
The MultiCare Youth Foundation (MYF) has partnered with the Ministry of Educational Transformation in Barbados to deliver the Transforming Our Perspective—Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (TOP-CBT) Training of Trainers Workshop.
The workshop, currently underway in Barbados, is a groundbreaking regional initiative aimed at equipping educators and youth workers with practical, evidence-based tools to address maladaptive behaviours in youth through mental health interventions.
Over the next two weeks, 50 guidance counsellors, teachers, school counsellors, social workers, and other youth workers across 42 schools will participate in two cohorts of training, each spanning five days
The sessions are being facilitated by Clinical Psychologist and CBT Master Trainer, Dr Kai AD Morgan, alongside Associate Clinical Psychologist, Kyle Schloss.
Participants will receive training on how to use the programme to address the individual risk factors of youth at their respective schools, positioning it as a game changer in the fight against youth crime and violence.
Following the workshops, participants will also benefit from post-training coaching to support the integration of CBT methodologies into their existing programmes, with guidance on the required monitoring and evaluation framework to be provided by the MYF.
In her remarks during the opening ceremony in Barbados on October 13, Executive Director of the MYF, Mitzian Turner, described the initiative as a significant milestone for the organisation and for youth development in the Caribbean.
“The MYF recognises that no one size fits all in this fight against youth crime and violence. As such, we have built an evidence-based and highly effective five-pillar model of life and employability skills training, vocational skills certification, mentorship, internships and the most recently added, TOP-CBT, the pillar for which we are here this week,” she stated.
Turner noted that “the TOP-CBT model is a local adaptation of the Mexican Role Model, designed and developed by Dr Morgan and her team to address behavioural risk factors among at-risk youth”.
“Since 2019, the MYF and Dr Morgan have implemented the programme across Jamaica, using the Training of Trainers model, with support from major international development partners, including the United States Agency for International Development (USAID), the European Union (EU), and the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP),” she further informed.
The programme has demonstrated measurable success, including substantial reductions in youth aggression and impulsivity, and significant increases in positive, pro-social behaviours among youth populations both in and out of school, as well as those in correctional institutions.
The Executive Director noted that while youth crime and violence are pressing issues in Jamaica, many Caribbean nations, including Barbados, face similar challenges.
She referenced data from the UNDP Caribbean Human Development Report (2012), which highlights growing concern about youth violence in a region where more than 60 per cent of the population is under the age of 30.
“However, we have found that by addressing individual and environmental risk factors, fostering self-regulation and changing negative perception, our CBT programme has demonstrated measurable impact on the behavioural outcomes of medium and high-risk youth who are often impacted by trauma,” Turner shared.
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