Creative Resilience
This podcast is meant to create a space for conversation, education, and connection around creative approaches to promoting mental health and well-being among youth, families, communities, and society. Specifically, we will hold space to honor the real-life stories of those impacted by trauma, stress, and adversity and discuss what goes into the creative process of developing and implementing interventions that promote healing and resilience. The podcast will highlight lived experience, research, lessons learned, and inspirations from academics, artists, and community leaders leading efforts to improve mental health and well-being within their communities through creative approaches that center partnership and community strengths to lead to sustainable change. Through sharing real-life stories, recent research evidence, concrete resources, and tangible examples of specific efforts, we hope to inspire and support creative action in more communities and serve as a space that promotes mental health and well-being through sharing, connecting, and getting creative.
About THRIVE Research Lab:
The THRIVE Research Lab is dedicated to community-centered, participatory research and action that promotes healing and resilience among youth, families, and communities experiencing trauma and chronic stress. We aim to promote healing and resilience through an innovative research program designed to partner with communities to develop and implement strength-based solutions grounded in cultural humility.
Creative Resilience
Innovative Strategies for Expanding Trauma-Informed Care
In this episode of Creative Resilience, Dr. Briana speaks with Dr. Ernestine Briggs King, a licensed psychologist and leading expert in child traumatic stress with more than 25 years of experience. Dr. Briggs King shares insights from her work in the Department of Family and Community Interventions at the Kennedy Krieger Institute, including her involvement with the Center for Child and Family Traumatic Stress and a therapeutic foster care program serving trauma-exposed children across Maryland. She highlights the importance of community partnerships, workforce development, and creative strategies, including telehealth, technology, AI tools, and faith-based collaborations, to expand access to mental health services, reduce stigma, and strengthen trauma-informed care. At the heart of her approach are collaboration, innovation, and the belief that building authentic relationships among providers, families, and communities is essential to fostering healing and resilience.
https://www.kennedykrieger.org/patient-care/faculty-staff/ernestine-briggs-king