Instituto Familiar de la Raza
Alexandra Capulong, PsyD, serves as the Interim Program Director at Instituto Familiar de la Raza since September 2022, having previously held roles as Program Manager and Mental Health Clinician I at the same organization. Alexandra's experience includes a Psychological Internship with the County of Marin, Department of Health and Human Services, and a Psychological Trainee position at Instituto Familiar de la Raza. Additional roles encompass Family Support Services at Ronald McDonald House Charities, Teaching at Learning Bridge Preschool, Crisis Counseling at Richmond High School, and Barista at Blue Bottle Coffee. Alexandra holds a PsyD in Psychology from Alliant International University, a Bachelor's degree in Psychology from San Francisco State University, and an Associate of Arts in Psychology from Modesto Junior College.
Instituto Familiar de la Raza
Instituto Familiar de la Raza remains true to the same principles on which it was founded. The circumstances and specific challenges facing the Chicano/Latino community continue to change, but our unique approach to its health and well-being of our community remains intact. Through a continuum of six responsive and robust programs for children, youth, adults, and families, IFR serves over 3,500 people a year. Employing traditional, contemporary and conventional modalities, IFR’s programs have received national recognition for our unique cultural interventions. With a competent bilingual staff that includes mental health professionals, paraprofessionals, and community health workers, IFR regularly employs this key tenet: la cultura cura/culture heals. IFR began as a small outpatient mental health clinic, and the need for La Clínica remains as urgent as it was when the organization was founded. IFR continued to grow as we recognized our ability to positively impact the Chicano/Latino community. True to our holistic view of health and wellness and in response to emerging community needs, Instituto began developing programs for children, youth, teachers and administrators, people with HIV/AIDS, and the indigenous/Maya population. For over 35 years, IFR has established a leadership role in community violence prevention, school-based mental health consultations, family programming, culturally-based integrated HIV services, and indigenous/Maya wellness programs. Viewed a whole, our programs are designed to provide a seamless continuum of health and wellness programs for Chicanos/Latinos in San Francisco. We remain committed to this mission.