Program Summary

South Asian Community Health Promotion Services


Program Manager:
Preet Sabharwal, PsyD
 
To Contact This Program:
Call (510) 745-9151.
 
This Service is Offered at:
Our Fremont Clinic and our Hayward and Pleasanton Satellite Clinics. This service is also offered in the community and at various cultural, community, and faith centers.
 
Languages:
Services are available in English, Farsi, Hindi, Nepali, Punjabi, Kannada, and Telugu
 
Download our Brochure:
 
Eligibility Criteria:
Persons from Bangladesh, Bhutan, Burma, India, Nepal, Pakistan, and Sri Lanka
 
Services are Provided by:
Staff members and trainees receiving supervision by licensed psychologists.
 
Archived Headlines about this Program or its Staff Members:
 

Quotes from Our Founder, Meji Singh, PhD

#MugQuotes

As a symbol of graduation, each trainee who graduates receives a limited edition Hume Center Mug with a quote from our founder Meji Singh, PhD on it. The quote changes each year.

2010-2011: Healing is not what we do to them. It is how we change our own reaction and feelings in relationship to them.

2011-2012: The clients create their own reality in relationship to the psychotherapists. It is the psychotherapist’s response that is different from the client’s expectations that brings about change.

2012-2013: Notice and explore.

2013-2014: Through psychotherapy, if we understand the suffering our clients have experienced and the way they have coped which may have resulted in symptoms and labels, then through that process they can learn her ways to be more satisfied and productive.

2014-2015: No implementation without participation.

2015-2016: You must anchor yourself. You cannot unload a ship in a storm.

2016-2017: How can you get someone to a place when you aren’t listening to where they want to go?

2017-2018: If we recognize our interconnectedness, we will find peace.

2018-2019:

"The healing process takes place in the context of a relationship." ~Meji Singh, PhD, Founding President

“It takes a community to heal a community.” ~Joty Sikand, PsyD, President

2019-2020: If you only treat symptoms, you're just chasing shadows.

2020-2021: Instead of listening to judge, listen to understand where the person is coming from.

2021-2022: "Community Mental Health is…

...where people who have the problem participate in solving it." - RK Janmeja Singh, Ph.D.

...the community taking care of the mental health of its people” - Joty Sikand, Psy.D.

2022-2023: When my candle is lit, I shine. When you light your candle from mine, then you shine.