NW Elders ECHO | January 14, 2025
Date of Presentation: January 14, 2025
Type: Past Presentation
Audience: Clinical Community
Program: Elders, Knowledge Holders and Culture Keepers
Keywords: #AI/AN #aian #ceremony #community conversations #elder care #Elder Health #gathering #indigenous knowledge #indigenous ways #Native Elder #Sacred #sacred trust #screening and assessment #traditions
The Northwest Elders and Knowledge Keepers ECHO session took place on January 14, 2025. In this presentation, Birdie Wermy MPH, BS (Southern Cheyenne) discusses “Sacred Trust: Screening & Assessment with Elders.”
The faculty panel and staff members for this session of the Northwest Elders, Knowledge Holders, and Culture Keepers ECHO includes:
- Jesse Beers – Cultural Stewardship Manager for CTCLUSI
- Katie Hunsberger – Behavioral Health Aide Program Manager for NPAIHB
- Dolores Jimerson – Behavioral Health Education Director for NPAIHB
- Maleah Nore – NW Elders ECHO Faculty
- Jessica Rienstra – ECHO Case Manager for NPAIHB
- Marilyn Scott – Tribal Chair at Upper Skagit Tribe
- David Stephens – ECHO Clinic Director for NPAIHB
- Birdie Wermy – Behavioral Health Program Manager for NPAIHB
- Alison Whitemore – LCSW & RPT (Round Valley Indian Tribes)
- Tanya Firemoon – Northwest Portland Area Indian Health Board Contractor
Recording:
Presented by:
Birdie Wermy
Biography
Birdie Wermy, MPH, BS (Southern Cheyenne) is an enrolled member of the Cheyenne and Arapaho Tribes of Oklahoma, she’s also Kiowa and Pawnee. She grew up in Oregon in a town 20 minutes south of Portland. Birdie is the Behavioral Health Project Manager at the Northwest Portland Area Indian Health Board, where she has worked for 18 years. Birdie has been a part of several successful projects over the years and has a wealth of knowledge and experience. She’s also a part-time instructor at a local Community College, where she teaches on alcohol and substance abuse. In her free time, Birdie enjoys bead working, running and spending time with her kids.
“I am inspired by our future generations! I enjoy being a part of something that is bigger than we can imagine and being a part of a team that is laying the groundwork for the future.”
Resources Provided:
- NW Elders ECHO - Case Submission Form
- Early Relational Health: Parents, Caregivers and Babies (ERH ECHO)
- Northwest Native American Research Center for Health (NW NARCH)
Date added: January 14, 2025












































