In this episode of our limited series, “How Sororities and Fraternities Support Mental Health Awareness,” Dr. April Clay, Pi Zeta Zeta Chapter member of Zeta Phi Beta Sorority, Inc. discusses racial injustice as a global concern. This Chapman University graduate and CEO of Clay Counseling Solutions, Inc., shares how the pandemics of COVID-19 and racial injustice are affecting youth and their families. While this college professor and Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist acknowledges the personal resiliency of young people under quarantine, she also acknowledges the suicidal increases as a result of these pandemics. Dr. Clay explains the physiological and psychological effects of racial battle fatigue and encourages us all to recognize how our medical wellness is tied to our racialized experiences. Dr. Clay completed her Doctorate in Education with an emphasis on Educational Justice at University of Redlands. She received both her MA in Clinical Psychology and Marriage and Family Therapy and her Bachelor of Arts in Psychology at Chapman University. As CEO and Founder of Clay Counseling Solutions, Inc., her organization serves schools, corporations, individuals and families. She is also an Adjunct Professor in the Dept. of School Counseling and School Psychology at Azusa Pacific University. As a professional researcher, Dr. Clay completed a project on the early impact of California’s Local Control Funding Formula on African American children with a team out of California State University, San Bernardino. To learn more about Dr. Clay and her organization’s free resources, visit her website at ClayCounselingSolutions.com.