Case Management
El Futuro’s case managers welcome individuals and families with a caring approach that informs and connects, providing warm handoffs to other community resources that can help to reduce stressors and therefore contribute to improved mental health outcomes. Conexiones provides critical wrap-around, trauma-informed and culturally-responsive care that our patients may find difficult to find elsewhere, and that is more necessary than ever due to the ongoing impacts of the COVID pandemic. Conexiones strives to bridge the gap between individual’s social needs and their self-sufficiency.
Through Conexiones, El Futuro provides:
- Warm-handoffs to and collaborations with community partners that provide complementary support services for Latino families.
- Care coordination with El Futuro mental health clinicians to ensure ongoing family progress toward mental health treatment plans.
Conexiones is our case management program that provides connections between established El Futuro clients and supportive community resources so they can better benefit from their mental health care. Our case managers work closely with El Futuro’s clinical staff to provide coordinated and comprehensive services. We take a culturally informed, personalized approach to provide the most caring and effective services. Through this approach, Conexiones strives to provide timely and responsive case management services that will reduce barriers commonly seen in our communities.
Our team works closely with community agencies and attends community meetings to stay informed of developments impacting our clients.
We provide referrals for:
- rent and utility assistance
- family and immigration lawyers
- medical debt assistance
- advocacy in schools (k-12)
- domestic violence
- and more.
Alvely Alcántara, LCSW
Rossy C. Garcia, MEd
Katy Sims, MD
Everardo Aviles, LCSW, LCAS (Eve)
As a medical anthropologist and social work researcher, Dr. Gulbas’ research embodies interdisciplinarity through the integration of applied theories of health and human development with qualitative and ethnographic methodologies. Her work seeks to understand how people—children, families, and providers—navigate complex sociocultural landscapes in the pursuit of mental health. Most of her work, to date, focuses attention on developing more robust interpretations of suicide risk. With funding from the National Institutes of Mental Health, this body of research has contributed to advancements in theoretical and empirical knowledge of the broader contexts within which youth suicide risk is situated.
R. Gabriela Barajas-Gonzalez is a developmental psychologist and an assistant professor of Population Health at NYU Grossman School of Medicine. Dr. Barajas-Gonzalez is the principal investigator of a study that examines the impact of immigration-related threat and stress on school communities. She earned a PhD in developmental psychology from Columbia University and hold a BA in human biology from Stanford University. Dr. Barajas-Gonzalez is the daughter of Mexican immigrants and a first gen college student.
Dr. Parra-Cardona is an Associate Professor in the Steve Hicks School of Social Work (SHSSW) at the University of Texas at Austin. At the SHSSW, he serves as Coordinator for Mexico and Latin American initiatives. He also serves as Area Director for Research at the UT Austin Latino Research Institute. Dr. Parra-Cardona’s program of research is focused on the cultural adaptation of evidence-based parenting interventions for low-income Latinx populations in the US and Latin America.
Bianka Reese, PhD, MSPH is a research scientist and program evaluator specializing in adolescent and young adult sexual and reproductive health. Her previous research in the experiences of Latinx LGBTQ+ youth stems from her work as the Research and Evaluation Manager at SHIFT NC (Sexual Initiatives For Teens), where she led largescale evaluations of multilevel, community-based sexual health promotion initiatives and research projects aimed at elevating the voices of diverse youth in North Carolina. Dr. Reese is currently the Senior Research Strategist at Creative Research Solutions, LLC, an award-winning national evaluation, research, and assessment firm.
Tania Connaughton-Espino, MPH is an independent researcher focused on adolescent and young adult sexual and reproductive health. Her interest in the experiences of Latinx LGBTQ+ youth stems from her previous work with SHIFT NC (Sexual Initiatives For Teens), where she led the training and evaluation department, conducted capacity-building workshops for youth serving professionals including on the topic of how to be more affirming of LGBTQ youth, and from her extensive experience working with the Latinx population in NC.
Maru Gonzalez, EdD is an Assistant Professor and Youth Development Specialist in the Department of Agricultural and Human Sciences at North Carolina State University. Her areas of inquiry include youth development with a focus on activism, social justice, and the experiences of LGBTQ+ young people across familial, school, and community contexts.
Nayeli Y. Chavez-Dueñas, PhD
Hector Y. Adames, PsyD