El Futuro: Moving toward a brighter future
After being in a car accident, 8 year old “Patricia” came for help with nightmares and fear of her mother dying. Patricia had problems concentrating at school and acted out at home. Through play therapy, she was able to work through her experiences and fears. I saw a powerful change in her play; she moved from a victim to survivor – into a position of control and safety. After a couple of months, her parents reported she was doing well at home and she was able to concentrate in school. She ended her last session by saying "I don't see dead people anymore. The bad dreams are gone!”
Our therapist, Birgitte Espitia, PhD, shared
this story at one of our recent staff meetings.
Dear friend of El Futuro,
At El Futuro we work to understand and help children like Patricia. In its second year, our "Creating Confianza" project has helped 200 children in Chatham County to succeed in school and we are building steam. Our effort to help at-risk children and adults, combat racism and ugly stereotyping in the classroom, and strengthen families is paying off. Now, we are expanding our work in the schools. Over the last several months we joined with three more schools to help children and their parents. We began a middle school boys peer group to support good decision making and allow them to share trauma experiences. At two other schools we are beginning to offer on-site counseling and consultation in Spanish to children who are turned around and confused.
Our work is to give those who are marginalized the courage to speak and emerge from the pain of mental illness. We partner with individuals like you to make this possible. El Futuro’s two clinics are in Carrboro and Siler City, but we also work on site in two primary care clinics, a growing number of schools, and in the community.
Please consider a year end tax deductible contribution to our work and join with us to help Patricia and others find a brighter future.
Warm regards,
Luke Smith, M.D.
Here is more information about the El Futuro clinical ethic:
El Futuro works closely to maintain a responsive reputation in the community. Clinics are located in Latino “barrios” (neighborhoods) and on bus routes. In Carrboro, we are co-located with the county’s Latino Center. Evening appointments are available on Monday, Wednesday and Thursday so that vulnerable wage-earners don’t miss work.
As veterans of the pre-reform public mental health system, our staff were all too familiar with traditional barriers to access to services. As a result, we have invested in simple best practice measures that open our doors to all clients:
- All staff, including volunteers, trainees and administrators, are bilingual and working toward fluency if not already fluent in Spanish and English.
- The answering machine messages are in Spanish.
- All signs and patient education materials are in Spanish or bilingual.
- Those who seek help are consulted as to the appropriateness of calling them back on the phone numbers they give, to take into account vulnerable job situations or possible domestic conflict or extended family residences impeding privacy.
- In consultation with staff and volunteers who are native Latin Americans, we have decorated and equipped our offices to make them comfortable and homelike for our clients.
- Client rights and responsibilities are explained verbally as well as provided in writing, to take into account the varying availability of education in our clients’ regions of origin.
- It is made clear to clients that immigration and insurance status do not affect provision of care at El Futuro.
- We include culturally specific questions on our checklist, including the use of community or folk resources in past help-seeking, whether clients have experienced hunger in their lives, spiritual practices that may guide their recovery, and what the clients’ immigration experiences were like.
- All staff are trained and supervised in issues such as using warmth and humor to develop trust with clients and work through the anxiety about authority that can impede Latino client-therapist relationships.
- Therapists openly broach possible areas of cultural difference, for example “Maybe it’s hard for you to deal with your children acting out in public, because it seems to really embarrass a lot of Latino parents,” or “I wonder if where you grew up a lot of people say they hear voices of people who’ve died, or is that unusual.”
- Psychiatrists tailor initial doses of medicine, taking into account whether the client is “naive” to psycho-pharmaceutical agents. Some clients seem to be “exquisitely sensitive” to SSRIs, and benefit from smaller initial doses than those commonly prescribed in traditional psychiatric settings.
- Staff are trained in helping clients feel comfortable saying what they want even though smooth social interactions traditionally lead some Latinos to say “yes” to things they really don’t want to do.
- We work with clients to understand what gender roles they feel are appropriate to their family, and whether there is consensus among all family members about this issue or it is a source of conflict.
As a result of our care, even clients who did not return say they felt good about El Futuro and experienced clinical improvement from their (brief) treatment. We feel these are positive indicators of client perceptions of El Futuro, and possible guideposts for new approaches to therapy.
Please don't hesitate to call us:
Carrboro Clinic Main number: 919-338-1939
Extension Person Position
500 Wayne Williamson Practice Manager and Finance Director
501 Connie Garcia Clinical Program Assistant: scheduling, front desk
502 Alejandra Therapist in Siler City Schools
503 Luke Smith Executive Director and Psychiatrist
505 Josh Hinson Therapist
506 Dulce Ramirez Outreach/Education
508 Sandy Ruiz Clinical supervisor and therapist
509 Gabriela Livas-Stein Therapist, Director of Research
510 Birgitte Espitia Clinical Program Director, Therapist
Durham Clinic Main number: 919-688-7101
Extension Person Position
600 Lexa Malave Clinical Program Assistant: scheduling, front desk
601 Karla Siu Therapist
603 Emily Guzman Therapist
604 Luke Smith Executive Director and Psychiatrist
606 Birgitte Espitia Clinical Program Director, Therapist
607 Karen Current Program Director and therapist
608 Dulce Ramirez Outreach/Education