Showing 1–16 of 24 results
American Indian/Alaska Native Poster: Awaiting Instructions (PDF only)
$0.00
The 11” x 17” poster may be used in any community or health setting frequented by men and boys including Tribal offices, schools, gyms, batter’s intervention programs, health care facilities and visitation centers.
American Samoa Safety Card
The General Health safety card features 10 panels, 5 panels each side, and folds up to the size of a business card (3.5" x 2") for discretion. Designed for women receiving health care services, the card helps women recognize how their relationship impacts their health and the lives of their children,
Beyond Halal and Haram: Muslims, Sex, and Relationships Safety Card (Hard Copy and PDF)
$0.00
The goal of this safety card is to be both a survivor-centered resource and a useful conversation starter for health care providers, counselors, social workers, mentors, or other adults working with high-school and college-aged Muslim youth who are doing universal education around healthy relationships and assessing for violence. The card
Building Domestic Violence Health Care Responses in Indian Country: A Promising Practices Report (PDF only)
$0.00
Funded by the Indian Health Service and Administration for Children and Families, the IHS/ACF Domestic Violence Project (2002-2009), trained thousands of health care providers and community advocates, identified and empowered national experts, instituted sustainable DV response programs in hospitals and clinics, developed model policies and tools to better address abuse
Caring Relationships, Healthy You (LGBQ) Safety Card (Hard Copy and PDF)
$0.00
The goal of this safety card is to be both a survivor-centered resource and a useful conversation starter for health care providers who are doing universal education around healthy relationships and assessing for violence specifically with LGBQ people or in LGBTQ health settings.
El objetivo de esta tarjeta de seguridad es
Caring Relationships, Healthy You Poster (LGBTQ) Hard Copy and PDF
$0.00
The goal of this poster in tandem with the Caring Relationships Safety Card is to be both a survivor-centered resource and a useful conversation starter for health care providers who are doing universal education around healthy relationships and assessing for violence specifically with LGBQ people or in LGBTQ health settings.
The
Connected Parents, Connected Kids ACEs Safety Card (Hard Copy and PDF)
$0.00
The Connected Parents, Connected Kids Safety Card is a universal education tool that health care and community-based providers can distribute as part of universal education with families to discuss Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs), relationships (healthy and unhealthy), and resilience. This resource is appropriate for a variety of settings, including pediatrics, reproductive health, home
Fathering After Violence “American Indian/Alaska Native” Poster (PDF only)
$0.00
This poster may be used in any community or health setting frequented by men and boys including Tribal offices, schools, gyms, batter’s intervention programs, health care facilities and visitation centers.
This resource is only available as a PDF download.
Fathering After Violence “Memories-Hug” Poster (PDF only)
$0.00
These posters were created as part of the Fathering After Violence Initiative and may be used in any community setting frequented by men and boys. This may include tribal offices, schools, gyms, child welfare offices, batter’s intervention programs, health care facilities and visitation centers.
Fathering After Violence “Memories-Necktie” Poster (PDF and Hard Copy)
$0.00
These posters were created as part of the Fathering After Violence Initiative and may be used in any community setting frequented by men and boys. This may include tribal offices, schools, gyms, child welfare offices, batter’s intervention programs, health care facilities and visitation centers.
Is Your Relationship Affecting Your Health? General Health Safety Card (Hard Copy and PDF)
$0.00
The General Health safety card features 10 panels, 5 panels each side, and folds up to the size of a business card (3.5" x 2") for discretion. Designed for women receiving health care services, the card helps women recognize how their relationship impacts their health and the lives of their children,
LGBTQIA+ Youth and Experiences of Human Trafficking: A Healing-Centers Approach
$0.00
This toolkit was developed in partnership with the National LGBTQIA+ Health Education Center and is intended to increase health centers’ awareness of and responsiveness to LGBTQIA+ youth experiencing human trafficking. The primary focus on LGBTQIA+ youth engaged in the sex trade, including forced, coerced, and voluntary sex work and survival
Los Angeles County Multi-lingual Safety Card Tools
$0.00
Futures Without Violence (FUTURES) has developed more than 25 multi-lingual and setting-specific safety card tools as part of its evidence-based intervention, CUES. In 2019, FUTURES collaborated with the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health, Office of Women’s Health (OWH) and the DC Forensic Nurse Examiners, to expand language access
Something My Father Would Do: Overcoming Legacies of Family Violence (DVD + Youtube Video)
$0.00
Currently this DVD is sold out, but we do have the English AND Spanish versions of the film uploaded to our Youtube Channel.
Strengthen Families, Prevent Violence Posters (Hard Copy and PDF)
$0.00
Strengthen Families, Prevent Violence is a campaign for Indian Country and was designed to educate and engage families on concrete action steps that they can take to promote resiliency and healing for children. The campaign was funded by the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention (DOJ) and developed by
Survivor Brochure: Healthcare Guide For (And By) Survivors of Domestic and Sexual Violence
$0.00
FUTURES worked in partnership with the Survivor Leadership Cohort to adapt this brochure originally created in collaboration with the National Center on Domestic Violence, Trauma & Mental Health. It was developed to support survivors of domestic/sexual violence during health care visits, and offers trauma-informed recommendations for survivors about how to