Crossroads of Care
Crossroads of Care:
Brain Injury, Behavioral Health, & Justice-Involved Youth
Empowering providers to navigate the intersection of trauma, treatment, and transformation.
February 20, 2026 | 8:30 AM – 5 PM | In Person or Virtual | CEUs Available
Munroe-Meyer Institute | 6902 Pine St, Omaha, NE
Hosted by the Brain Injury Association of Nebraska, in partnership with the Munroe-Meyer Institute at UNMC and the Clinical Neuroscience & Neuropsychology (CNN) Lab at the University of Nebraska–Lincoln, this full-day symposium brings together professionals who support justice-involved and at-risk youth.
This accredited continuing education activity is designed for professionals working with justice-involved or at-risk youth, including behavioral health providers, mental health clinicians, psychologists, school professionals, probation and diversion officers, juvenile justice staff, brain injury specialists, social workers, nurses, case managers, and community support providers. The symposium is also relevant to educators, policymakers, and nonprofit staff serving youth with complex behavioral, neurological, and social needs.
About The Symposium
Across youth-serving systems, many providers encounter young people with overlapping trauma histories, behavioral health challenges, and unrecognized brain injuries. These needs often cross traditional service boundaries, leading to confusion, inconsistent interventions, and missed opportunities for effective support.
Crossroads of Care focuses on helping professionals recognize and respond to these intersections through practical tools, real case examples, and cross-system strategies.
Participants will explore:
- How brain injury, trauma, and behavioral health symptoms overlap
- How to use the OBISSS screening tool
- How to interpret screening or evaluation results
- How to improve coordinated case planning across justice, behavioral health, education, and community systems
- How to build inclusive, lifespan-spanning care pathways that prevent youth from “falling through the cracks”
Educational Objectives
At the conclusion of this activity, the participants should be better able to:
1. Describe how brain injury, trauma, and behavioral health conditions intersect and influence outcomes for justice-involved youth.
2. Apply the OBISSS screening tool and case conceptualization frameworks to identify and respond to brain injury within behavioral and justice settings.
3. Demonstrate strategies to improve cross-system communication and coordination among behavioral health, education, and justice partners.
4. Integrate trauma-informed and brain injury-responsive approaches into assessment, treatment planning, and community reentry supports.

Agenda
Registration Details
The symposium will be offered both in-person and virtually.
- Cost: $25 (same for in-person or virtual)
- In-Person Capacity: Limited to 75 seats; first-come, first-served
- CEUs will be provided for eligible attendees.
- Both ticket types include access to materials, resources, and recordings when applicable.
If your organization requires an invoice and/or to send a paper check via mail, please reach out to info@biane.org to request this.
Accredited Continuing Education
In support of improving patient care, University of Nebraska Medical Center is jointly accredited by the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education (ACCME), the Accreditation Council for Pharmacy Education (ACPE), and the American Nurses Credentialing Center (ANCC), to provide continuing education for the healthcare team.
The University of Nebraska Medical Center designates this activity for 6.0 ANCC contact hours. Nurses should only claim credit for the actual time spent participating in the activity.

Continuing Education (CE) credits for psychologists are provided through the co-sponsorship of the American Psychological Association (APA) Office of Continuing Education in Psychology (CEP). The APA CEP Office maintains responsibility for the content of the programs. This activity has been approved for 6.0 credit hours of continuing education credit.
As a Jointly Accredited Organization, University of Nebraska Medical Center is approved to offer social work continuing education by the Association of Social Work Boards (ASWB) Approved Continuing Education (ACE) program. Organizations, not individual courses, are approved under this program. Regulatory boards are the final authority on courses accepted for continuing education credit. Social workers completing this course receive 6.0 general continuing education credits. The content level of this activity is basic.
This training is approved by the Administrative Office of the Court and Probation for 6 Criminogenic CEUs.

Crossroads of Care Flyer
Have a Question?
Contact Peggy Reisher, MSW
Executive Director, Brain Injury Association of Nebraska

















