On This Episode
On the next episode of Connecting the Dots we will be chatting with Alison Krompf, former Deputy Commissioner for the Vermont Department of Mental Health, and Director of Vermont Strategy for the Four Pines Foundation. She’ll share her research on the role of strengths in improving youth mental health outcomes. We hope you can join us live, today at 3pm EST, or catch up with us later on the TCOM YouTube channel.
Click the button below to join the stream!
About Our Guest
Alison is the Director of Vermont Strategy for the Four Pines Fund, a philanthropic foundation focused on improving suicide care in Vermont and across the nation. Before joining Four Pines, Alison served as Deputy Commissioner for the Vermont Department of Mental Health, leading efforts to implement TCOM within the community mental health agencies in the state. She is the 2016 recipient of the TCOM Champion Award and is currently finishing her PhD in Leadership and Policy studies at the University of Vermont.
About Connecting The Dots
Mr. Mark Lardner, LCSW-C, the Senior Policy Analyst at the Center for Innovation in Population Health at the University of Kentucky, is interested in hearing stories from people currently working to connect the dots in our helping systems; using their data to seamlessly move from the delivery of person-centered care based on individual aspirations to transformational system level outcomes.
This live video podcast will be an in-depth, and broadly accessible, exploration of innovative approaches for translating assessment data into meaningful metrics across the helping professions.
Each month, a different guest will share their insights on how to use data to better understand the transformational process through the use of aggregated data. These interactive episodes will air on monthly and be archived with helpful resources on our IPH Center live website. We hope you will join us on this journey to uncover how applied person-centered data is moving us closer to transformational systems that work for all people.