Archived Stories
In Our Shoes
El Futuro is committed to serving the Latino community of North Carolina. Every day we hear our clients' stories, struggles, and successes. We share our clients' stories to honor their journeys, inspire others to seek care, and highlight the strength and resilience of...
North Carolina Medical Journal spotlight on El Futuro
The North Carolina Medical Journal (NCMJ) recently wrote a spotlight on El Futuro's work with Latino communities in North Carolina and the growth our clients experience. Read more about it at this link.
Our Siler City office is moving!
Our office in Siler City is relocating to 401-B N. Ivey Avenue, Siler City NC 27344. This move will offer a more welcoming space to our clients and we're so excited to be able to open it to the community on March 4. Read more in the document below, and as always, you...
El Futuro blooms with a new logo!
For almost 15 years, El Futuro has been providing culturally-responsive, bilingual mental health care to North Carolina's Latino community. We believe that every familia deserves the right to grow and bloom, and we have recently been focusing on our growth, as well....
El Futuro Clinic opens a new location for a greater reach of the Latino community
After 14 years dedicating itself to providing mental health services to the Latino community in North Carolina, El Futuro has opened a new, larger clinic in Durham’s Lakewood community. Read more in this story by Qué Pasa Raleigh’s Margarita Hervás.
Impacts of Family Separation, Yet Resilience and Hope for the Future
During the most recent policy of immigrant family separation, more than 2,500 migrant children have been separated from their parents as they entered the United States — parents being referred to prosecution and children being turned over to the U.S. Department of...
Living in Lakewood: thank you Ellen Cassilly Architect!
We’ve been in the Lakewood Reuse Arts District for more than two months and couldn’t be loving it more. We can welcome so many more people into this bright new space and are so thankful to Ellen Cassilly Architect.
Kids are being traumatized as adults fight over immigration, doctors say
Toxic stress from the immigrant process — even when family separation doesn’t take place — can have a large impact on a child’s development. El Futuro is and always has been working to help familias affected by this toxic stress.
The Scrap Exchange’s Vision Takes Shape
It’s been five years since The Scrap Exchange took its first steps to creating the Reuse Arts District in the Lakewood Shopping Center that El Futuro now calls home. Now the RAD is taking shape to be a center for this community to experience art, mental health care,...
Reflecting on Mental Health Awareness Month
May was Mental Health Awareness Month — a time to remember that nearly one in five people suffer from a mental illness, and that there is no shame in seeking mental health treatment. At El Futuro, we are constantly trying to dispel the stigma of mental illness and...
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