational interventions for violence prevention. Mr. Ortega as the Assistant Director at the ASC concentrated on studying the efficacy of BIPPs interventions and developed innovated curriculum that focused on deconstructing masculinity and its impact on violence against women. This work took Mr. Ortega to Recife Brazil, where he spent half a year working with and evaluating a violence prevention program for youth at the PAPAI Institute. Jesús, previous to his new position at DMS, hold the position of Deputy Director at The Alamo Area Resource Center, a not-for-profit organization working with people living with HIV/AIDS and medical services to the LGBT community in San Antonio. He also worked as adjunct faculty of UTSA College of Public Policy in the Department of social work where he teaches cultural competency and global social work. He holds a Master’s Degree in Social Work from UTSA, and a Master’s Degree in Urban Planning from the City University of New York. He is also a graduate of Columbia University School of Business on Non-profit Management.

 

 

Starts: Jun 11, 2021 12:00 pm
Ends: Jun 11, 2021 1:30 pm
Timezone:
US/Eastern
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Event Type
Webinar/Virtual Training
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