Connecting Cultures/New England Survivors of Torture & Trauma
Please call our intake person at 802.656.2661.
The Connecting Cultures/NESTT program represents a partnership between Connecting Cultures at the University of Vermont (UVM), the Vermont Law School’s South Royalton Legal Clinic, physical therapy through UVM, and psychiatric service via a Resilience Practice. Survivors of Torture (SOTs) receive comprehensive psychological, social work, legal care, and physical therapy, as well as psychiatric consultation and medical referral services. We also conduct psychological asylum evaluations for individuals seeking asylum.
Here are a couple of published articles they shared with us:
- Wanna, C. P.; Seehuus, M.; Mazzulla, E. & Fondacaro, K. (2019, July 3). A house is not a home: Modeling the effects of social support and connection within resettled refugee populations(link is external). Journal of Community Psychology, 1-16.
- Meyerhoff, J.; Rohan, K. J.; & Fondacaro, K. M. (2018, Dec). Suicide and Suicide-Related Behavior Among Bhutanese Refugees Resettled in the United States(link is external). Asian American Journal of Psychology, 9(4), 270-283.
- Fondacaro, K., & Mazzulla, E. (2018). The Chronic Traumatic Stress Framework: A conceptual model to guide empirical investigation of comprehensive treatments for refugees and survivors of torture(link is external). Torture, 28(1), 58-69.
NESTT is a member of the National Consortium of Torture Treatment Programs.
Do you have to be a survivor of torture to be eligible for your services?
We provide services to refugees with and without histories of torture, however, we are careful to use our SOT funds solely for SOT’s and other funding sources for our refugees without torture histories.
Key Partners in Direct Care (Please send referrals to healing center first)
Our primary medical referrals are the Community Health Center of Burlington and the University of Vermont Medical Center (UVMMC).