OUS to have workshop: To focus on impact of drug abuse on children, families
Published 8:44 am Wednesday, May 22, 2019
Ohio University Southern will have a workshop, “Opioid Epidemic Impact on Children in Appalachia,” for those who work with the children and families affected by the region’s continuing drug abuse crisis.
Sarah Diamond Burroway, director of Southern’s Workforce Success initiative said the session will provide attendees with information gleaned from research on rural Appalachia.
“The region’s opioid struggles have created new issues for children who lose parents to long-term treatment, overdose death, or incarceration and we hope the session brings new information to our community workforce who deal directly with children and families,” she said.
The May 29 workshop’s featured speaker is Wendy Welch, author of “Fall or Fly: The Strangely Hopeful Story of Foster Care and Adoption in Appalachia.”
She will share insights the foster care system, and the strengths and limitations of policy that guides it. Her book, published by Ohio University Press, also discusses advocacy related to foster care and supports for children impacted by opioids
The workshop will also feature a presentation by founders of a local program for children affected by the opioid crisis.
Kristi Whitaker, special education assistant, and Jalina Wheeler, counselor, co-founded “Kids Rising Up Through Support and Healing,” or KRUSH at Russell-McDowell Elementary School in Flatwoods, Kentucky. The program is designed to support children whose parents are incarcerated or impacted by substance use disorder.
Nicole Pennington, dean of OUS and interim executive dean of Regional Higher Education, said the workshop is funded by a Rural Business Development grant from the USDA and provides needed resources to provide training for people who work in the helping industries.
“Southern understands training resources for employers in our community are often limited and workshops such as this provide an excellent opportunity to bring relevant information to our Tri-State workforce,” Pennington said.
The workshop is for nurses, teachers, social workers, counselors, first responders, children’s services workers, and people who work in the foster care system.
In addition to those working in the field, area college and university students pursuing careers in the targeted disciplines are invited to attend.
The workshop will be at OUS’s Ironton campus, located at 1804 Liberty Avenue. Sign-in begins at 9:30 a.m. with the workshop beginning at 10 a.m. in the Bowman Auditorium of the Collins Center. Advance registration is required by calling 740-533-4593, or, via email to workforcesuccess@ohio.edu.
Continuing education credits are pending for nursing, social work, counselors, and teachers. Ohio University School of Nursing is an approved provider of continuing nursing education by the Ohio Nurses Association an accredited approver of continuing nursing education by the American Nurses Credentialing Center’s Commission on Accreditation.
For more information about continuing education, contact Burroway, 740-533-4593.