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Public Health Pronto: Module 3.4

Public Health Pronto: Module 3.4

Communication Skills

Module 3.4: 5-Minute Summary

Here we summarize the knowledge you've gained over the previous modules with a 5-minute conversation with John Richards, Co-Director of NCEMCH and Suzanne Bronheim, Associate Professor and Senior Policy Analyst within the Georgetown University Center for Child and Human Development. In this conversation, Dr. Bronheim answers questions that you have submitted throughout the module.

Click below to: Learn more about our speaker, Comment on the conversation, and Interact with other MCH professionals who are also taking Public Health Pronto.

Survey. Please take a moment to fill out this 5-Question Survey about the program and your learning experience.

LEARN

Suzanne BronheimAbout Our Speaker

Suzanne M. Bronheim, Ph.D., is Associate Professor in the Department of Pediatrics and a Senior Policy Analyst within the Georgetown University Center for Child and Human Development (GUCCHD). As faculty within the National Center for Cultural Competence (NCCC), she has leveraged her 30-year career to advance MCH issues of cultural competence, family-centered care, CYSHCN, and systems development. 

Currently, Dr. Bronheim helps to lead the National Partnership to Promote Safe Sleep; she previously served as the Director of the Sudden Unexpected Infant and Child Death and Pregnancy Loss Project within the NCCC for 15 years

As a pediatric psychologist, she was director of the learning disabilities/neuropsychology service at Georgetown for twenty years, was co-director of the Tourette Syndrome Clinic at Georgetown, provided evaluation and consultation for adults with developmental disabilities, and served as the psychologist in the Pediatric Pulmonary Center, the Cystic Fibrosis Center and the renal dialysis and transplant team at Georgetown University Hospital. For over ten years, she coordinated Communities Can!—a national network of communities dedicated to using collaborative, systems integration strategies to support and serve all children and families, including those with or at risk for special health care needs.

Dr. Bronheim served as PI for a MCHB-funded research project to address racial and ethnic disparities in access to information by families of children with special health care needs and is part of research teams conducting validations studies on measures of provider cultural and linguistic competence and family-centered care.  She has provided training and technical assistance related to cultural and linguistic competence to state Title V and other public health programs, health and mental health care systems, non-profit organizations, health care providers, and family advocacy and support organizations. She has also developed resources on the role of cultural and linguistic competence in infant mortality disparities, approaches to implementing cultural and linguistic competence in health promotion, and providing culturally and linguistically competent services and supports to families.

COMMENT

Comment on the Presentation...

Please share your thoughts on the webinar and/or ask questions in advance that you would like the speaker to address. Also, please use this as an opportunity to share your personal stories about how this competency fits into your daily work.

Click for Discussion Form

If you can't see/access the form above, please email comments to [email protected].

INTERACT

See What Others are Saying...

Tell us how you will use what you have learned:

  • I loved these examples of tweets from different PH agencies--I think I could use them to model my own messages in a brief, appealing format.
  • I lot of good public health examples that we can all relate to. Good to hear some tips and tricks that have been useful for others out there so I feel empowered to bring some ideas back to my team to try.
This project is supported by the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) under grant number UE8MC25742; MCH Navigator for $225,000/year. This information or content and conclusions are those of the author and should not be construed as the official position or policy of, nor should any endorsements be inferred by HRSA, HHS or the U.S. Government.