$54,800 in Grants Awarded – More Available Fall 2021
The streets sell a lifestyle rooted in brotherhood, protection, and opportunity, but with the potential for great personal costs. Despite
The streets sell a lifestyle rooted in brotherhood, protection, and opportunity, but with the potential for great personal costs. Despite
Dee Minchhoff, DNP, RN, is a longtime volunteer and friend of LOHF. She has served on our Nurse Scholarship Committee
Anita is a physician at Schaefferstown Family Practice. She currently serves as a volunteer board member and on our Access
At LOHF, we offer Mental Health Copay Assistance to youth, children, and parents of dependent children (ages 0-25) who live
One year into the COVID-19 pandemic, the LOHF Mental Health Copay Assistance program continues to help those in financial need
In March, we welcomed new board members. We look forward to their leadership and insight. Stacey Denlinger, DO is a
LOHF grants funds to organizations working to improve the mental health of youth and teens in Lancaster County. In the
LANCASTER, PA – LOHF announces the first eight organizations to join the new LOHF Clinical Supervision Collaborative (LCSC) in response to the inadequate supply of child/youth mental healthcare professionals in Lancaster County. This is funded for 3 years, in part by a grant from the Steinman Foundation
LOHF recently awarded funding to four Lancaster County children’s behavioral health programs. These programs improve the mental well-being of youth and children, especially those who may not otherwise get the support they need. The LOHF grants program is an important part of our strategy to improve access to behavioral healthcare for young people in Lancaster County.
Black Lives Matter. We need to do better, because our friends and neighbors deserve better. All human beings deserve dignity and respect. Our community is hurting, our nation is hurting, and this hurt has been festering far too long.
In support of helping professionals during COVID-19, we hosted a Zoom series “Self-Care Check-in for Helping Professionals.” Here, we have provided the recordings and links from each one. Each 30-minute session includes practice of at least one self-care exercise, and an interactive discussion with a special guest on a particular aspect of self-care for those caring for others. These are inclusive for any helping professional, whether on the frontlines of managing the pandemic, or helping people in other ways. This includes healthcare professionals, teachers, counselors, and so many more professions that serve others. We hope this will be a helpful resource to revisit from time to time, and to share with others.
Pennsylvania has just authorized mental health care providers to be able to offer patient visits via telephone and video communication platforms such as FaceTime, Zoom, or Skype.