Kentucky Cabinet for Health and Family Services – UofL News Thu, 23 Apr 2026 20:21:12 +0000 en-US hourly 1 UofL graduate student and employee plays pivotal role in health care ethics for state /post/uofltoday/uofl-graduate-student-and-employee-plays-pivotal-role-in-health-care-ethics-for-state-government/ Wed, 11 Dec 2024 18:58:39 +0000 /?p=61726 When graduate student Stephanie Schemke receives her  this December, she also marks 20 years as part of the Cardinal family. From earning her bachelor’s degree in biology in 2004 to 18 years of employment with the university, and now this latest educational achievement, Stephanie hasn’t strayed far from her Cardinal values. 

With years of experience in clinical trial regulatory and human studies administration, Schemke said she chose to pursue the master’s program in health care ethics because of its flexibility and applicability. 

“It involves and builds upon the same ethical principles I have learned through my research administration experience, and it culminated at the degree level that gives me the upward mobility potential I was looking for, as well as giving me the opportunity to continue to work full time,” she said.

As part of the degree’s culminating graduation experience requirement, Schemke completed a three-month internship at the , helping to establish and develop the new Drug and Supplement Branch of the Kentucky Cabinet for Health and Family Services. The branch will work to maintain and regulate hemp-derived cannabinoid production and sales in Kentucky. 

Schemke said the internship was an important part of the HCE program because “it provided the avenue for real world application of the concepts I learned during the program’s courses,” she said. 

As part of this hands-on experience, Schemke played a pivotal role in crafting regulations at the state level, ensuring that all of the research, outreach and advocacy was informed by ethical considerations and methodologies that she’s learned in the HCE program. 

What will this mean for Kentuckians? According to Schemke, when responsibility for hemp regulation began shifting to the Drug and Supplement branch, it expanded the number of staff focused on public safety related to the use and sale of these products.

“I was grateful to observe and learn the details of how such a reorganization is managed and think the recognition of need in this area can only help public safety in our state,” Schemke said. 

She credits the University of Louisville for making her next step possible.

 “I am thankful for the tuition remission benefit that UofL offers employees,” she said. “I felt very supported in the goal of advancing my education for future opportunities.”

]]>
UofL to help lead in development of 911 alternative response model for Louisville /post/uofltoday/uofl-to-help-lead-in-development-of-911-alternative-response-model-for-louisville/ Thu, 20 May 2021 16:54:14 +0000 http://www.uoflnews.com/?p=53543 During a time when local and national attention is focused on calls for changes in policing, collaborators from the University of Louisville, , and the Kentucky Cabinet for Health and Family Services’ , have initiated planning for a community-centered alternative response model for Louisville 911 calls best served by mental health and social services professionals rather than traditional police engagement.

Susan Buchino, assistant professor in the School of Public Health and Information Sciences and assistant director of the Commonwealth Institute of Kentucky

Diversion Options: Voice and Empowerment (DOVE) Delegates is a research and development partnership that will design an alternative response model that meets Louisville’s unique needs, based substantially on input from the city’s residents and those directly impacted.

The need for an alternative response model derives from community concerns about instances in which law enforcement officers engage with individuals experiencing behavioral health crises.

Susan Buchino, an assistant professor in the and assistant director of the , will co-lead UofL’s research effort with Tony Zipple, an executive-in-residence at SPHIS.

“We have the opportunity to create a program that reduces the criminalization of intellectual and behavioral health conditions by using community-care practices and linking people to appropriate health and social services,” Buchino said.

Those involved in the project will assess best practices from other cities, analyze local data and organize community forums. Although similar models have been highlighted nationally, Louisville’s DOVE Delegates planning process is intentional about learning from the work of others while ensuring the model fits the context and climate of Louisville. DOVE Delegates will seek input of invested community members, as well as city leaders, behavioral health and social service providers, and representatives from advocacy organizations.

The will concentrate on organizing focus groups of Louisville residents to learn about their experiences and to integrate their input into planning and decision-making. A community survey launched this month with focus groups to be held throughout the city. School of Social Work Chair Shannon Cambron will lead Spalding’s involvement, and Louisville social worker and community organizer Khalilah Collins will serve as a project manager on the forums, which aim to elevate the voices of those whose lives may have been negatively impacted by current systems and practices.

Experts from Seven Counties Services will contribute insight from the perspective of a mental health services provider, focusing on behavioral health crisis response.

The work of UofL, Seven Counties and Spalding will be combined into a progress report that will be presented this summer to Louisville Metro Government, which is providing support to the DOVE Delegates through funds focused on reimagining public safety, including forfeiture monies from the Louisville Metro Police Department.

Recommendations will be made for implementation of a pilot program in the city’s 2022 fiscal year. The goal of implementing such a model is to create a positive health and economic impact on the community.

The Department of Behavioral Health, Developmental and Intellectual Disabilities is supporting DOVE Delegates through a federal Transformation Transfer Initiative Jail Diversion grant from the National Association of State Mental Health Project Directors.

Key to its community engagement, DOVE Delegates has seated a 20-person accountability/advisory board made up of representatives from around the city and from a range of professional and personal backgrounds. The board was formed to ensure accountability and transparency to the community, and it will provide recommendations and insight into the planning and development process while supporting outreach and engagement efforts of the project.

 

 

]]>