Community Alliance
Juvet Che has a diverse work experience in the medical field. They worked as a Chief Medical Officer at Community Alliance, where they integrated mental health, physical health, and social wellbeing to help clients and patients find purpose. Prior to that, Juvet held roles as a Psychiatrist at The University of Vermont Medical Center and HCA South Atlantic Division. They also served as a Medical Director at the Nebraska Department of Health and Human Services. Juvet has experience in correctional healthcare as a Primary Care Physician (CMO) at the Nebraska Department of Correctional Services. They started their career as a Physician at Joshua Medical Centers and completed their Internal Medicine Residency at the University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston.
Juvet Che completed a Bachelor of Science (BSc) degree in Biology, General from Grambling State University between 2003 and 2006. In 2012, Juvet obtained a Doctor of Medicine (M.D.) degree from The University of Texas Medical Branch. From 2017 to 2020, Juvet pursued further education at Creighton University School of Medicine, completing the Psychiatry Residency Training program. Juvet also obtained additional certifications including a Medical Doctor degree from The University of Texas Medical Branch in July 2012 and a Medical Residency Permit from Creighton University School of Medicine in July 2017.
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Community Alliance
At Community Alliance, our sole focus is, and always has been on adults with mental illness. Since 1981, this fact has separated us from more traditional social service agencies and treatment centers in the Omaha area. We are an organization of over 250 dedicated, concerned professionals and volunteers who believe in the potential of recovery for all individuals with a mental illness and we dedicate all our resources to support the journey of each individual we serve. We work to provide programs and opportunities to encourage individuals to develop the strengths and skills to deal with their mental illness or co-occurring mental illness and substance use disorder. Additionally, we serve as an advocate with doctors, social service networks, and throughout the community. We go outside the walls of the hospital and our own facilities to support people in their own neighborhoods and communities, where the strengths and confidences we have helped them develop can be put into practice. We advocate with government and others for greater access to the life-restoring services and needed policy changes that can ease the journey being traveled by so many individuals with mental illness and their families. And we work to help erase the stigma and myths that still surround mental illness and which still serve as roadblocks along the road to recovery.