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October 30

Innovations in immigrant mental health

Headshots of Rachel Plummer, Margaret (Maggie) Sullivan, and Jake Savage against green background

Event Type

1:00 pm 3:00 pm

Join us for a conversation with colleagues from the Cambridge Economic Opportunity Committee and the Somerville Public Library to learn about innovative ways in which community-based programs and services are addressing the mental health and wellbeing of immigrants. The Partnerships for Community Mental Health and Immigrant Well-being initiative is cohosted by the FXB Center for Health and Human Rights and the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health Office of Field Education and Practice. This project aims to examine the mental healthcare landscape in Massachusetts and learn from immigrant-led, culturally rooted, community-based approaches to mental health.

Additional details:

Main talk from 1:00pm-1:50pm EDT at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Kresge 200 (677 Huntington Ave, Boston, MA, 02115). The conversation will continue at the Jonathan M. Mann Conference Room (FXB Building, 7th Floor, 651 Huntington Ave, Boston, MA).

Moderator: Margaret (Maggie) Sullivan, FNP-BC, DrPH, FAAN

Margaret (Maggie) Sullivan is an Instructor and Director of the FXB Center for Health and Human Rights Program on Immigrants and Unhoused Communities, a Distinguished Fellow of the National Academies of Practice (NAP) in Nursing, and a Fellow of the American Academy of Nursing (FAAN). She is a nationally board-certified family nurse practitioner dedicated to serving immigrant communities, especially those with precarious documentation status or at risk of homelessness. Maggie co-leads the Partnership for Community Mental Health and Immigrant Well-being with her colleague, Jocelyn Chu, a project which aims to examine the mental healthcare landscape in Massachusetts and learn from immigrant-led, culturally rooted, community-based approaches to mental health. She co-advises the Harvard Students Human Rights Collaborative (HSHRC) and conducts forensic medical evaluations for asylum with Harvard Medical School’s Asylum Clinic. In collaboration with the Initiative on Health & Homelessness, Maggie co-developed and co-teaches HPM 523: Homelessness and Health: Lessons from Health Care, Public Health, and Research. Since 2009, Maggie has practiced at Boston Health Care for the Homeless (BHCHP), providing primary care to immigrant and limited English proficient (LEP) patients in shelter-based clinics. In March of 2019 she launched Oasis, an immigrant health clinic at BHCHP where immigrants experiencing homelessness are connected with interdisciplinary and multilingual health services. Maggie also works as a clinical consultant with the Massachusetts League of Community Health Center’s farmworker health program. Between 2010-2017, she collaborated with Partners In Health in Chiapas, Mexico and Guatemala.

Speakers:

Rachel Plummer, MPH

Rachel Plummer is the Associate Director at Cambridge Economic Opportunity Committee (CEOC), Cambridge’s anti-poverty nonprofit. Rachel has been working at CEOC for 4 years. She began as a graduate student intern at CEOC during her Master of Public Health program at the Harvard T. H. Chan School of Public Health. Before working at CEOC, she worked at Massachusetts General Hospital in clinical research related to addiction medicine. Rachel’s current position at CEOC touches all of CEOC’s program areas with a particular focus on food insecurity and mental health. She leads the agency’s community-based mental health program, where non-clinicians deliver a 5-session mental health intervention. Rachel is deeply committed to hearing and centering the voices of community members and incorporating those voices in programmatic and policy decision making.

Jake Savage, LICSW

Jake Savage, is the Library Social Worker at Somerville Public Library. A Somerville resident with a background in immigrant and refugee health, he is passionate about increasing equity in the community through advocacy, programming, and access to resources and information. He also loves to read, hike, and solve crossword puzzles!

This event is co-sponsored by the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health Field Education and Practice Office.

Speaker remarks are based on their own scholarship and experience. As such, they speak for themselves, not for Harvard University.

ⓘ Harvard Chan School hosts a diverse array of speakers, invited to share both scholarly research and personal perspectives. They do not speak for the School, and hosting them does not imply endorsement of their views, organizations, or employers.