SC CTSI Community Engagement Partners with Universities and Community Organizations to Develop Mental Health Training for Promotores de Salud
By Andrea Diaz — April 17, 2024
The Community Engagement core group collaborated with universities across California to develop a six-month mental health training program for community health workers. This initiative was aimed to enhance mental health support in underserved communities by providing community health workers with credible, scientifically backed information.

CE partnered with Stanford University, University of California, Davis, University of California, Merced, and University of California, Irvine, to develop a series of webinars for the promotores on mental health topics that affect the Latino community. As part of the project, each promotor was expected to deliver a minimum of three community-based workshops on the topics that they had learned.
“The initiative was threefold. First, to support the promotores in managing their own stress or any other mental health challenges they may be facing. Second, to provide them with reliable information to share within their community. Lastly, to teach promotores the skills to develop and deliver their own community-based workshop, ” said Nicole Wolfe, PhD, Co-Director of the Community Engagement core group at SC CTSI.
Over the course of the six months, the promotores attended webinars on a range of mental health topics including: stress, mental health, and mindfulness; maintaining mental health and well-being; understanding and addressing depression, stress, and anxiety; trauma and mental health: what it is, how it affects our communities, and how can we treat it; mental health and well-being among Latinos. Sara Calderon, a promotora on the CE team, led these webinars alongside experts from partner academic institutions.

Following each webinar, the CE team held a discussion meeting with the promotores to review the learning objectives from the webinar and to engage in bi-directional communication on the topic to ensure understanding and retention. Each promotor was then instructed to create a presentation on that topic, which could then be used for a community-based workshop. The CE team worked closely with each promotor to help them develop, schedule, and evaluate their workshop.
“The immediate impact of this project on the communities involved has been positive and highlights the immediate impact of the project in raising awareness, fostering community engagement, and providing valuable support for mental health concerns within the communities served,” said Mayra Rubio-Diaz, CE Special Projects Manager.