Sessions
Breakout Session 4: Suicide in Relation to the Great Plains Indigenous Population
11:15 AM - 12:15 PM Wed
I am licensed in Arizona and Nevada with over 14 years in the social work field and 6 years of psychoeducation experience. I have experience in helping clients with LGBTIA+-related issues, trauma, and abuse, coping with grief and loss, motivation, self-esteem, and confidence.
"Without having the Triangle of Self-balance of the Mind, Body and Spirit, one has not truly aligned oneself.”-Ebony Brushbreaker, PhD, LCSW
Dr. Ebony Brushbreaker is a Licensed Clinical Social Worker, who graduated Summa Cum Laude from Colorado State University with a bachelor’s in social work. Prior to working in Social Services, Dr. Ebony served in the United States Army for eight years and received an Honorable Discharge as a Staff Sergeant stationed at Fort Bragg, North Carolina, in the 1st of the 159th Aviation Brigade. After obtaining her master’s in social work (Summa Cum Laude), she began her journey in the Medical Social Work field. For over 12 years, she worked with geriatric clients and adults with complex medical conditions in various settings including Long Term Care, Hospice, and Home Health. She recently obtained a PhD in Health Administration and Health Care Leadership with honors (Summa Cum Laude) and is committed to increasing access to medically necessary services. In addition to clinical work, she served as a Regional Director of Social Services in the Long-Term Care discipline.
An enrolled member of the Sicangu (Rosebud) Lakota Sioux Tribe and Oglala Sioux Tribe Lineage on her Maternal Grandmother’s side, Dr. Ebony is a strong advocate for mental health services in the Native American/Indigenous population. Her culture, upbringing, and lived experiences have informed her clinical work, where she believes in cultivating the Being of a person from not only the physical side, following the medical model of treatment, but with an awareness of the inner Spirit. She believes in her traditional ways and her culturally informed treatment is wholistic, empowering, and sensitive to the BIPOC (Black, Indigenous, and people of color) experience. Her approach to mental health and well-being is eclectic and incorporates elements from cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), expressive arts, structural, and solution-focused therapy.
Dr. Ebony works with individuals (age 13+) and families with a wide range of clinical concerns, including depression, anxiety, substance abuse, history of sexual trauma, grief, adjustment to aging, adjustment to chronic illness, and end-of-life issues.