Hi there!

I’m enas abdelkhaleq,
ceo & lead trainer

Enas is a public health educator who is primarily invested in the intersection between human behavior and health outcomes. With a background in cultural anthropology and communication studies (CSULB) and medical anthropology and public health (NMSU), Enas is equipped to train providers in best practices when it comes to supporting the next generation of healthy and regulated adults.

Enas has spent the last 10 years supporting young people in the Southwest and their families. Focusing on the 14-24 age group, Enas has provided health education, case management, and supportive services, in addition to personnel and program management.

Enas is a certified trainer in many topics, and a subject matter expert. All of our training curriculum have been meticulously studied and created to be effective in diverse communities.

Enas created Culture of Care in 2025 to spread education and humanity throughout our public service sector. A refugee from Occupied Palestine at the age of 14, Enas found it crucial to give youth a voice when it comes to receiving appropriate supportive services, in addition to helping families understand and process these needs. Our dedication to supporting all families is rooted in this history.

what people are saying

“Enas was compassionate, heartfelt, competent, and highly skilled. Her pacing was helpful and I did not feel overwhelmed by the amount of information presented within the timeframe. The experience felt deeply human and humbling.”

“The trainer was excellent and well versed in the materials. The training also provided a safe space for people to share their experiences”

“I really enjoyed this training, as an LMSW it was a great review of behavior, crises. Also provided new perspectives on how to approach people in such crises in a less clinical approach.”

“I love the training and am highly recommending [it] to my colleagues.”

“Overall great session, and the trainer was very good at adding real-world examples that applied specifically to [our] population.”