Networking Happy Hour and Welcome

May 4, 2021 4:00pm ‐ May 4, 2021 5:30pm

Identification: ATuHH


Opening General Session and Channeling the Movement - Building the Agricultural Worker Health System for the Future

May 5, 2021 10:00am ‐ May 5, 2021 11:30am

Identification: AGS1

Welcome, Bureau of Primary Health Care Update and NACHC Policy Update. Keynote presentation description: The past year has shown the necessity to pivot when faced with emergencies, the urgency to speak up on behalf of agricultural workers, and the position health centers serve as national leaders of health care for marginalized populations. On any given day, a health center leader is faced with areas around community organizing, cultivating partnerships, workforce development, community and patient outreach, fiscal acuity, and leadership. This year they also faced a pandemic, rising racist attacks on their communities, fear of safety in their own buildings and demand for services only the frontline workforce like the agricultural workers we serve could provide. Our movement has seen leaders launch agricultural worker health programs and fight for civil rights for decades -- and as the next generation of leaders are facing similar challenges as their predecessors, they are also seeing the opportunities to strengthen these programs for the future. Through a moderated discussion with UnidosUS’ Vice President of Health, Rita Carreon, a cross-generational set of leaders will discuss their work, their perspectives, their cautions, and most importantly, their hope for the future of the Health Center Movement.

Learning Objectives:
  • Understand the value and impact of partnerships and coalitions in communities served by health centers.
  • Learn how health center leaders have impacted policies affecting health centers.
  • Understand the traits and skill sets of effective health center leaders.

Concurrent Sessions

May 5, 2021 12:00pm ‐ May 5, 2021 1:30pm

Identification: cc1


Post-Pandemic Trauma-Informed Self-Care for Health Center Staff

May 5, 2021 12:00pm ‐ May 5, 2021 1:30pm

Identification: AWA1

The COVID-19 Pandemic has been a traumatic event for people around the world and in communities around the United States. Among health center staff, furloughs, task shifting and remote work, and increased exposure risk are just some of the challenges presented over the last year. In their work to bridge services and provide access to necessary care, health center staff have navigated the trauma of vulnerable patients, sometimes taking it on themselves.

The tendency for burnout and compassion fatigue is already high for healthcare workers, and the pandemic has only increased demands on staff. A trauma-informed self-care framework provides health center leadership with the capacity to recognize and address signs of burnout, compassion fatigue, and vicarious trauma, but also to help prevent some of the consequences to health center operations.

In this 90-minute session, participants will be introduced to a trauma-informed, healing-centered approach to organizational self-care. The presenters will address the ways in which trauma of the pandemic may affect health center staff and patients. Participants will learn how they can use a trauma-informed framework to establish and improve their organizational self-care policies and practices to support health center staff as they adjust to the post-pandemic context.

Learning Objectives:
  • Define and recognize signs of burnout, compassion fatigue, and vicarious trauma.
  • Understand the principles of trauma-informed care.
  • Conceptualize the integration of trauma-informed care into the health center’s organizational self-care culture

Strengthening your Health Center’s Collaboration with Migrant and Seasonal Head Start

May 5, 2021 12:00pm ‐ May 5, 2021 1:30pm

Identification: AWB1

Migrant Head Start sites and Migrant Health Centers are dedicated to improving the health and well-being of farmworker families. Many Health Centers partner with their local Migrant Head Start site but the strength of that collaboration varies widely. Farmworker Justice and the National Migrant and Seasonal Head Start Collaboration Office (MSHSCO) have been working with MSHS grantees and Health Centers to strengthen their collaborations to serve not just MSHS children but also their families. During this session, we will discuss different levels of partnership so participants can assess their collaboration with the Health Centers. We will also share strategies to strengthen the partnership, highlighting the partnership between Greene County Health Care and Migrant Head Start. Participants will share their own experiences working with Health Centers.

Learning Objectives:
  • Assess their partnership with the Migrant Health Center.
  • Understand the difference between MOUs and contracts.
  • Identify strategies to strengthen their partnership between their MHS site and Migrant Health Center.

2020 Migrant Health Awards Presentation

May 5, 2021 1:30pm ‐ May 5, 2021 2:00pm

Identification: AWARD1

2020 Outstanding Migrant Health Center Award and 2020 Lifetime Achievement in Migrant Health Award


Concurrent Sessions

May 5, 2021 2:30pm ‐ May 5, 2021 4:00pm

Identification: cc2


Invitations and Advocacy Building: How Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Will Push Our Movement Forward

May 5, 2021 2:30pm ‐ May 5, 2021 4:00pm

Identification: AWA2

Join NACHC’s National Grassroots Advocacy team as we discuss advocacy best practices, grassroots mobilization, and farmworker health. During this session, speakers will discuss how centering Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) will strengthen the storytelling aspect of our collective advocacy. Significant focus will be given to effective coalition-building and the importance of invitations in movement building. Promotoras will also co-present on how we can use lessons from the field to build a stronger base of defensores to promote the Community Health Center Mission.

Learning Objectives:
  • Understand the importance of coalition and community building to strengthen advocacy efforts.
  • Learn how to expand your advocate base through invitation.
  • Develop vital storytelling skills that showcase the diversity of the Community Health Center Movement.

The Importance of Value-Based Contracts in Community Health Centers

May 5, 2021 2:30pm ‐ May 5, 2021 4:00pm

Identification: AWB2

We will discuss the importance of value-based contracting, the financial impacts it has on Health Centers and, most important, how that level of financial stability has helped during the pandemic not only from a cash flow perspective, but also allows systems to maintain a workforce that can be redirected to deal with the needs of the community.

Learning Objectives:
  • How to maintain a value based system viable under a pandemic such as Covid-19 or other emergency situation impacting entire communities.
  • How to use contracted resource effectively during a pandemic alleviating financial strain in the CHC world.
  • How to maintain a viable workforce and activate them as front line respondents to a pandemic.

2020 Migrant Health Awards Presentation

May 5, 2021 4:00pm ‐ May 5, 2021 4:30pm

Identification: AWARD2

2020 Outstanding Migrant Health Center Board Member and 2020 Outstanding Migrant Health Public Service Award