aportes a la gestión necesaria para la sustentabilidad de la SALUD PÚBLICA como figura esencial de los servicios sociales básicos para la sociedad humana, para la familia y para la persona como individuo que participa de la vida ciudadana.
martes, 23 de marzo de 2010
Project Connect: A Coordinated Public Health Initiative to Prevent Violence Against Women - Violence Against Women Update - Office on Women’s Health
Project Connect: A Coordinated Public Health Initiative to Prevent Violence Against Women - Violence Against Women Update - Office on Women’s Health (OWH)
Project Connect: A Coordinated Public Health Initiative to Prevent Violence Against Women
The Family Violence Prevention Fund (FVPF) has chosen ten sites in nine states for a groundbreaking two-year violence prevention initiative designed to improve the health and safety of women and children. Project Connect: A Coordinated Public Health Initiative to Prevent Violence Against Women is funded by the Office on Women's Health (OWH) of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. It will find new ways to identify, respond to, and prevent domestic and sexual violence, and promote an improved public health response to abuse. Project Connect funding stems from the health provisions in the Violence Against Women Reauthorization Act of 2005.
More than half the Project's funds are directed to ten geographically and ethnically diverse sites that will create comprehensive models of public health prevention and intervention that can lead to improved health and safety. Each site will work with family planning, adolescent health, home visitation, and other maternal child health and perinatal programs to develop policy and public health responses to domestic and sexual violence. Project Connect grantees will also provide basic health and reproductive health services in domestic and sexual violence programs.
The FVPF, in collaboration with the OWH, will provide technical assistance and monitor the grantees selected for Project Connect. Ten grantees were selected through a competitive process and will be awarded $200,000 for implementation. View all grantees:
http://www.womenshealth.gov/violence/programs/index.cfm#e
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