Learning Community: Practice Transformation for Pediatric Behavioral Health: Measurement-Informed Care for Childhood Trauma and Family Stress (June 3, 2026)

Program Information

The 2026 Learning Community advances from foundational learning to applied practice transformation within pediatric primary care and integrated care settings. The series supports primary care–led teams in strengthening measurement-informed, team-based approaches to pediatric behavioral health and family support.

Content emphasizes how primary care teams coordinate care across behavioral health, schools, and community partners, implement evidence-informed workflows, and sustain change within existing roles, staffing models, and system capacity. The series prioritizes practical strategies that support workforce sustainability and continuous improvement in real-world primary care environments.

This activity meets the first and third Wednesday of every month from 2-3PM ET. The activity will also meet on the fifth Wednesday of the month in July.

Acknowledgement of Support

This Learning Community is supported by the National Council for Mental Wellbeing and the Center of Excellence for Integrated Health Solutions, funded by Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration and operated by the National Council for Mental Wellbeing.
The views, opinions, and content expressed in this presentation do not necessarily reflect the view, opinions, or policies of the Center for Mental Health Services (CMHS), the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA), or the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS)

Target Audience

This activity is appropriate for the following audiences:

  • Nurse Practitioners
  • Physicians
  • Physician Associates
  • Social Workers
  • Nurses
  • Psychologists
  • Care Team Members

Learning Objectives

Upon completion of this activity, participants should be able to do the following:

  1. Integrate core principals of two generation, trauma-informed care into pediatric primary care practice. 
  2. Implement integrated care team strategies to support medical-behavioral health and health related social needs.
  3. Adapt a quality improvement (QI) framework to effectively integrate behavioral health within their care setting.
  4. Evaluate the effectiveness of your team’s QI model for behavioral health integration.
Activity summary
Available credit: 
  • 1.00 AAPA Category I CME
    Through Joint Accreditation, Moses/Weitzman Health Center, Inc./Weitzman Institute is able to provide American Academy of PAs (AAPA) credit to physician assistants at its activities. Participants should only claim commensurate credit with the extent of their participation in the activity.
  • 1.00 ACE/ASWB
    Through Joint Accreditation Moses/Weitzman Health Center, Inc./Weitzman Institute is able to provide Association of Social Work Boards (ASWB) credit to social workers at its activities.
  • 1.00 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit
    Through Joint Accreditation, Moses/Weitzman Health Center, Inc./Weitzman Institute is able to provide AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™ to physicians at its activities via Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME).
  • 1.00 ANCC
    Through Joint Accreditation, Moses/Weitzman Health Center, Inc./Weitzman Institute is able to provide American Nurses Credentialing Center (ANCC) nursing credit to nurses at its activities.
  • 1.00 APA
    Through Joint Accreditation, Moses/Weitzman Health Center, Inc./Weitzman Institute is able to provide American Psychological Association (APA) credit to psychologists at its activities.
  • 1.00 Participation Hour(s)
    You are able to download an unaccredited Participation Certificate for your records if you are not able to use any of the credit types provided for this activity or if this activity does not offer accredited CME/CE credits.
Activity opens: 
05/06/2026
Activity expires: 
09/30/2026

Schedule

This activity meets the first and third Wednesday of every month from 2-3pm ET. The activity will also meet on the fifth Wednesday of the month in July. Below are the dates of the sessions.

Learning Sessions

  • June 3, 2026
  • June 17, 2026
  • July 15, 2026
  • July 29, 2026
  • August 19, 2026
  • September 2, 2026
  • September 16, 2026

Office Hour Sessions

  • July 1, 2026
  • August 5, 2026

Faculty

Stephen DiGiovanni, MD

Dr. Stephen DiGiovanni earned his medical degree from Jefferson Medical College at Thomas Jefferson University in 1996. He completed his pediatric residency and served as Chief Resident at Maine Medical Center from 1997 to 2001. He then spent nine years in community practice at Bayview Pediatrics in Yarmouth, Maine, providing comprehensive primary care.

In 2011, Dr. DiGiovanni returned to Maine Medical Center, where he combines clinical care with teaching and quality improvement in the Pediatric Residency Clinic. Since 2013, he has served as Medical Director of the Maine Medical Center Primary Care Clinics, leading programs that deliver high-quality, equitable care to a diverse patient population while advancing medical education for residents and students.

Dr. DiGiovanni also serves as Medical Lead for the MaineHealth Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs) and Resiliency Program. In this role, he advances team-based models to assess, intervene and monitor (AIM) pediatric adversity, developmental concerns, behavioral health symptomology and health related social needs to build resiliency for children and families.

Lisa Leary, MS

Lisa Leary, MS, is an educator and healthcare improvement strategist with a strong commitment to advancing high-quality, value-based care while fostering environments that support workforce well-being and professional growth. She has partnered with healthcare and public health organizations to strengthen clinical workflows, evaluate program impact, reduce inefficiencies, and support teams in implementing meaningful, measurable change.

Lisa has extensive experience working with professionals across the helping professions, including community health workers, public health practitioners, and primary and specialty care providers. Her work focuses on translating data and frontline experience into practical improvements that enhance care delivery and learning within collaborative settings.

Lisa holds a master’s degree in Evaluative Clinical Science from Dartmouth College and is a Certified Six Sigma Green Belt. She brings more than 20 years of experience in facilitation, training, qualitative research, clinical evaluation, and practice transformation.

Kristina Mody, MPH

Kristina Mody, MPH is Director of Practice Transformation at the California Quality Collaborative (CQC), where she leads the Behavioral Health Integration Initiative, accelerating the integration of behavioral health into primary care across California. An experienced improvement advisor and coach, she provides technical assistance and collective solutions to support sustainable, high‑value care transformation. Kristina authored CQC’s Behavioral Health Integration Curriculum, Pediatric BHI Toolkit, and an issue brief on sustainable financing for BHI, speaks frequently on integrated care, and co‑chairs the Value‑Based Care Workgroup for the Collaborative Family Healthcare Association.

Addie Van Zwoll, PhD, MJ, LCSW, LMSW

Dr. Van Zwoll has worked in the school-based healthcare field at the local, state, and national level since 2011. As a clinical social worker and manager of behavioral health services at a local SBHC, she was able to provide direct clinical services and expand behavioral health programming, including the introduction of alternative to suspension programs and a calm room. Ms. Van Zwoll also served on the Illinois School-Based Health Alliance Steering Committee for several years. Ms. Van Zwoll is passionate about working with adolescents and increasing access to mental health care. She joined the SBHA in 2023 and is currently working on a variety of projects, including both program and consulting work.

Dr. Van Zwoll is a graduate of Western Michigan University (Bachelor of Social Work, Bachelor of Arts-Criminal Justice, 2006), University of Michigan (Master of Social Work, 2007), Loyola University Chicago (Master of Jurisprudence in Children’s Law & Policy, 2014), has a certificate in School Discipline Reform also from Loyola University Chicago, and is currently pursuing her PhD in Social Work from Loyola University Chicago.

Weitzman Institute Disclosure Statement

It is the policy of the Weitzman Institute to ensure that Continuing Education (CE) activities are independent and free of commercial bias. To ensure educational content is objective, balanced, and guarantee content presented is in the best interest of its learners' and the public, the Weitzman Institute requires that everyone in a position to control educational content disclose all financial relationships with ineligible companies within the prior 24 months. An ineligible company is one whose primary business is producing, marketing, selling, re-selling or distributing healthcare products used by or on patients. Examples can be found at accme.org.

Faculty participating in a Weitzman Institute-sponsored activity must disclose to the planning committee and audience all financial or other relationship(s) with ineligible companies.

Accreditation Statement

In support of improving patient care, Moses/Weitzman Health System Inc. and its Weitzman Institute is jointly accredited by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME), the Accreditation Council for Pharmacy Education (ACPE), and the American Nurses Credential Center (ANCC) to provide continuing education for the healthcare team.   

By completing this activity, you provide Moses/Weitzman Health System Inc. the permission to share completion data with the ACCME and the certifying board(s).

Joint Accreditation logo

Please note that continuing education credit requirements differ by state, jurisdiction, and licensing agency. It is your responsibility to confirm if your licensing/credentialing agency will accept the credits offered by this activity.

Available Credit

  • 1.00 AAPA Category I CME
    Through Joint Accreditation, Moses/Weitzman Health Center, Inc./Weitzman Institute is able to provide American Academy of PAs (AAPA) credit to physician assistants at its activities. Participants should only claim commensurate credit with the extent of their participation in the activity.
  • 1.00 ACE/ASWB
    Through Joint Accreditation Moses/Weitzman Health Center, Inc./Weitzman Institute is able to provide Association of Social Work Boards (ASWB) credit to social workers at its activities.
  • 1.00 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit
    Through Joint Accreditation, Moses/Weitzman Health Center, Inc./Weitzman Institute is able to provide AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™ to physicians at its activities via Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME).
  • 1.00 ANCC
    Through Joint Accreditation, Moses/Weitzman Health Center, Inc./Weitzman Institute is able to provide American Nurses Credentialing Center (ANCC) nursing credit to nurses at its activities.
  • 1.00 APA
    Through Joint Accreditation, Moses/Weitzman Health Center, Inc./Weitzman Institute is able to provide American Psychological Association (APA) credit to psychologists at its activities.
  • 1.00 Participation Hour(s)
    You are able to download an unaccredited Participation Certificate for your records if you are not able to use any of the credit types provided for this activity or if this activity does not offer accredited CME/CE credits.
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