Breadcrumb
- Federal Resources
Federal Resources
Filter by Agency
- (-) Administration for Children and Families (10)
- AmeriCorps (7)
- (-) Bureau of Indian Affairs (3)
- Bureau of Justice Assistance (8)
- Bureau of Justice Statistics (1)
- Census Bureau (1)
- Center for Nutrition Policy and Promotion (3)
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (145)
- Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (13)
- Community Oriented Policing Services (1)
- Consumer Product Safety Commission (1)
- Division of Adolescent and School Health (DASH) (3)
- Employment and Training Administration (2)
- Family and Youth Services Bureau (12)
- Federal Bureau of Investigation (2)
- Food and Nutrition Service (7)
- General Services Administration (4)
- Health Resources and Services Administration (6)
- Institute of Education Sciences (1)
- National Agricultural Library (1)
- National Center for Education Statistics (2)
- (-) National Center for Injury Prevention and Control (5)
- National Center on Safe Supportive Learning Environments (2)
- National Clearinghouse on Families & Youth (NCFY) (3)
- (-) National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (21)
- National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (2)
- National Institute of Food and Agriculture (3)
- National Institute of Justice (9)
- National Institutes of Health (12)
- National Science Foundation (1)
- NDTAC (8)
- Off ice of Justice Programs (1)
- Office of Adolescent Health (7)
- Office of Civil Rights (2)
- Office of Community-Oriented Policing Services (2)
- Office of Disability Employment Policy (1)
- Office of Elementary and Secondary Education (1)
- (-) Office of Healthy Homes and Lead Hazard Control (3)
- Office of Innovation and Improvement (1)
- Office of Justice Programs (61)
- Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention (129)
- Office of Minority Health (1)
- Office of Policy and Research (1)
- Office of Public Health and Science (4)
- Office of Special Education and Rehabilitative Services (1)
- Office of Special Education Programs (1)
- Office of the Assistant Secretary for Health (2)
- Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation (ASPE) (2)
- (-) Office of the Surgeon General (1)
- Office of Tribal Justice (1)
- Office of Victims of Crime (2)
- Office of Violence Against Women (3)
- Office of Women’s Health (1)
- Public and Indian Housing Division (1)
- Reserve Affairs (1)
- Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) (4)
Filter by Topic
- Afterschool (4)
- Bullying (1)
- Children of Incarcerated Parents (7)
- Child Welfare (43)
- Community Development (6)
- Disabilities (2)
- Education (7)
- Employment & Training (4)
- Family & Community Engagement (1)
- Financial Literacy (1)
- Gang Prevention (1)
- (-) Health and Nutrition (16)
- Housing (7)
- (-) Juvenile Justice (2)
- LGBTQ (16)
- Mental Health (12)
- (-) Mentoring (1)
- Native Youth (4)
- Parenting (10)
- Positive Youth Development (16)
- Program Development (17)
- Runaway and Homeless Youth (39)
- Safety (10)
- School Climate (1)
- Substance Use/Misuse (7)
- Teen Dating Violence (9)
- (-) Teen Driver Safety (24)
- Teen Pregnancy (2)
- Teen Pregnancy Prevention (22)
- Trafficking of Youth (21)
- Transition Age Youth (5)
- Violence Prevention & Victimization (18)
- Youth Preparedness (4)
Measles: What Programs Serving Children and Families Should Know
In light of the recent outbreak of measles, this resource can help the staff of programs that serve children, youth, and families to prevent the spread of the disease and provide accurate information to families.
Quick Health Data Online
Quick Health Data Online provides reliable, easily accessible state- and county-level health data for all 50 states, the District of Columbia, and U.S. territories and possessions. Data are available by gender, race, and ethnicity and are organized into 11 main categories, including demographics, mortality, natality, reproductive health, and mental health.
Resource Roundup: Helping Youth and Families Get Affordable Care Act Health Coverage
NCFY has compiled a list of resources from federal agencies and nonprofit organizations that can help professionals guide youth and families in obtaining affordable health care through Medicaid or the Health Insurance Marketplace.
Train Juvenile Justice Staff to Educate Youth on Sexual Health
Without other trusted adults to guide them, young men in juvenile justice facilities may turn to employees for information about sexual health, a role that these individuals may not be trained to fulfill. To answer this need, the Washington State Department of Health, through the State Personal Responsibility Education Program, provided training to juvenile justice staff to deliver evidence-based sexual health curricula to youth.
Watch: Youth Describe Their Most Meaningful Relationships
In a new video series from the National Clearinghouse on Families and Youth, four youth talk about the adults who helped change their lives. The first video in the series features Marcus, a former foster youth, describing how his adoptive mom has helped and supported him.
Q&A: How Trauma Affects Physical Health
This article features a Q&A with Dr. Stacy Drury, of the Tulane University School of Medicine, who co-authored a study on the physical effects of trauma on the health of young survivors. The study looked at the length of young people’s telomeres, which appear at the end of every cell and act as a marker of aging. Drury and her colleagues found that youth with a history of violence in the home and other traumatic experiences had shorter telomeres than their peers.
Q&A: How to Help Homeless Youth Quit Smoking
This Q&A with Joan Tucker, the senior behavioral scientist and professor at Pardee RAND Graduate School in Santa Monica, California, focuses on Dr. Tucker’s work on smoking among homeless youth and her recommendations for what tailored cessation programs might look like.
Resource: Apps Help Prevent Teen Pregnancy and Promote Youth Sexual Health
This slideshow highlights six free apps that can help youth avoid pregnancy and sexually transmitted infections.
Share with Youth: Apps Promote Youth Sexual Health
This slideshow features free apps that can help youth avoid pregnancy and sexually transmitted infections. It includes a brief description of each app and a link to where it can be downloaded.
Resource: How Does Talking to Extended Family Influence Teens' Decisions About Sex?
This article highlights a recent study which examined why teens talk with extended family members about sex and what they discuss. The results indicate that almost 60% of teens in the study talked with extended family members about sex, and youth who said they talked exclusively to extended family members about sex were more than twice as likely to have had sex.
Native American Traditional Justice Practices
“Expert Working Group Report: Native American Traditional Justice Practices” (PDF, 35 pages) summarizes discussions and recommendations from a meeting about federal efforts to support the use of traditional Native American justice interventions to respond to criminal and delinquent behavior. The meeting was held in April 2013 and included 14 experts from multidisciplinary communities.
Resource: Native One Stop Website
This website provides a one-stop shop for American Indians and Alaska Natives to access resources available from the federal government. Users can complete a prescreening questionnaire to determine their eligibility criteria for resources and programs and learn how to apply. Resource categories include youth, education, food, employment, loans, and environment.
Resource: Updated Model Indian Juvenile Code
This resource (PDF, 3 pages) serves as a framework to help tribes interested in creating or enhancing their own codes that focus on juvenile justice. This model code encourages the use of alternatives to detention and confinement while focusing on community-based, multi-disciplinary responses to juvenile delinquency, truancy, and child-in-need services.
New State Fact Sheets on Drunk Driving and Restraint Use
The CDC’s Injury Center has released two new fact sheets that provide state-specific data on seat belt use and drunk driving. “Buckle Up: Restraint Use Fact Sheets” provides snapshots of motor vehicle occupant deaths and seat belt use and describes proven strategies to increase the use of appropriate restraints. “Sobering Facts: Drunk Driving State Fact Sheets” provides information on alcohol-involved traffic deaths as well as strategies that can reduce drunk driving. Access state-level data on a variety of topics related to driver safety on the Injury Center’s website.
Resource: Injury and Violence in the U.S. by the Numbers
This infographic highlights key data on injury and violence in the United States in morbidity, mortality, and the cost to society. It also provides information on proven prevention strategies for issues such as motor vehicle injury, prescription drug overdose, child abuse and neglect, sexual violence, and youth sports concussions.
Resource: Best Practices Guide for Tribal Motor Vehicle Injury Prevention
This resource (PDF, 132 pages) for organizations and American Indian/Alaska Native (AI/AN) communities features a summary of the burden of motor vehicle crash injury and death among the AI/AN community. It also provides recommended strategies, with examples from Indian Country, to increase seat belt use, increase child safety seat use, and reduce alcohol-impaired driving.
Resource: Roadway to Safer Tribal Communities Toolkit
This toolkit features fact sheets, posters, and videos that tribal governments and health professionals can use to promote road safety in American Indian/Alaska Native communities, a population with the highest motor vehicle-related death rates of all racial and ethnic groups.
Resource: WISQARS Fatal Injury Mapping
This update to the Web-based Injury Statistics Query and Reporting System (WISQARS) includes 2008–2014 fatal injury mapping data. The mapping module allows public health and other professionals in the injury prevention field to produce customized, color-coded maps depicting injury-related death rates throughout the U.S.
2015 National Distracted Driving Enforcement
In recognition of National Distracted Driving Awareness Month in April, NHTSA has planned a number of activities, including the implementation of U Drive. U Text. U Pay, its second national enforcement campaign for distracted driving, and a robust social media strategy designed to raise public awareness about the consequences of texting and driving.
About Safe Communities
The Safe Communities approach represents a new way community programs are established and managed. All partners participate as equals in developing solutions, sharing successes, assuming risks, and building a community structure and process to continue improvement of community life through the reduction of injuries and costs.
Community How-to Guides on Underage Drinking Prevention
This set of documents was developed by the National Association of Governors Highway Safety Representatives with financial assistance from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. The guides focus on the following topics: Coalition Building, Needs Assessment and Strategic Planning, Evaluation, Prevention and Education, Underage Drinking Enforcement, Public Policy Advocacy, Media Relations, Self-Sufficiency, and Resources.
Distraction.gov
Distraction.gov provides wide array of information and resources about distracted driving including information from the 2010 summit on distracted driving, campaign tools, facts, statistics and research, information about laws in different states related to distracted driving, speeches, press releases and other resources for the media.
Dangers of Texting and Driving
Liz Marks shares how her accident from texting while driving changed her life.
Five Seconds of Texting While Driving
The National Highway and Traffic Safety Administration shows what could happen in just five seconds of texting while driving.
Impaired Driving Reports from NHTSA
This page compiles multiple research and evaluation projects conducted by NHTSA related to behaviors and attitudes in highway safety. The research presented focuses on the role of impaired driving in fatal crashes, and the prevention of alcohol and drug use by drivers.