Monthly Archives

February 2025

Native American Maternal Health Community Advisory Board

By Native American Initiatives

Written by Chelsea Bellon, Native American Initiatives Program Manager

In 2024, an intentional partnership was formed between the Native American Initiatives (NAI) Program at HMHB-MT, the Western Montana Area Health Education Center, and the Family Medicine Residency Program of Western Montana. Their shared goal: to strengthen maternal health in Tribal Communities across Montana by engaging collaboration and connection.

This vision was brought to life by Chelsea Bellon, Drew Babcock, and Amy Stiffarm, who represented these organizations focused on core priorities—ensuring statewide representation, providing financial compensation for participation, facilitating resource sharing, and amplifying community voices.

With support from the St. Joseph Fund, Montana’s first Native American Maternal Health Community Advisory Board (The CAB) was created.  Its founding members brought diverse perspectives and deep commitment to the work.  The founding members included: Adriann Ricker, Audrey Jackson, April Charlo, Ellen BigSam, Kaycee Martinez, Lauren Small-Rodriguez, Ticia Cliff, Savannah Smith, Mattea Grant, Danielle Vazquez, Margaret Ann Adams, Alissa Snow, Joshlyn Snow, Charlene Ramirez, and Julianne Denny. In its first year, The CAB focused on conducting a strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats analysis, identifying resource gaps and needs, and creating space to share personal experiences that shaped and inspired their dedication to maternal health.

With the support and encouragement of our partners at St. Joseph Fund, The CAB was able to grow and prioritize growth and engagement for the second year. The New Year new and some returning members shared their interest and work related to maternal and family health. The second year of The CAB members are: Danna Runsabove, Dani Vazquez, Mary Ellen Lafromboise, Amber Daniels, Kaycee Martinez, Alyssa Schock, Melissa Gordon, Amber Birdinground Cummins, Ticia Cliff, Ni’Cole Triplett, Charlene Ramirez, Misty Pipe, Gerlinda Morrison, Jules Denny, Heather Fourstar, Donnell Buckles, and Sisi Whiteman. Additional facilitators and advisors include: Margaret Ann Adams and Diona Buck. In an effort to expand representation across the state, the second year CAB members capture Tribal program managers, healthcare providers, Birthworkers, and advocates supporting and leading maternal and family health initiatives in their communities.

Growth Initiatives

This year, the CAB will focus on collaboration and growth. CAB members will engage with organizations and working groups through brainstorming and listening sessions. They will also have access to engaging professional development opportunities that align with their cultural values.

Recently, CAB members met with University of Montana students to discuss programming opportunities to support families with special medical needs. They participated in discussions about available resources, the support they provide, and the gaps they have observed when seeking specialty medical care.

While the CAB does not function as an Institutional Review Board (IRB), it seeks to collaborate with organizations, committees, and working groups to engage in meaningful conversations that can guide improvements in maternal health outcomes and enhance understanding of Native perspectives in Montana’s urban and rural communities. Organizations or individuals interested in meeting virtually with the Native American Maternal Health Community Advisory Board can contact Chelsea Bellon at chelsea@hmhb-mt.org or fill out this Meeting Request Form.

The facilitators recognize the importance of supporting CAB members’ professional and personal development goals. CAB members can request financial support for training, education, or community-building initiatives related to maternal and family health. Nurturing and empowering leaders in this field remains a key priority.

 

MTPAL: One Number, Two Programs—Empowering Healthcare Providers for Moms and Kids

By Community Support, Maternal Mental Health

Thanks to Shawnalea Chief Goes Out, Perinatal Health Program Officer for the Member Health Management Bureau of the Health Resources Division, for authoring this guest post!

In Montana, healthcare providers now have a powerful new tool to support maternal and pediatric mental health through the Montana Psychiatric Access Line (MTPAL). Combining two vital programs—MTPAL for Moms and MTPAL for Children—this initiative expands access to expert consultation, resources, and training, ensuring that both mothers and children receive timely, high-quality care for behavioral health concerns.

One number, two programs.

PRISM for Moms and MAPP-NET is now Montana Psychiatric Access Line (MTPAL). Access perinatal and pediatric mental health care services at MTPAL.org or 1-844-40-MTPAL or 1-844-406-8725.

The MT PAL program is a comprehensive initiative designed to enhance the capability of health care providers in both maternal and pediatric settings. MTPAL for Moms focuses on expanding providers’ capacity to screen, assess, treat, and refer patients for maternal mental health and substance use disorders during or after pregnancy, ensuring holistic care for maternal well-being. Simultaneously, MT PAL for Children aims to integrate behavioral health into pediatric primary care, utilizing telehealth modalities to offer high-quality and timely detection, assessment, treatment, and referral for children and adolescents with behavioral health conditions. Both facets of the program emphasize the use of evidence-based practices and methods, striving to deliver effective and accessible health care for mothers and their children.

  • Training and Education for Treatment for Healthcare Professionals
  • Telehealth Consultation and Referral
  • Resource for Healthcare Professionals

Announcing MTPAL for Moms Learning Hub

Each month, our expert hub publishes didactics to empower clinicians in evidence-based best practices in the care and treatment of pregnant and postpartum patients who have mental health concerns. All trainings are presented free of charge to Montana healthcare professionals.

Simply sign up on MTPAL.org to join our list and access the first training – Understanding Perinatal Mental Health: Prevalence, Risks, and Impacts.

Join us March 18,19th in Helena, MT for our combined Perinatal and Pediatric Mental Health Symposium https://www.umt.edu/pediatric-mental-health-symposium/ .Here we will be launching our new MTPAL Psychiatric Access Line along with providing great training and learning opportunities.

“Session Voices” & the 2025 Montana Legislature

By advocacy, Community

by Emily Freeman, HMHB Storytelling Coordinator and Mother Love Podcast Host

As Emily gears up for the release of new Mother Love episodes on the 2025 Montana Legislative session, she takes a moment to reflect on the process, and the people who shape it. 

The Montana State Capitol during Montana Zero to Five’s 2025 Have a Heart for Kids Day.

If global politics feel out of reach, or national policies don’t seem to reflect your immediate on-the-ground concerns, I urge you to consider taking a closer look at what happens at a state level. This link will let you peek into the meetings and hearings of the current Montana legislative session. Here, in a sea of navy-blue blazers – with the occasional pop of a floral dress, or a wild beard – you can watch the slow but compelling work of statecraft. It’s a masterclass in interpersonal communication, restrained conflict and decorum (well…most of the time).  

The humanity is heartening: the vulnerability of an unpolished legislator stumbling through what may be their first time reading aloud at the podium; the low-level Dad jokes; the look of someone who’s clearly not a lifetime suit-wearer, but has forced himself into one because that’s what it takes to play the game. And the game is an important one.  

These 120 legislators are engaged in future work – planting trees in whose shade they may never sit, as the old saying goes. And they’re also doing past work, as they attempt to shift legislation from previous sessions into greater alignment with current needs, through policy changes or formal acknowledgement. 

It can be easy to fixate on the legislators who appear to be working tirelessly and unapologetically around an issue that seems out of touch with the most pressing concerns of their constituents. Or those who seem to have a personal grudge against one of their colleagues and starts to lose hold on their ability to control it as the day goes on. And yet, for the most part, the people in these meetings seem like they truly want to work together, to listen and learn, so that they may collectively advance policies that will uplift Montana.  

In these meetings you’ll also see non-legislators, ordinary Montanans delivering personal testimony in support, or opposition, of a bill. Watch enough meetings and you might just see someone you know standing at the podium, or speaking through Zoom, doing the brave work of letting their voice be heard in order to make change. I challenge you not to be moved by some of these testimonies: by the mom who drove halfway across the state to share about a challenge she faced with her child, and how a certain program or policy helped; by the advocate speaking on behalf of those who can’t do so on their own, but whose security hangs in the balance; by people who know firsthand what it means for state funding to make or break a life.  

Come for the feels, stay for the unintentional moments of comedy: the hot mic, the late-afternoon popcorn-munching in the back row of the House, the wrong button pushed, the sheepish apology. Legislative session meetings might just wind up being your new favorite reality show. 

Last session, I came to Helena in my role as Executive Director of the Early Childhood Coalition of Beaverhead County, participating in an advocacy day hosted by Zero to Five Montana. I’d lived in Montana for over a decade, and yet the legislative session had never felt accessible or — to be perfectly honest — all that interesting. But on that February day, standing in the rotunda, which in itself is a transformative experience (the architectural interiors of the statehouse are next level), watching ordinary people speak about their experiences navigating the early parenting years, entreating their legislators to take their concerns seriously, and thanking them for the ways that they already had, I realized that this experience truly is for everyone. Every Montanan, whether you’ve been here a week or a lifetime, is entitled to participate in the legislative session, in whatever capacity feels right to you.  

Session Voices guest, Mary Collins, testifying about HB360.

Political involvement can look like everything from traveling to Helena to speak at a podium, to leaving a voicemail, to simply making an effort to get to know the legislators from your own community when they’re not at work in Helena. Whether or not you voted for them, they’re now installed in their role to hear your concerns, your priorities, and your hopes for the future of our state. You don’t have to be a policy expert, or know the details of bills, in order to be involved (although if you are interested in doing so, this bill tracker is excellent and easy to navigate). 

My goal with “Session Voices”, the new Mother Love podcast miniseries, is to bring you guests who’ll help us all to understand the legislative landscape a bit more, and to explain the ways in which we can be a part of the process, whether it’s during the 90 days of the 2025 session, or during the many months and interim year between sessions, when laws aren’t made, but relationships can be. You’ll hear voices from across the legislative ecosystem, from policy experts to parents, and will hopefully gain a bit more understanding of how it all works, and how much of it is within your reach. You can find Mother Love on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen. Our first episode, with Mary Collins from the University of Montana’s Center for Children, Families and Workforce Development, is live now, and on Monday you can hear my interview with Grace Decker, of Montana Advocates for Children. And if you have a great guest in mind (maybe it’s you!), feel free to reach out at stories@hmhb-mt.org.