National Strategy for Suicide Prevention: Goals and Objectives for Action CEU Course
1. Increase awareness of suicide prevention methods
2. Increase familiarity with broad based support systems
3. Become familiar with strategies to reduce stigma
4. Learn how to promote efforts to reduce efforts to lethal means of self harm.
5. Identify at risk behavior
6. Implement appropriate treatment and resources
7. Develop and Promote Effective Clinical and Professional Practices
Table of Contents:
1. GOAL 1: Promote Awareness that Suicide is a Public Health Problem that is Preventable
2. GOAL 2: Develop Broad-Based Support for Suicide Prevention
3. GOAL 3: Develop and Implement Strategies to Reduce the Stigma Associated with Being a Consumer of Mental Health, Substance Abuse, and Suicide Prevention Services
4. GOAL 4: Develop and Implement Community-Based Suicide Prevention Programs
5. GOAL 5: Promote Efforts to Reduce Access to Lethal Means and Methods to Self-Harm
6. GOAL 6: Implement Training for Recognition of At-Risk Behavior and Delivery of Effective Treatment
7. GOAL 7: Develop and Promote Effective Clinical and Professional Practices
8. GOAL 8: Improve Access to and Community Linkages with Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services
9. GOAL 9: Improve Reporting and Portrayals of Suicidal Behavior, Mental Illness, and Substance Abuse in the Entertainment and News Media
10. GOAL 10: Promote and Support Research on Suicide and Suicide Prevention
11. GOAL 11: Improve and Expand Surveillance Systems
12. Looking Ahead
13. References
GOAL 1: Promote Awareness that Suicide is a Public Health Problem that is Preventable
Why is this Goal Important to the National Strategy?
In a democratic society, the stronger and broader the support for a public health initiative, the greater its chance for success. The social and political will can be mobilized when it is believed that suicide is preventable. If the general public understands that suicide and suicidal behaviors can be prevented, and people are made aware of the roles individuals and groups can play in prevention, many lives can be saved.
In order to mobilize social and political will, it is important to first dispel the myths that surround suicide. Many of these myths relate to the causes of suicide, the reasons for suicide, the types of individuals who contemplate suicide, and the consequences associated with suicidal ideation and attempts. Better awareness that suicide is a serious public health problem results in knowledge change, which then influences beliefs and behaviors (Satcher, 1999). Increased awareness coupled with the dispelling of myths about suicide and suicide prevention will result in a decrease in the stigma associated with suicide and life-threatening behaviors. An informed public awareness coupled with a social strategy and focused public will lead to a change in the public policy about the importance of investing in suicide prevention efforts at the local, State, regional, and national level (Mrazek & Haggerty, 1994).
Background Information and Current Status
The factors that contribute to the development, maintenance, and exacerbation of suicidal behaviors are now better understood from a public health perspective (Silverman & Maris, 1995). A public health approach allows suicide to be seen as a preventable problem, because it offers a way of understanding pathways to self-injury that lend themselves to the development of testable preventive interventions (Gordon, 1983; Potter, Powell & Kachur, 1995). Although some have criticized the public health model of suicide as being too disease-oriented, it does, in fact, take into account psychological, emotional, cognitive, and social factors that have been shown to contribute to suicidal behaviors (Potter, Rosenberg, & Hammond, 1998).
Did You Know?
In the 10 years 1989-1998, 307,973 people died as a result of suicide.
Suicide is a major public health problem. It is one of the top ten leading causes of death in the United States, ranking 8th or 9th for the last few decades. For the approximately 31,000 suicide deaths per year, there are an estimated 200,000 additional individuals who will be affected by the loss of a loved one or acquaintance by suicide. The economic and emotional toll on the Nation is profound (Palmer, Revicki, Halpern, & Hatziandreu, 1995).
How Will the Objective Facilitate Achievement of the Goal?
The objectives established for this goal are focused on increasing the degree of cooperation and collaboration between and among public and private entities that have made a commitment to public awareness of suicide and suicide prevention. To accomplish this goal, support for innovative techniques and approaches is needed to get the message out, as well as support for the organizations and institutions involved.
Objective 1.1:
By 2005, increase the number of States in which public information campaigns designed to increase public knowledge of suicide prevention reach at least 50 percent of the State's population.
Suicide has been designated as a serious public health problem by the U.S. Surgeon General, and the 105th U.S. Congress has recognized that this problem deserves increased attention [U.S. Senate Resolution 84 (5/6/97) and U.S. House Resolution 212 (10/9/98)]. They recognize suicide as a national problem and declare suicide prevention as a national priority, encouraging the development of an effective national strategy for the prevention of suicide. Public and private organizations have developed information campaigns to educate the public that suicide is preventable, as it can be a consequence of other treatable disorders such as depression, schizophrenia, bipolar illness, alcohol and drug abuse, and certain medical conditions. Campaigns alert professional, community, and lay groups about the common signs and symptoms associated with suicidal behavior. Some organizations with existing campaigns include the American Association of Suicidology (AAS), the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention (AFSP), the Suicide Awareness\Voices of Education (SA\VE), the Suicide Prevention Advocacy Network (SPAN USA), and Yellow Ribbon Suicide Prevention Program.
Ideas for Action Work with local media to develop and disseminate public service announcements describing a safe and effective message about suicide and its prevention.
Public information campaigns can take many forms. No single slogan or message works for everyone. For example, the primary purpose of the annual National Depression Screening Day is to identify, in a variety of settings, individuals with symptoms of depression and refer them for treatment (Jacobs, 1999b). However, such a screening program performed at primary care centers, mental health and substance abuse treatment centers, colleges, universities, and places of employment can play an important role in raising awareness and educating large groups of individuals about this mental disorder and its association with suicidal behaviors. Because no one
is immune to suicide the challenge is to develop a variety of messages targeting the young and the old, various racial and ethnic populations, individuals of various faiths, those of different sexual orientations, and people from diverse socioeconomic groups and geographical regions.
Objective 1.2:
By 2005, establish regular national congresses on suicide prevention designed to foster collaboration with stakeholders on prevention strategies across disciplines and with the public.
Broad-based participation and involvement is needed to ensure progress in reducing the toll of suicide. Open discussion and assessment of suicide prevention programs can only lead to their refinement and better chances for success.
The techniques and tools to create and implement prevention initiatives can be taught and demonstrated. Learning how to develop and disseminate public health messages and to mount public health campaigns is critical to implementing suicide prevention efforts.
A number of organizations have convened annual, national meetings devoted to suicide prevention. Currently, such meetings are sponsored by AAS, AFSP, and biennially by the International Association for Suicide Prevention (IASP). The establishment of regular national congresses on suicide prevention, collaboratively sponsored by more than one organization, will maintain interest and focus on this issue. Ideally, these national congresses should be sponsored by public/private partnerships (see Objective 2.2), and focus on needs and plans for coordinating effective suicide prevention efforts.
Ideas for Action Identify foundations and other stakeholders to contribute to the support of national congresses on suicide prevention.
Objective 1.3:
By 2005, convene national forums to focus on issues likely to strongly influence the effectiveness of suicide prevention messages.
National forums increase awareness of the problem of suicide and serve to mobilize social will. Such meetings keep the subject in the forefront of attention and raise concerns to the national level. Such activities increase connectedness between and among key stakeholders, and serve to bring support, consensus and collaboration to suicide prevention efforts.
Focusing on factors that influence the effectiveness of suicide prevention initiatives is critical to an overall strategy. National forums are opportunities to focus on specific issues that affect all efforts to mount suicide prevention initiatives. By highlighting specific areas, consensus can be reached on how best to incorporate elements into a suicide prevention plan and how best to evaluate effectiveness.
Ideas for Action Incorporate suicide awareness and prevention messages into employee assistance program activities in businesses with greater than 500
employees.
Objective 1.4:
By 2005, increase the number of both public and private institutions active in suicide prevention that are involved in collaborative, complementary dissemination of information on the World Wide Web.
The World Wide Web offers an unparalleled opportunity to bring public health information to a much broader audience because it can be accessed at home, at work, at schools, at community centers, at libraries, or at any other location where there is access to the Internet. Not only does the World Wide Web offer exciting possibilities for the delivery of public health messages (including promoting awareness and referral sources for those in need), but it offers an opportunity to develop preventive interventions as well.
For example, the World Wide Web offers the potential for interactive dialogue and exchange of accurate information. Clear, concise, and culturally sensitive public health messages are key to assisting individuals to evaluate their at-risk status accurately and to know where and how to get help. It therefore is important that both public and private institutions committed to suicide prevention activities collaborate and cooperate to deliver information that is consistent, comparable, complementary, and not competitive. In addition to several Federal websites (see Appendix D); some of the key national organizations currently disseminating suicide prevention information on the World Wide Web include AAS, AFSP, IASP, SPAN USA, and the American Academy of Pediatrics.
Did You Know? Suicide is the eighth leading cause of death for all Americans.
GOAL 2: Develop Broad-Based Support for Suicide Prevention
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Showing posts with label BBS Approved CEUs for MFTs MFT. Show all posts
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September 25, 2010
May 22, 2010
Children’s Mental Health Facts: Bipolar Disorder
Children’s Mental Health Facts: Bipolar DisorderHelping Children and Youth With Bipolar Disorder: Systems of Care
This fact sheet provides basic information on bipolar disorder in children and describes an approach to getting services and supports, called “systems of care,” that helps children, youth, and families thrive at home, in school, in the community, and throughout life.
What Is Bipolar Disorder?
Bipolar disorder is a brain disorder that causes persistent, overwhelming, and uncontrollable changes in moods, activities, thoughts, and behaviors. A child has a much greater chance of having bipolar disorder if there is a family history of the disorder or depression. This means that parents cannot choose whether or not their children will have bipolar disorder.
Although bipolar disorder affects at least 750,000 children in the United States 1 , it is often difficult to recognize and diagnose in children. If left untreated, the disorder puts a child at risk for school failure, drug abuse, and suicide. That is why it is important that you seek the advice of a qualified professional when trying to find out if your child has bipolar disorder.
Symptoms of bipolar disorder can be mistaken for other medical/mental health conditions, and children with bipolar disorder can have other mental health needs at the same time. Other disorders that can occur at the same time as bipolar disorder include, but are not limited to, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, conduct disorder, oppositional defiant disorder, anxiety disorders, autistic spectrum disorders, and drug abuse disorders. The roles that a family’s culture and language play in how causes and symptoms are perceived and then described to a mental health care provider are important, too. Misperceptions and misunderstandings can lead to delayed diagnoses, misdiagnoses, or no diagnoses—which are serious problems when a child needs help. That is why it is important that supports be in place to bridge differences in language and culture. Once bipolar disorder is properly diagnosed, treatment can begin to help children and adolescents with bipolar disorder live productive and fulfilling lives.
What Are the Signs of Bipolar Disorder?
Unlike some health problems where different people experience the same symptoms, children experience bipolar disorder differently. Often, children with the illness experience mood swings that alternate, or cycle, between periods of “highs” and “lows,” called “mania” and “depression,” with varying moods in between. These cycles can happen much more rapidly than in adults, sometimes occurring many times within a day. Mental health experts differ in their interpretation of what symptoms children experience. The following are commonly reported signs of bipolar disorder:
Excessively elevated moods alternating with periods of depressed or irritable moods;
Periods of high, goal-directed activity, and/or physical agitation;
Racing thoughts and speaking very fast;
Unusual/erratic sleep patterns and/or a decreased need for sleep;
Difficulty settling as babies;
Severe temper tantrums, sometimes called “rages”;
Excessive involvement in pleasurable activities, daredevil behavior, and/or grandiose, “super-confident” thinking and behaviors;
Impulsivity and/or distractibility;
Inappropriate sexual activity, even at very young ages;
Hallucinations and/or delusions;
Suicidal thoughts and/or talks of killing self; and
Inflexible, oppositional/defiant, and extremely irritable behavior.
What Happens After a Bipolar Disorder Diagnosis?
If a qualified mental health provider has diagnosed your child with bipolar disorder, the provider may suggest several different treatment options, including strategies for managing behaviors, medications, and/or talk therapy. Your child’s mental health care provider may also suggest enrolling in a system of care, if one is available.
What Is a System of Care?
A system of care is a coordinated network of community-based services and supports that are organized to meet the challenges of children and youth with serious mental health needs and their families. Families, children, and youth work in partnership with public and private organizations so services and supports are effective, build on the strengths of individuals, and address each person’s cultural and linguistic needs. Specifically, a system of care can help by:
Tailoring services to the unique needs of your child and family;
Making services and supports available in your language and connecting you with professionals who respect your values and beliefs;
Encouraging you and your child to play as much of a role in the design of a treatment plan as you want; and
Providing services from within your community, whenever possible.
How Can I Find a System of Care for My Child With Bipolar Disorder?
Contact the system of care community in the box on the back of this fact sheet. If none is listed or that system of care community is not in your area, visit mentalhealth.samhsa.gov/cmhs and click “Child, Adolescent & Family” and then “Systems of Care” to locate a system of care close to you. If you prefer to speak to someone in person to locate a system of care, or if there is not a system of care in your area, contact the National Mental Health Information Center by calling toll-free 1.800.789.2647 or visiting mentalhealth.samhsa.gov.
Are Systems of Care Effective?
National data collected for more than a decade support what families in systems of care have been saying: Systems of care work. Data from systems of care related to children and youth with bipolar disorder reflect the following:
Children and youth demonstrate improvement in emotional and behavioral functioning.
Caregivers report that children and youth have a reduction in conflicts with others in the family.
Caregivers experience an increased ability to do their jobs.
Caregivers report fewer missed days and a reduction in tardiness from work.
Children and youth with bipolar disorder improve in school-related tasks, such as paying attention in class, taking notes, and completing assignments on time.
Children and youth with bipolar disorder have fewer contacts with the juvenile justice system after enrolling in a system of care.
The Core Values of Systems of Care
Although systems of care may be different for each community, all share three core values. These values play an important role in ensuring that services and supports are effective and responsive to the needs of each child, youth, and family. These core values are:
Systems of care are family-driven and youth-guided.
Systems of care are culturally and linguistically competent.
Systems of care are community-based.
Austin’s Story
At age 12, Austin appears to be a typical sixth grader—he likes to play basketball and video games, and is enrolled in an after-school horseback riding program. He is an honor roll student, and his mother describes him as compassionate, loyal, and a champion for the “underdog.” Austin and his family also manage the challenges of bipolar disorder each day.
Austin was diagnosed in first grade with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder and separation anxiety disorder, but Austin’s mother, Kim, recalls a series of incidents that led her to question whether her son’s mental health needs were being met. At age 9, Austin set two fires within a week. The first time it happened, Kim thought it was an isolated incident that would not be repeated— Austin said he was lighting candles.
The second time Austin set a fire, however, the situation was very different. While bringing groceries into the house, Austin set a small fire in the car. When Kim discovered signs of the fire the next morning, she says, “I immediately got on the phone and started calling his physician. Thoughts were flashing through my mind about what could have happened.”
After Kim received a referral from Austin’s physician for diagnostic testing and other mental health services, she learned that her son had been experiencing hallucinations, which were causing him to set the fires. She also learned that his extreme mood swings, as well as his unusual sleep patterns, were signs of bipolar disorder. As a result, Austin was hospitalized for 20 days and diagnosed with bipolar disorder. During this time, Austin was accepted into a system of care through a referral from his school guidance counselor.
Kim says the system of care played an important role in helping Austin make the transition from the hospital to his home—even providing transportation, as Kim’s car was being repaired at the time. System of care staff helped Kim learn more about her son’s disorder. They also helped her locate services and supports tailored to Austin’s needs, including counseling, health care, specialized schooling, after-school programs, transportation, and child care.
The system of care also empowered Kim to be a more effective advocate for Austin’s needs. Before joining the system of care, she says, “I tried to fit the service to the need, rather than fit the need to the service. That was a mistake.”
Kim also assumed that professionals were best able to determine how to meet her child’s needs. After working in partnership with the system of care, Kim now knows that services and supports should be responsive to Austin’s needs and that her and her son’s input into the services and supports is crucial.
Despite the successes her family has had, Kim emphasizes that the journey to wellness is not over. In addition to coping with the symptoms of bipolar disorder, she and Austin also must overcome the stigma associated with mental illnesses. Together, Kim and Austin counter this stigma by educating others that he, and others with mental illnesses, should be known for who they are rather than the disorders they happen to have. Despite the ongoing challenges of stigma and bipolar disorder, Kim believes that the system of care has made a huge difference in terms of helping her family move forward.
What Steps Are Necessary To Enroll in a System of Care?
Although each community’s system of care is different, most children and youth in a system of care go through the following steps to be enrolled:
Step One: Diagnosis and Referral—To be considered for system of care enrollment, your child must have a diagnosed behavioral, emotional, or mental health disorder that severely affects his or her life. Additionally, most children and youth are referred to a system of care by mental health providers, educators, juvenile justice professionals, child welfare professionals, physicians, and others who might already be serving your child.
Step Two: Assessment and Intake—Once your child has been diagnosed and has been referred to the system of care, the system of care may ask you to answer some questions that will help you determine whether or not your child and family are eligible to receive services and supports. If your child and family are eligible, you may have to answer more questions so the system of care can begin to understand your needs. Throughout these steps, the system of care will work with you to fill out all of the necessary paperwork.
Step Three: Care Planning and Partnership Building—After your child and family are enrolled, the system of care will work with you to determine what services and supports best fit your child’s and family’s needs. Once the care planning is complete, the system of care will develop partnerships among you and all of those who are helping your child and family to ensure that services and supports are as effective as possible.
For More Information
Federal Government Resources
National Mental Health Information Center
Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration
mentalhealth.samhsa.gov
Tel: 1.800.789.2647 (toll-free; English/Spanish)
TDD: 1.866.889.2647
National Institute of Mental Health
National Institutes of Health
www.nimh.nih.gov
Tel: 1.866.615.6464 (toll-free; English/Spanish)
TTY: 301.443.8431
Additional Resources
Following are some other resources that may be helpful. This list is not exhaustive, and inclusion does not imply endorsement by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration or the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
Child and Adolescent Bipolar Foundation
www.bpkids.org
Tel: 847.256.8525
Federation of Families for Children’s Mental Health
www.ffcmh.org
Tel: 703.684.7710
NAMI (National Alliance on Mental Illness)
www.nami.org
Tel: 1.800.950.6264 (toll-free)
National Mental Health Association
www.nmha.org
Tel: 1.800.969.6642 (toll-free)
For information about children’s mental health contact the National Mental Health Information Center toll-free: 1.800.789.2647 (English/Spanish) 1.866.889.2647 (TDD)
This fact sheet provides basic information on bipolar disorder in children and describes an approach to getting services and supports, called “systems of care,” that helps children, youth, and families thrive at home, in school, in the community, and throughout life.
What Is Bipolar Disorder?
Bipolar disorder is a brain disorder that causes persistent, overwhelming, and uncontrollable changes in moods, activities, thoughts, and behaviors. A child has a much greater chance of having bipolar disorder if there is a family history of the disorder or depression. This means that parents cannot choose whether or not their children will have bipolar disorder.
Although bipolar disorder affects at least 750,000 children in the United States 1 , it is often difficult to recognize and diagnose in children. If left untreated, the disorder puts a child at risk for school failure, drug abuse, and suicide. That is why it is important that you seek the advice of a qualified professional when trying to find out if your child has bipolar disorder.
Symptoms of bipolar disorder can be mistaken for other medical/mental health conditions, and children with bipolar disorder can have other mental health needs at the same time. Other disorders that can occur at the same time as bipolar disorder include, but are not limited to, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, conduct disorder, oppositional defiant disorder, anxiety disorders, autistic spectrum disorders, and drug abuse disorders. The roles that a family’s culture and language play in how causes and symptoms are perceived and then described to a mental health care provider are important, too. Misperceptions and misunderstandings can lead to delayed diagnoses, misdiagnoses, or no diagnoses—which are serious problems when a child needs help. That is why it is important that supports be in place to bridge differences in language and culture. Once bipolar disorder is properly diagnosed, treatment can begin to help children and adolescents with bipolar disorder live productive and fulfilling lives.
What Are the Signs of Bipolar Disorder?
Unlike some health problems where different people experience the same symptoms, children experience bipolar disorder differently. Often, children with the illness experience mood swings that alternate, or cycle, between periods of “highs” and “lows,” called “mania” and “depression,” with varying moods in between. These cycles can happen much more rapidly than in adults, sometimes occurring many times within a day. Mental health experts differ in their interpretation of what symptoms children experience. The following are commonly reported signs of bipolar disorder:
Excessively elevated moods alternating with periods of depressed or irritable moods;
Periods of high, goal-directed activity, and/or physical agitation;
Racing thoughts and speaking very fast;
Unusual/erratic sleep patterns and/or a decreased need for sleep;
Difficulty settling as babies;
Severe temper tantrums, sometimes called “rages”;
Excessive involvement in pleasurable activities, daredevil behavior, and/or grandiose, “super-confident” thinking and behaviors;
Impulsivity and/or distractibility;
Inappropriate sexual activity, even at very young ages;
Hallucinations and/or delusions;
Suicidal thoughts and/or talks of killing self; and
Inflexible, oppositional/defiant, and extremely irritable behavior.
What Happens After a Bipolar Disorder Diagnosis?
If a qualified mental health provider has diagnosed your child with bipolar disorder, the provider may suggest several different treatment options, including strategies for managing behaviors, medications, and/or talk therapy. Your child’s mental health care provider may also suggest enrolling in a system of care, if one is available.
What Is a System of Care?
A system of care is a coordinated network of community-based services and supports that are organized to meet the challenges of children and youth with serious mental health needs and their families. Families, children, and youth work in partnership with public and private organizations so services and supports are effective, build on the strengths of individuals, and address each person’s cultural and linguistic needs. Specifically, a system of care can help by:
Tailoring services to the unique needs of your child and family;
Making services and supports available in your language and connecting you with professionals who respect your values and beliefs;
Encouraging you and your child to play as much of a role in the design of a treatment plan as you want; and
Providing services from within your community, whenever possible.
How Can I Find a System of Care for My Child With Bipolar Disorder?
Contact the system of care community in the box on the back of this fact sheet. If none is listed or that system of care community is not in your area, visit mentalhealth.samhsa.gov/cmhs and click “Child, Adolescent & Family” and then “Systems of Care” to locate a system of care close to you. If you prefer to speak to someone in person to locate a system of care, or if there is not a system of care in your area, contact the National Mental Health Information Center by calling toll-free 1.800.789.2647 or visiting mentalhealth.samhsa.gov.
Are Systems of Care Effective?
National data collected for more than a decade support what families in systems of care have been saying: Systems of care work. Data from systems of care related to children and youth with bipolar disorder reflect the following:
Children and youth demonstrate improvement in emotional and behavioral functioning.
Caregivers report that children and youth have a reduction in conflicts with others in the family.
Caregivers experience an increased ability to do their jobs.
Caregivers report fewer missed days and a reduction in tardiness from work.
Children and youth with bipolar disorder improve in school-related tasks, such as paying attention in class, taking notes, and completing assignments on time.
Children and youth with bipolar disorder have fewer contacts with the juvenile justice system after enrolling in a system of care.
The Core Values of Systems of Care
Although systems of care may be different for each community, all share three core values. These values play an important role in ensuring that services and supports are effective and responsive to the needs of each child, youth, and family. These core values are:
Systems of care are family-driven and youth-guided.
Systems of care are culturally and linguistically competent.
Systems of care are community-based.
Austin’s Story
At age 12, Austin appears to be a typical sixth grader—he likes to play basketball and video games, and is enrolled in an after-school horseback riding program. He is an honor roll student, and his mother describes him as compassionate, loyal, and a champion for the “underdog.” Austin and his family also manage the challenges of bipolar disorder each day.
Austin was diagnosed in first grade with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder and separation anxiety disorder, but Austin’s mother, Kim, recalls a series of incidents that led her to question whether her son’s mental health needs were being met. At age 9, Austin set two fires within a week. The first time it happened, Kim thought it was an isolated incident that would not be repeated— Austin said he was lighting candles.
The second time Austin set a fire, however, the situation was very different. While bringing groceries into the house, Austin set a small fire in the car. When Kim discovered signs of the fire the next morning, she says, “I immediately got on the phone and started calling his physician. Thoughts were flashing through my mind about what could have happened.”
After Kim received a referral from Austin’s physician for diagnostic testing and other mental health services, she learned that her son had been experiencing hallucinations, which were causing him to set the fires. She also learned that his extreme mood swings, as well as his unusual sleep patterns, were signs of bipolar disorder. As a result, Austin was hospitalized for 20 days and diagnosed with bipolar disorder. During this time, Austin was accepted into a system of care through a referral from his school guidance counselor.
Kim says the system of care played an important role in helping Austin make the transition from the hospital to his home—even providing transportation, as Kim’s car was being repaired at the time. System of care staff helped Kim learn more about her son’s disorder. They also helped her locate services and supports tailored to Austin’s needs, including counseling, health care, specialized schooling, after-school programs, transportation, and child care.
The system of care also empowered Kim to be a more effective advocate for Austin’s needs. Before joining the system of care, she says, “I tried to fit the service to the need, rather than fit the need to the service. That was a mistake.”
Kim also assumed that professionals were best able to determine how to meet her child’s needs. After working in partnership with the system of care, Kim now knows that services and supports should be responsive to Austin’s needs and that her and her son’s input into the services and supports is crucial.
Despite the successes her family has had, Kim emphasizes that the journey to wellness is not over. In addition to coping with the symptoms of bipolar disorder, she and Austin also must overcome the stigma associated with mental illnesses. Together, Kim and Austin counter this stigma by educating others that he, and others with mental illnesses, should be known for who they are rather than the disorders they happen to have. Despite the ongoing challenges of stigma and bipolar disorder, Kim believes that the system of care has made a huge difference in terms of helping her family move forward.
What Steps Are Necessary To Enroll in a System of Care?
Although each community’s system of care is different, most children and youth in a system of care go through the following steps to be enrolled:
Step One: Diagnosis and Referral—To be considered for system of care enrollment, your child must have a diagnosed behavioral, emotional, or mental health disorder that severely affects his or her life. Additionally, most children and youth are referred to a system of care by mental health providers, educators, juvenile justice professionals, child welfare professionals, physicians, and others who might already be serving your child.
Step Two: Assessment and Intake—Once your child has been diagnosed and has been referred to the system of care, the system of care may ask you to answer some questions that will help you determine whether or not your child and family are eligible to receive services and supports. If your child and family are eligible, you may have to answer more questions so the system of care can begin to understand your needs. Throughout these steps, the system of care will work with you to fill out all of the necessary paperwork.
Step Three: Care Planning and Partnership Building—After your child and family are enrolled, the system of care will work with you to determine what services and supports best fit your child’s and family’s needs. Once the care planning is complete, the system of care will develop partnerships among you and all of those who are helping your child and family to ensure that services and supports are as effective as possible.
For More Information
Federal Government Resources
National Mental Health Information Center
Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration
mentalhealth.samhsa.gov
Tel: 1.800.789.2647 (toll-free; English/Spanish)
TDD: 1.866.889.2647
National Institute of Mental Health
National Institutes of Health
www.nimh.nih.gov
Tel: 1.866.615.6464 (toll-free; English/Spanish)
TTY: 301.443.8431
Additional Resources
Following are some other resources that may be helpful. This list is not exhaustive, and inclusion does not imply endorsement by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration or the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
Child and Adolescent Bipolar Foundation
www.bpkids.org
Tel: 847.256.8525
Federation of Families for Children’s Mental Health
www.ffcmh.org
Tel: 703.684.7710
NAMI (National Alliance on Mental Illness)
www.nami.org
Tel: 1.800.950.6264 (toll-free)
National Mental Health Association
www.nmha.org
Tel: 1.800.969.6642 (toll-free)
For information about children’s mental health contact the National Mental Health Information Center toll-free: 1.800.789.2647 (English/Spanish) 1.866.889.2647 (TDD)
May 11, 2010
Suicide: Consequences
Suicide: Consequences
Cost to Society
•The total lifetime cost of self-inflicted injuries occurring in 2000 was approximately $33 billion. This includes $1 billion for medical treatment and $32 billion for lost productivity (Corso et al. 2007).
Consequences
•Suicide is the 11th leading cause of death among Americans (CDC, 2006).
•Over 33,000 people kill themselves each year (CDC, 2006).
•Approximately 395,000 people with self-inflicted injuries are treated in emergency departments each year (CDC, 2007).
•Many people are exposed to another person's suicide which may affect them psychologically. One estimate was that approximately 7% of the US population knew someone who died of suicide during the past 12 months. (Crosby and Sacks, 2002).
References
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Web-based Injury Statistics Query and Reporting System (WISQARS). Atlanta, GA: National Center for Injury Prevention and Control. Available at: www.cdc.gov/ncipc/wisqars. Last modified 2008 August 26.
Crosby AE, Sacks JJ. Exposure to suicide: Incidence and association with suicidal ideation and behavior – United States, 1994. Suicide and Life-Threatening Behavior 2002; 32:321–328.
Corso PS, Mercy JA, Simon TR, Finkelstein EA, & Miller TR. Medical Costs and Productivity Losses Due to Interpersonal Violence and Self- Directed Violence. American Journal of Preventive Medicine 2007: 32(6): 474–482.
Cost to Society
•The total lifetime cost of self-inflicted injuries occurring in 2000 was approximately $33 billion. This includes $1 billion for medical treatment and $32 billion for lost productivity (Corso et al. 2007).
Consequences
•Suicide is the 11th leading cause of death among Americans (CDC, 2006).
•Over 33,000 people kill themselves each year (CDC, 2006).
•Approximately 395,000 people with self-inflicted injuries are treated in emergency departments each year (CDC, 2007).
•Many people are exposed to another person's suicide which may affect them psychologically. One estimate was that approximately 7% of the US population knew someone who died of suicide during the past 12 months. (Crosby and Sacks, 2002).
References
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Web-based Injury Statistics Query and Reporting System (WISQARS). Atlanta, GA: National Center for Injury Prevention and Control. Available at: www.cdc.gov/ncipc/wisqars. Last modified 2008 August 26.
Crosby AE, Sacks JJ. Exposure to suicide: Incidence and association with suicidal ideation and behavior – United States, 1994. Suicide and Life-Threatening Behavior 2002; 32:321–328.
Corso PS, Mercy JA, Simon TR, Finkelstein EA, & Miller TR. Medical Costs and Productivity Losses Due to Interpersonal Violence and Self- Directed Violence. American Journal of Preventive Medicine 2007: 32(6): 474–482.
May 04, 2010
Family Psychoeducation
Family Psychoeducation
Workbook
Chapter 12: Readings and Other Resources
Essential Readings For Practitioners
The following four books are recommended references for those wanting to master this approach. The first includes key elements of the Anderson and Falloon approach and should be read first. The Miklowitz, et al., book is an important reference for those working with consumers with bipolar disorder.
McFarlane, W.R., Multifamily Groups in the Treatment of Severe Psychiatric Disorders, New York, NY, Guilford, 2002.
Anderson, C., Hogarty, G., Reiss, D., Schizophrenia and the Family, New York, NY, Guilford Press, 1986
Falloon, I., Boyd, J., McGill, C., Family Care of Schizophrenia, New York, NY, Guilford Press, 1984.
Miklowitz, D.J., Goldstein, M., Bipolar Disorder: A Family-focused Treatment Approach, New York, NY, Guilford Press, 1997
Additional Resources For Practitioners
Amenson, C., Schizophrenia: A Family Education Curriculum, Pacific Clinics, 1998.
Provides 150 slides with lecture notes for a class for families with a member with schizophrenia. Includes information about the illness, medication and psychosocial treatments and the role of the family in promoting recovery.
Amenson, C., Schizophrenia: Family Education Methods, Pacific Clinics, 1998.
Companion handbook to Schizophrenia: A Family Education Curriculum provides methods for forming a class, optimizing the learning of families, and dealing with typical problems that arise in conducting family classes.
Mueser K, Glynn S: Behavioral Family Therapy for Psychiatric Disorders. Oakland, New Harbinger Publications, 1999
A comprehensive model of single-Family Psychoeducation that includes a multifamily discussion/support group. The book contains individual educational handouts for various psychiatric diagnoses and handout for various related topic areas.
Psychopharmacology
The Essential Guide to Psychiatric Drugs by J. Gorman, St. Martin’s Press, 1995.
Written for a sophisticated consumer, it is the most accessible source of information about psychotropic medications. It distills the Physician’s Desk Reference into understandable language. It describes the individual “trees” (such as Prozac) in the forest of medicines. “The benzodiazepines: Are they really dangerous?” is a typical section heading.
Medicine and Mental Illness by M. Lickey and B. Gordon, Freeman, 1991.
A scholarly yet readable work written for professionals, it is best at teaching the principles of diagnosis, neurophysiology and psychopharmacological treatment of mental illness. It describes the “forest” of psychopharmacology, why it is there and how it works. “The blockade of dopamine receptors and antipsychotic potency” is a typical section heading. It does not discuss the profiles of individual medications.
Cultural Competence
The Cross-Cultural Practice of Clinical Case Management in Mental Health edited by Peter Manoleas, Haworth Press, 1996.
A collection of useful articles about the role of gender, ethnicity, and acculturation in treatment seeking and response. Provides guidelines for engaging and intervening with specific ethnic and diagnostic groups in varying treatment contexts.
Videotapes
Schizophrenia Explained by William R. McFarlane, M.D. Produced by, and order from, the author at Maine Medical Center, 22 Bramhall Street, Portland, ME 04102. (Phone 207-871-2091). mcfarw@mmc.org
This provides a full review in lay language of the psychobiology of schizophrenia, emphasizing the key concepts in Family Psychoeducation: stress reduction, optimal environments and interactions for recovery, and support for the family’s ability to contribute to recovery in many ways. It is often used in lieu of a psychiatrist during Family Education Workshops and for staffs of case management programs, community residences and employment programs to help them understand how to assist consumers with this disorder.
Exploring Schizophrenia by Christopher S. Amenson, Ph.D. Produced by the California Alliance for the Mentally Ill (Phone 916-567-0163).
This videotape uses everyday language to describe schizophrenia and give guidelines for coping with illness for consumers and their families.
Surviving and Thriving with a Mentally Ill Relative by Christopher Amenson, Ph.D., Third edition 1998.
Eighteen hours of good “home video quality” videotapes cover schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, major depressive disorder, medication, psychosocial rehabilitation, relapse prevention, motivation, and family skills. Order from Paul Burk, 1352 Hidden Springs Lane, Glendora, CA 91740. (Phone 626-335-1307).
Critical Connections: A Schizophrenia Awareness Video produced by the American Psychiatric Association, 1997.
This 30 minute video was designed by the APA to help consumers and families cope with the disabling effects of schizophrenia. It provides a hopeful, reassuring message about new medications and psychosocial treatments that assist with recovery.
Exploring Bipolar Disorder by Jerome V. Vaccaro, M.D., 1996
One hour professional quality videotape describes the illness, recovery, and the role of the family. Persons with the illness contribute valuable insights. Produced by and ordered from the California Alliance for the Mentally Ill, 1111 Howe Avenue, Suite 475, Sacramento, CA 95825. Phone 916-567-0163.
Periodicals
Schizophrenia Bulletin
Highly technical and difficult to read but it is the ultimate source for research findings. The fall 1995 issue summarizes “Treatment Outcomes Research”.
Psychiatric Services
Practical articles in all aspects of mental illness. Brief clinically relevant articles on medication and other treatments. The most useful periodical for clinical staff.
Psychosocial Rehabilitation
Practical psychosocial rehabilitation articles. Easy to read and understand. Provides “how to” details. Contains good consumer written articles.
Other Resources
There are a number of excellent books written for persons with a mental illness and their families to help them understand and deal with these illnesses. Many of these are helpful for professionals directly and all are important resources to which to refer patients and families. (See Reading List for Families.) Many of the professional and family books are offered at a discount by The National Alliance on Mental Illness, 200 N. Glebe Road, Suite 1015, Arlington, VA 22203-3754. Phone 703-524-7600.
Books on Mood Disorders (Bipolar and Unipolar Depressions)
A Brilliant Madness: Living with Manic Depressive Illness by Patty Duke and Gloria Hochman. (Bantam, 1992)
Combines personal experience with clinical information to describe manic depression in understandable terms and provide guidelines for coping with it.
Control Your Depression by Peter Lewinsohn, Ricardo Munoz, Mary Ann Youngren, and Antonette Zeiss.(Prentice Hall, Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey, 1979)
Self-help book which assesses contributors to depression and includes activities, relaxation techniques, thinking, social skills, self-control, and specific ideas and exercises for each problem area.
The Depression Workbook by Mary Ellen Copeland. (Harbinger, 1992)
Assists individuals in taking responsibility for wellness by using charts and techniques to track and control moods. The most complete and useful self help book for bipolar and unipolar depressions.
The Feeling Good Handbook by David Burns, (Penguin, New York, NY, 1989)
Self-help book presents rationale for cognitive therapy for depression. Gives specific ideas and exercises to help change thought patterns associated with depression and other problems.
Lithium and Manic Depression: A Guide by John Bohn and James Jefferson.
A very helpful guide for people with manic depression and their families regarding lithium treatment. Order from Lithium Information Center, Department of Psychiatry, University of Wisconsin, 600 Highland Ave., Madison, WI 53792.
Our Special Mom and Our Special Dad by Tootsie Sobkiewicz (Pittsburgh: Children of Mentally Ill Parents, 1994 and 1996)
Two interactive storybooks that allow primary school age children to understand and identify with the problems associated with having a mentally ill parent. Can be well utilized by a relative or therapist in individual or group work.
Overcoming Depression, Third Edition by D. & J. Papolos (Harper & Row, 1997).
A comprehensive book written for persons suffering from manic depression and major depression, as well as their families. It is the best source of information about these disorders. Does not offer coping strategies. This book and The Depression Workbook are the best two to read.
An Unquiet Mind by Kay Redfield Jamison
A compelling and emotional account of the author’s awareness, denial, and acceptance of her bipolar disorder. It offers hope and insight regarding recovery for anyone who reads it.
Books on Dual Diagnosis (Mental Illness and Substance Abuse)
Alcohol, Street Drugs, and Emotional Problems: What you need to know by B. Pepper and H. Ryglewicz.
These informative pamphlets come in versions for the client, for the family and for professionals. They can be ordered from TIE Lines, 20 Squadron Blvd. Suite 400, New York, NY 10956.
Lives at Risk: Understanding and Treating Young People with Dual Disorders by B. Pepper and H. Rygelwicz
Poignant description of the combination of schizophrenia, mood disorders, and/or personality disorders with substance abuse. Strong on empathy and understanding of the multiple problems. Provides little specific guidance.
Hazelden Publications (RW9 P.O. Box 176, Center City, MN 55012-0176 Phone 1-800-328-9000 or Website www.htbookplace.org
Publishes a large number of pamphlets and self-help books on substance abuse and dual diagnoses. Examples of titles include:
Preventing Relapse Workbook
Taking Care of Yourself: When a family member has a dual diagnosis
Twelve Steps and Dual Disorders
Understanding Schizophrenia and Addiction
Books About Children Who Have a Mental Illness
Children and Adolescents with Mental Illness: A Parents Guide by E. McElroy (Woodbine House, 1988)
Useful guide written by a psychologist who heads the NAMI Children’s and Adolescent network.
Educational Rights of Children with Disorders: A Primer for Advocates by Center for Law and Education. (Cambridge 1991.)
Neurobiological Disorders in Children and Adolescents by E. Peschel, R. Peschel and C. Howe. (Oxford Press, 1992)
Biological mental illnesses among children are less common and less understood “family problems”. This book helps to define childhood neurobiological disorders and gives guidance for finding appropriate treatment.
Books on Special Topics
Planning for the Future and the Life Planning Workbook by L. Mark Russell and Arnold Grant (American Publishing Company, 1995)
This book and accompanying workbook are guides for parents seeking to provide for the future security and happiness of an adult child with a disability following the parents’ deaths.
A Parent’s Guide to Wills and Trusts by Don Silver. (Adams-Hall, 1992)
Information on how to protect a disabled child’s financial future, written by an attorney and NAMI member.
Schizophrenia and Genetic Risks by Irving Gottesman.
This pamphlet contains detailed information about this single topic. It may be ordered from NAMI.
A Street is Not a Home: Solving American’s Homeless Dilemma by Robert Coates. (Prometheus, 1990)
Analysis and guide to dealing with homelessness among persons suffering from mental illness.
Suicide Survivors: A Guide for Those Left Behind by Adina Wrobleski. (Afterwards, 1991.)
With an understanding attitude, the author explores and offers coping suggestions for the many issues that confront families who have had a member kill himself.
Reading List For Families With A Member Who Has A Mental Illness
(Annotations by Christopher S. Amenson, Ph.D.)
Books Which Offer Guidance To Families
Coping with Schizophrenia: A Guide for Families by Kim Mueser and Susan Gingerich. (New Harbinger, 1994)
Comprehensive guide to living with schizophrenia and the best source for practical advice on topics including medication, preventing relapse, communication, family rules, drug use, and planning for the future. Includes forms and worksheets for solving typical problems.
Schizophrenia: Straight Talk for Families and Friends by Maryellen Walsh. (Morrow & Co., 1985).
A parent who, as a professional writer, thoroughly researched the field writes this book. This book is emotional in ways that will touch you and deals with all the issues important to families of persons of schizophrenia. If you can read only one book, select this one if you want to feel understood; select Understanding Schizophrenia to access current research on causes and treatments; select Coping with Schizophrenia if you want concrete advice about coping with the illness.
Surviving Schizophrenia: A Family Manual, Third Edition by E. Fuller Torrey. (Harper & Row, 1995).
Beloved by the Alliance for the Mentally Ill because it was the first book in 1983 to support and educate families. Contains one of the best descriptions of “The Inner World of Madness”. Discusses the major topics in easy to read and very pro-family language.
Troubled Journey: Coming to Terms with the Mental Illness of a Sibling or Parent by Diane Marsh and Rex Dickens (Tarcher/Putnam, 1997)
The best book for siblings and adult children. Helps to recognize and resolve the impact of mental illness on childhood. Seeks to renew self-esteem and improve current family and other relationships.
Understanding Schizophrenia: A Guide to the New Research on Causes and Treatment by Richard Keefe and Philip Harvey. (The Free Press, 1994)
The best description of research on schizophrenia as of 1994. It provides more depth and detail than Surviving Schizophrenia and is a little more difficult to read. A must for families that want to understand the science of schizophrenia.
How to Live with a Mentally Ill Person: A Handbook of Day-to-Day Strategies by Christine Adamec. (John Wiley and Sons, 1996)
This comprehensive, easy-to-read book is written by a parent. It reviews methods for accepting the illness, dealing with life issues, developing coping strategies, negotiating the mental health system, and more.
Books Describing The Experience of Schizophrenia
Anguished Voices: Siblings and Adult Children of Persons with Psychiatric Disabilities by Rex Dickens and Diane Marsh (Center for Psychiatric Rehabilitation, 1994.)
Collection of 8 well-written articles which describe the impact of mental illness on siblings and children. A poignant statement of the issues across the life span that need to be addressed when a person grows up with mental illness in the family.
Crazy Quilt by Jocelyn Riley (William Morrow, 1984)
Fictional account of a 13-year-old girl whose mother has schizophrenia. Written for children and adolescents. Provides understanding for these forgotten victims.
Is There No Place on Earth for Me? by Susan Sheehan. (Houghton-Mifflin, 1982.)
A very realistic depiction of the experience of schizophrenic woman is interwoven with information about legal, funding, and treatment issues. Gives a good description of historical and political influences on the treatment of persons suffering from schizophrenia. Won the Pulitzer Prize.
Tell Me I’m Here: One Family’s Experience with Schizophrenia by Ann Devesch. (Penquin, 1992)
Written by a United Nations Media Peace Prize winner and founder of Schizophrenia Australia, this book describes their family’s experience.
The Quiet Room by Lori Schiller. (1994)
The life story of a person who had an almost full recovery from schizophrenia with clozapine. Great for its inspirational value.
The Skipping Stone: Ripple Effects of Mental Illness on the Family by Mona Wasow (Science and Behavior Books, 1995)
Describes the impact of mental illness on each member of the family in a “Tower of Babel”. Information is from in-depth interviews with family members and professionals.
The Girl with the Crazy Brother by Betty Hyland (Franklin Watts, 1986)
Written for adolescents by an Alliance for the Mentally Ill member. Describes in short novel form the experience of a teenage girl trying to understand the sudden deterioration of her older brother.
Website resources
Workbook
Chapter 12: Readings and Other Resources
Essential Readings For Practitioners
The following four books are recommended references for those wanting to master this approach. The first includes key elements of the Anderson and Falloon approach and should be read first. The Miklowitz, et al., book is an important reference for those working with consumers with bipolar disorder.
McFarlane, W.R., Multifamily Groups in the Treatment of Severe Psychiatric Disorders, New York, NY, Guilford, 2002.
Anderson, C., Hogarty, G., Reiss, D., Schizophrenia and the Family, New York, NY, Guilford Press, 1986
Falloon, I., Boyd, J., McGill, C., Family Care of Schizophrenia, New York, NY, Guilford Press, 1984.
Miklowitz, D.J., Goldstein, M., Bipolar Disorder: A Family-focused Treatment Approach, New York, NY, Guilford Press, 1997
Additional Resources For Practitioners
Amenson, C., Schizophrenia: A Family Education Curriculum, Pacific Clinics, 1998.
Provides 150 slides with lecture notes for a class for families with a member with schizophrenia. Includes information about the illness, medication and psychosocial treatments and the role of the family in promoting recovery.
Amenson, C., Schizophrenia: Family Education Methods, Pacific Clinics, 1998.
Companion handbook to Schizophrenia: A Family Education Curriculum provides methods for forming a class, optimizing the learning of families, and dealing with typical problems that arise in conducting family classes.
Mueser K, Glynn S: Behavioral Family Therapy for Psychiatric Disorders. Oakland, New Harbinger Publications, 1999
A comprehensive model of single-Family Psychoeducation that includes a multifamily discussion/support group. The book contains individual educational handouts for various psychiatric diagnoses and handout for various related topic areas.
Psychopharmacology
The Essential Guide to Psychiatric Drugs by J. Gorman, St. Martin’s Press, 1995.
Written for a sophisticated consumer, it is the most accessible source of information about psychotropic medications. It distills the Physician’s Desk Reference into understandable language. It describes the individual “trees” (such as Prozac) in the forest of medicines. “The benzodiazepines: Are they really dangerous?” is a typical section heading.
Medicine and Mental Illness by M. Lickey and B. Gordon, Freeman, 1991.
A scholarly yet readable work written for professionals, it is best at teaching the principles of diagnosis, neurophysiology and psychopharmacological treatment of mental illness. It describes the “forest” of psychopharmacology, why it is there and how it works. “The blockade of dopamine receptors and antipsychotic potency” is a typical section heading. It does not discuss the profiles of individual medications.
Cultural Competence
The Cross-Cultural Practice of Clinical Case Management in Mental Health edited by Peter Manoleas, Haworth Press, 1996.
A collection of useful articles about the role of gender, ethnicity, and acculturation in treatment seeking and response. Provides guidelines for engaging and intervening with specific ethnic and diagnostic groups in varying treatment contexts.
Videotapes
Schizophrenia Explained by William R. McFarlane, M.D. Produced by, and order from, the author at Maine Medical Center, 22 Bramhall Street, Portland, ME 04102. (Phone 207-871-2091). mcfarw@mmc.org
This provides a full review in lay language of the psychobiology of schizophrenia, emphasizing the key concepts in Family Psychoeducation: stress reduction, optimal environments and interactions for recovery, and support for the family’s ability to contribute to recovery in many ways. It is often used in lieu of a psychiatrist during Family Education Workshops and for staffs of case management programs, community residences and employment programs to help them understand how to assist consumers with this disorder.
Exploring Schizophrenia by Christopher S. Amenson, Ph.D. Produced by the California Alliance for the Mentally Ill (Phone 916-567-0163).
This videotape uses everyday language to describe schizophrenia and give guidelines for coping with illness for consumers and their families.
Surviving and Thriving with a Mentally Ill Relative by Christopher Amenson, Ph.D., Third edition 1998.
Eighteen hours of good “home video quality” videotapes cover schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, major depressive disorder, medication, psychosocial rehabilitation, relapse prevention, motivation, and family skills. Order from Paul Burk, 1352 Hidden Springs Lane, Glendora, CA 91740. (Phone 626-335-1307).
Critical Connections: A Schizophrenia Awareness Video produced by the American Psychiatric Association, 1997.
This 30 minute video was designed by the APA to help consumers and families cope with the disabling effects of schizophrenia. It provides a hopeful, reassuring message about new medications and psychosocial treatments that assist with recovery.
Exploring Bipolar Disorder by Jerome V. Vaccaro, M.D., 1996
One hour professional quality videotape describes the illness, recovery, and the role of the family. Persons with the illness contribute valuable insights. Produced by and ordered from the California Alliance for the Mentally Ill, 1111 Howe Avenue, Suite 475, Sacramento, CA 95825. Phone 916-567-0163.
Periodicals
Schizophrenia Bulletin
Highly technical and difficult to read but it is the ultimate source for research findings. The fall 1995 issue summarizes “Treatment Outcomes Research”.
Psychiatric Services
Practical articles in all aspects of mental illness. Brief clinically relevant articles on medication and other treatments. The most useful periodical for clinical staff.
Psychosocial Rehabilitation
Practical psychosocial rehabilitation articles. Easy to read and understand. Provides “how to” details. Contains good consumer written articles.
Other Resources
There are a number of excellent books written for persons with a mental illness and their families to help them understand and deal with these illnesses. Many of these are helpful for professionals directly and all are important resources to which to refer patients and families. (See Reading List for Families.) Many of the professional and family books are offered at a discount by The National Alliance on Mental Illness, 200 N. Glebe Road, Suite 1015, Arlington, VA 22203-3754. Phone 703-524-7600.
Books on Mood Disorders (Bipolar and Unipolar Depressions)
A Brilliant Madness: Living with Manic Depressive Illness by Patty Duke and Gloria Hochman. (Bantam, 1992)
Combines personal experience with clinical information to describe manic depression in understandable terms and provide guidelines for coping with it.
Control Your Depression by Peter Lewinsohn, Ricardo Munoz, Mary Ann Youngren, and Antonette Zeiss.(Prentice Hall, Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey, 1979)
Self-help book which assesses contributors to depression and includes activities, relaxation techniques, thinking, social skills, self-control, and specific ideas and exercises for each problem area.
The Depression Workbook by Mary Ellen Copeland. (Harbinger, 1992)
Assists individuals in taking responsibility for wellness by using charts and techniques to track and control moods. The most complete and useful self help book for bipolar and unipolar depressions.
The Feeling Good Handbook by David Burns, (Penguin, New York, NY, 1989)
Self-help book presents rationale for cognitive therapy for depression. Gives specific ideas and exercises to help change thought patterns associated with depression and other problems.
Lithium and Manic Depression: A Guide by John Bohn and James Jefferson.
A very helpful guide for people with manic depression and their families regarding lithium treatment. Order from Lithium Information Center, Department of Psychiatry, University of Wisconsin, 600 Highland Ave., Madison, WI 53792.
Our Special Mom and Our Special Dad by Tootsie Sobkiewicz (Pittsburgh: Children of Mentally Ill Parents, 1994 and 1996)
Two interactive storybooks that allow primary school age children to understand and identify with the problems associated with having a mentally ill parent. Can be well utilized by a relative or therapist in individual or group work.
Overcoming Depression, Third Edition by D. & J. Papolos (Harper & Row, 1997).
A comprehensive book written for persons suffering from manic depression and major depression, as well as their families. It is the best source of information about these disorders. Does not offer coping strategies. This book and The Depression Workbook are the best two to read.
An Unquiet Mind by Kay Redfield Jamison
A compelling and emotional account of the author’s awareness, denial, and acceptance of her bipolar disorder. It offers hope and insight regarding recovery for anyone who reads it.
Books on Dual Diagnosis (Mental Illness and Substance Abuse)
Alcohol, Street Drugs, and Emotional Problems: What you need to know by B. Pepper and H. Ryglewicz.
These informative pamphlets come in versions for the client, for the family and for professionals. They can be ordered from TIE Lines, 20 Squadron Blvd. Suite 400, New York, NY 10956.
Lives at Risk: Understanding and Treating Young People with Dual Disorders by B. Pepper and H. Rygelwicz
Poignant description of the combination of schizophrenia, mood disorders, and/or personality disorders with substance abuse. Strong on empathy and understanding of the multiple problems. Provides little specific guidance.
Hazelden Publications (RW9 P.O. Box 176, Center City, MN 55012-0176 Phone 1-800-328-9000 or Website www.htbookplace.org
Publishes a large number of pamphlets and self-help books on substance abuse and dual diagnoses. Examples of titles include:
Preventing Relapse Workbook
Taking Care of Yourself: When a family member has a dual diagnosis
Twelve Steps and Dual Disorders
Understanding Schizophrenia and Addiction
Books About Children Who Have a Mental Illness
Children and Adolescents with Mental Illness: A Parents Guide by E. McElroy (Woodbine House, 1988)
Useful guide written by a psychologist who heads the NAMI Children’s and Adolescent network.
Educational Rights of Children with Disorders: A Primer for Advocates by Center for Law and Education. (Cambridge 1991.)
Neurobiological Disorders in Children and Adolescents by E. Peschel, R. Peschel and C. Howe. (Oxford Press, 1992)
Biological mental illnesses among children are less common and less understood “family problems”. This book helps to define childhood neurobiological disorders and gives guidance for finding appropriate treatment.
Books on Special Topics
Planning for the Future and the Life Planning Workbook by L. Mark Russell and Arnold Grant (American Publishing Company, 1995)
This book and accompanying workbook are guides for parents seeking to provide for the future security and happiness of an adult child with a disability following the parents’ deaths.
A Parent’s Guide to Wills and Trusts by Don Silver. (Adams-Hall, 1992)
Information on how to protect a disabled child’s financial future, written by an attorney and NAMI member.
Schizophrenia and Genetic Risks by Irving Gottesman.
This pamphlet contains detailed information about this single topic. It may be ordered from NAMI.
A Street is Not a Home: Solving American’s Homeless Dilemma by Robert Coates. (Prometheus, 1990)
Analysis and guide to dealing with homelessness among persons suffering from mental illness.
Suicide Survivors: A Guide for Those Left Behind by Adina Wrobleski. (Afterwards, 1991.)
With an understanding attitude, the author explores and offers coping suggestions for the many issues that confront families who have had a member kill himself.
Reading List For Families With A Member Who Has A Mental Illness
(Annotations by Christopher S. Amenson, Ph.D.)
Books Which Offer Guidance To Families
Coping with Schizophrenia: A Guide for Families by Kim Mueser and Susan Gingerich. (New Harbinger, 1994)
Comprehensive guide to living with schizophrenia and the best source for practical advice on topics including medication, preventing relapse, communication, family rules, drug use, and planning for the future. Includes forms and worksheets for solving typical problems.
Schizophrenia: Straight Talk for Families and Friends by Maryellen Walsh. (Morrow & Co., 1985).
A parent who, as a professional writer, thoroughly researched the field writes this book. This book is emotional in ways that will touch you and deals with all the issues important to families of persons of schizophrenia. If you can read only one book, select this one if you want to feel understood; select Understanding Schizophrenia to access current research on causes and treatments; select Coping with Schizophrenia if you want concrete advice about coping with the illness.
Surviving Schizophrenia: A Family Manual, Third Edition by E. Fuller Torrey. (Harper & Row, 1995).
Beloved by the Alliance for the Mentally Ill because it was the first book in 1983 to support and educate families. Contains one of the best descriptions of “The Inner World of Madness”. Discusses the major topics in easy to read and very pro-family language.
Troubled Journey: Coming to Terms with the Mental Illness of a Sibling or Parent by Diane Marsh and Rex Dickens (Tarcher/Putnam, 1997)
The best book for siblings and adult children. Helps to recognize and resolve the impact of mental illness on childhood. Seeks to renew self-esteem and improve current family and other relationships.
Understanding Schizophrenia: A Guide to the New Research on Causes and Treatment by Richard Keefe and Philip Harvey. (The Free Press, 1994)
The best description of research on schizophrenia as of 1994. It provides more depth and detail than Surviving Schizophrenia and is a little more difficult to read. A must for families that want to understand the science of schizophrenia.
How to Live with a Mentally Ill Person: A Handbook of Day-to-Day Strategies by Christine Adamec. (John Wiley and Sons, 1996)
This comprehensive, easy-to-read book is written by a parent. It reviews methods for accepting the illness, dealing with life issues, developing coping strategies, negotiating the mental health system, and more.
Books Describing The Experience of Schizophrenia
Anguished Voices: Siblings and Adult Children of Persons with Psychiatric Disabilities by Rex Dickens and Diane Marsh (Center for Psychiatric Rehabilitation, 1994.)
Collection of 8 well-written articles which describe the impact of mental illness on siblings and children. A poignant statement of the issues across the life span that need to be addressed when a person grows up with mental illness in the family.
Crazy Quilt by Jocelyn Riley (William Morrow, 1984)
Fictional account of a 13-year-old girl whose mother has schizophrenia. Written for children and adolescents. Provides understanding for these forgotten victims.
Is There No Place on Earth for Me? by Susan Sheehan. (Houghton-Mifflin, 1982.)
A very realistic depiction of the experience of schizophrenic woman is interwoven with information about legal, funding, and treatment issues. Gives a good description of historical and political influences on the treatment of persons suffering from schizophrenia. Won the Pulitzer Prize.
Tell Me I’m Here: One Family’s Experience with Schizophrenia by Ann Devesch. (Penquin, 1992)
Written by a United Nations Media Peace Prize winner and founder of Schizophrenia Australia, this book describes their family’s experience.
The Quiet Room by Lori Schiller. (1994)
The life story of a person who had an almost full recovery from schizophrenia with clozapine. Great for its inspirational value.
The Skipping Stone: Ripple Effects of Mental Illness on the Family by Mona Wasow (Science and Behavior Books, 1995)
Describes the impact of mental illness on each member of the family in a “Tower of Babel”. Information is from in-depth interviews with family members and professionals.
The Girl with the Crazy Brother by Betty Hyland (Franklin Watts, 1986)
Written for adolescents by an Alliance for the Mentally Ill member. Describes in short novel form the experience of a teenage girl trying to understand the sudden deterioration of her older brother.
Website resources
April 09, 2010
An Overview of the Illness Management and Recovery Program
An Overview of the Illness Management and Recovery Program
for more on this topic,
mft ceus
The Illness Management and Recovery Program consists of a series of weekly sessions where mental health practitioners help people who have experienced psychiatric symptoms to develop personalized strategies for managing their mental illness and moving forward in their lives. The program can be provided in an individual or group format, and generally lasts between three and six months. In the sessions, practitioners work collaboratively with people, offering a variety of information, strategies, and skills that people can use to further their own recovery. There is a strong emphasis on helping people set and pursue personal goals and helping them put strategies into action in their everyday lives.
Materials for Providing the Illness Management and Recovery Program
In the Practitioners’ Workbook (this document) there are two sets of materials for Illness Management and Recovery: the Practitioners’ Guide (Chapters 1-10) and Educational Handouts. The educational handouts contain practical information and strategies that people can use in the recovery process. The handouts are not meant to stand alone. Practitioners are expected to help people select and put into practice the knowledge and strategies that are most helpful to themselves as individuals. The following topics are covered in nine educational handouts:
Recovery Strategies
Practical Facts about Schizophrenia/Bipolar Disorder/ Depression
The Stress-Vulnerability Model and Strategies for Treatment
Building Social Support
Using Medication Effectively
Reducing Relapses
Coping with Stress
Coping with Problems and Symptoms
Getting Your Needs Met in the Mental Health System
Chapter 1 of the Practitioners’ Guide contains overall strategies for conducting the program, and Chapters 2-10 contain practitioner guidelines for using each of the educational handouts to conduct sessions. The guidelines contain specific suggestions for using motivational, educational, and cognitive behavioral techniques to help people use strategies from the handouts in their daily lives. They also provide tips for developing homework assignments and for dealing with problems that might arise during sessions.
Getting started
First, practitioners are advised to familiarize themselves with the format, content and tone of the program. This can be accomplished by first reading the following:
Chapter 1 of the Practitioners’ Guide
Educational Handout #1 (“Recovery Strategies”)
Practitioner Guidelines for Educational Handout #1 (“Recovery Strategies”)
It is optimal for practitioners to read the remaining educational handouts and accompanying practitioners’ guidelines before beginning to work with people. Practitioners are advised to review specific handouts and guidelines prior to addressing these particular topic areas with people.
Preparing For Sessions
The first session is usually spent on orientation, using the “Orientation Sheet” (see Appendix 1) as a guide. The second (and sometimes third) session is spent on getting to know the person better, using the ”Knowledge and Skills Inventory” (see Appendix 2) as a guide. This inventory is focused on the person’s positive attributes rather than their problems or “deficits.” It is important to gather information in a friendly, low- key manner, using a conversational tone. The remaining sessions are focused on helping people to learn and practice the information and strategies in the educational handouts and to set and pursue their personal goals. Each session should be documented, using the “Progress Note for Illness Management and Recovery” (Appendix 3). The format of the progress note helps practitioners to keep track of the person’s personal goals, the kinds of interventions provided (motivational, educational, cognitive-behavioral), the specific evidence-based skill(s) that are taught (coping skills, relapse prevention skills and behavioral tailoring skills) and the homework that is agreed upon.
Before beginning each educational handout, the practitioner is encouraged to review the contents of the handout and the practitioner guidelines of the same title in the Practitioners’ Guide. Most educational handouts will require two to four sessions to put the important principles into practice. Preparation for sessions is most effective when practitioners review the educational handout and the corresponding practitioners’ guidelines side-by-side, noting the goals of the handout, the specific topic headings, the probe questions, the checklists, etc. As noted above, sessions should be recorded on the form “Progress Note for Illness Management and Recovery” (Appendix 3). Although for many people it is most helpful to go through the handouts in the order they are listed, it is important to tailor the program to respond to individual needs. For example, when a person is very distressed by the symptoms he or she is experiencing, it would be preferable to address this problem early in the program using Educational Handout #8, “Coping with Problems and Symptoms. ” Practitioners need to be responsive to people’s concerns and use their clinical judgment regarding the order and pacing of handouts.
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Importance of Recovery
There is widespread acceptance of the importance of recovery as a guiding vision for helping people who experience psychiatric symptoms to achieve personal success in their lives. The term recovery means different things to different individuals. Each person is free to define it in his or her terms. For some individuals, recovery means no longer having any symptoms or signs of a mental illness. For others, recovery means taking on challenges, enjoying the pleasures life has to offer, pursuing personal dreams and goals, and learning how to cope with or grow past one’s mental illness despite symptoms or setbacks.
Regardless of the personal understanding each individual develops about recovery, the overriding message is one of hope and optimism. The recovery vision is at the heart of the Illness Management and Recovery Toolkit. Through learning information about mental illness and its treatment, developing skills for reducing relapses, dealing with stress, and coping with symptoms, people can become empowered to manage their own illness, to find their own goals for recovery, and to assume responsibility for directing their own treatment. People who experience psychiatric symptoms are not passive recipients of treatment, and the goal is not to make them “comply” with treatment recommendations. Rather, the focus of Illness Management and Recovery is providing people with the information and skills they need in order to make informed decisions about their own treatment.
Broadly speaking, the goals of Illness Management and Recovery are to:
Instill hope that change is possible
Develop a collaborative relationship with a treatment team
Help people establish personally meaningful goals to strive towards
Teach information about mental illness and treatment options
Develop skills for reducing relapses, dealing with stress, and coping with symptoms
Provide information about where to obtain needed resources
Help people develop or enhance their natural supports for managing their illness and pursuing goals
Back to top
Importance of Helping People Set and Pursue Personal Goals
Being able to set and pursue personal goals is an essential part of recovery. At the same time that information and skills are being taught in the Illness Management and Recovery Program, people are also helped to define what recovery means to them and to identify what goals and dreams are important to them. The first educational handout, “Recovery Strategies,” contains specific information about setting goals. However, throughout the entire program, practitioners help people set meaningful personal goals and follow up regularly on those goals. As people gain more mastery over their psychiatric symptoms, they gain more control over their lives and become better able to realize their vision of recovery. In each session of the program, practitioners should follow up on the participants’ progress towards their goals. “Goals Set in the Illness Management and Recovery Program” (Appendix 5) helps practitioners to keep track of a person’s goals. Another form, “Step-By-Step Problem-Solving and Goal Achievement” (Appendix 6) is useful for helping a person plan the steps for achieving a goal (or solving a problem).
Back to top
Logistics
The content and teaching methods used in the Illness Management and Recovery Program are derived from multiple studies of professionally based illness management training programs for people who have experienced psychiatric symptoms. Information is taught using a combination of motivational, educational, and cognitive-behavioral teaching principles. Critical information is summarized in educational handouts that are written for people who experience psychiatric symptoms but are also suitable for distribution to anyone with a professional or caring relationship with a person who experiences psychiatric symptoms (such as a case manager or a family member).
The information and skills taught in Illness management and Recovery are organized into nine topic areas: recovery strategies, practical facts about mental illness, the stress-vulnerability model, building social support, using medication effectively, reducing relapses, coping with stress, coping with problems and symptoms, and getting your needs met in the mental health system. There are educational handouts and practitioners’ guidelines for each topic area.
Each topic is taught using a combination of motivational, educational, and cognitive behavioral methods. Also, in order to help people apply the information and skills that they learn in the sessions to their day-to-day lives, the practitioner and the person collaborate to develop homework assignments at the end of each session. These homework assignments are tailored to the individual, to help him or her practice strategies in “the real world.” Because developing and enhancing natural supports is a goal of Illness Management and Recovery, people are encouraged to identify significant others with whom they can share the handout materials and who may support them in applying newly acquired skills or completing homework.
The amount of time required to teach Illness Management and Recovery depends on a variety of factors, including people’s prior knowledge and level of skills, the problem areas that they would like to work on, and the presence of either cognitive difficulties or severe symptoms that may slow the learning process. In general, between three and six months of weekly sessions of 45 to 60 minutes may be required to teach Illness Management and Recovery. Following the completion of the nine topic areas, people may also benefit from either booster sessions or participation in support groups aimed at using and expanding skills.
for more on this topic,
mft ceus
The Illness Management and Recovery Program consists of a series of weekly sessions where mental health practitioners help people who have experienced psychiatric symptoms to develop personalized strategies for managing their mental illness and moving forward in their lives. The program can be provided in an individual or group format, and generally lasts between three and six months. In the sessions, practitioners work collaboratively with people, offering a variety of information, strategies, and skills that people can use to further their own recovery. There is a strong emphasis on helping people set and pursue personal goals and helping them put strategies into action in their everyday lives.
Materials for Providing the Illness Management and Recovery Program
In the Practitioners’ Workbook (this document) there are two sets of materials for Illness Management and Recovery: the Practitioners’ Guide (Chapters 1-10) and Educational Handouts. The educational handouts contain practical information and strategies that people can use in the recovery process. The handouts are not meant to stand alone. Practitioners are expected to help people select and put into practice the knowledge and strategies that are most helpful to themselves as individuals. The following topics are covered in nine educational handouts:
Recovery Strategies
Practical Facts about Schizophrenia/Bipolar Disorder/ Depression
The Stress-Vulnerability Model and Strategies for Treatment
Building Social Support
Using Medication Effectively
Reducing Relapses
Coping with Stress
Coping with Problems and Symptoms
Getting Your Needs Met in the Mental Health System
Chapter 1 of the Practitioners’ Guide contains overall strategies for conducting the program, and Chapters 2-10 contain practitioner guidelines for using each of the educational handouts to conduct sessions. The guidelines contain specific suggestions for using motivational, educational, and cognitive behavioral techniques to help people use strategies from the handouts in their daily lives. They also provide tips for developing homework assignments and for dealing with problems that might arise during sessions.
Getting started
First, practitioners are advised to familiarize themselves with the format, content and tone of the program. This can be accomplished by first reading the following:
Chapter 1 of the Practitioners’ Guide
Educational Handout #1 (“Recovery Strategies”)
Practitioner Guidelines for Educational Handout #1 (“Recovery Strategies”)
It is optimal for practitioners to read the remaining educational handouts and accompanying practitioners’ guidelines before beginning to work with people. Practitioners are advised to review specific handouts and guidelines prior to addressing these particular topic areas with people.
Preparing For Sessions
The first session is usually spent on orientation, using the “Orientation Sheet” (see Appendix 1) as a guide. The second (and sometimes third) session is spent on getting to know the person better, using the ”Knowledge and Skills Inventory” (see Appendix 2) as a guide. This inventory is focused on the person’s positive attributes rather than their problems or “deficits.” It is important to gather information in a friendly, low- key manner, using a conversational tone. The remaining sessions are focused on helping people to learn and practice the information and strategies in the educational handouts and to set and pursue their personal goals. Each session should be documented, using the “Progress Note for Illness Management and Recovery” (Appendix 3). The format of the progress note helps practitioners to keep track of the person’s personal goals, the kinds of interventions provided (motivational, educational, cognitive-behavioral), the specific evidence-based skill(s) that are taught (coping skills, relapse prevention skills and behavioral tailoring skills) and the homework that is agreed upon.
Before beginning each educational handout, the practitioner is encouraged to review the contents of the handout and the practitioner guidelines of the same title in the Practitioners’ Guide. Most educational handouts will require two to four sessions to put the important principles into practice. Preparation for sessions is most effective when practitioners review the educational handout and the corresponding practitioners’ guidelines side-by-side, noting the goals of the handout, the specific topic headings, the probe questions, the checklists, etc. As noted above, sessions should be recorded on the form “Progress Note for Illness Management and Recovery” (Appendix 3). Although for many people it is most helpful to go through the handouts in the order they are listed, it is important to tailor the program to respond to individual needs. For example, when a person is very distressed by the symptoms he or she is experiencing, it would be preferable to address this problem early in the program using Educational Handout #8, “Coping with Problems and Symptoms. ” Practitioners need to be responsive to people’s concerns and use their clinical judgment regarding the order and pacing of handouts.
Back to top
Importance of Recovery
There is widespread acceptance of the importance of recovery as a guiding vision for helping people who experience psychiatric symptoms to achieve personal success in their lives. The term recovery means different things to different individuals. Each person is free to define it in his or her terms. For some individuals, recovery means no longer having any symptoms or signs of a mental illness. For others, recovery means taking on challenges, enjoying the pleasures life has to offer, pursuing personal dreams and goals, and learning how to cope with or grow past one’s mental illness despite symptoms or setbacks.
Regardless of the personal understanding each individual develops about recovery, the overriding message is one of hope and optimism. The recovery vision is at the heart of the Illness Management and Recovery Toolkit. Through learning information about mental illness and its treatment, developing skills for reducing relapses, dealing with stress, and coping with symptoms, people can become empowered to manage their own illness, to find their own goals for recovery, and to assume responsibility for directing their own treatment. People who experience psychiatric symptoms are not passive recipients of treatment, and the goal is not to make them “comply” with treatment recommendations. Rather, the focus of Illness Management and Recovery is providing people with the information and skills they need in order to make informed decisions about their own treatment.
Broadly speaking, the goals of Illness Management and Recovery are to:
Instill hope that change is possible
Develop a collaborative relationship with a treatment team
Help people establish personally meaningful goals to strive towards
Teach information about mental illness and treatment options
Develop skills for reducing relapses, dealing with stress, and coping with symptoms
Provide information about where to obtain needed resources
Help people develop or enhance their natural supports for managing their illness and pursuing goals
Back to top
Importance of Helping People Set and Pursue Personal Goals
Being able to set and pursue personal goals is an essential part of recovery. At the same time that information and skills are being taught in the Illness Management and Recovery Program, people are also helped to define what recovery means to them and to identify what goals and dreams are important to them. The first educational handout, “Recovery Strategies,” contains specific information about setting goals. However, throughout the entire program, practitioners help people set meaningful personal goals and follow up regularly on those goals. As people gain more mastery over their psychiatric symptoms, they gain more control over their lives and become better able to realize their vision of recovery. In each session of the program, practitioners should follow up on the participants’ progress towards their goals. “Goals Set in the Illness Management and Recovery Program” (Appendix 5) helps practitioners to keep track of a person’s goals. Another form, “Step-By-Step Problem-Solving and Goal Achievement” (Appendix 6) is useful for helping a person plan the steps for achieving a goal (or solving a problem).
Back to top
Logistics
The content and teaching methods used in the Illness Management and Recovery Program are derived from multiple studies of professionally based illness management training programs for people who have experienced psychiatric symptoms. Information is taught using a combination of motivational, educational, and cognitive-behavioral teaching principles. Critical information is summarized in educational handouts that are written for people who experience psychiatric symptoms but are also suitable for distribution to anyone with a professional or caring relationship with a person who experiences psychiatric symptoms (such as a case manager or a family member).
The information and skills taught in Illness management and Recovery are organized into nine topic areas: recovery strategies, practical facts about mental illness, the stress-vulnerability model, building social support, using medication effectively, reducing relapses, coping with stress, coping with problems and symptoms, and getting your needs met in the mental health system. There are educational handouts and practitioners’ guidelines for each topic area.
Each topic is taught using a combination of motivational, educational, and cognitive behavioral methods. Also, in order to help people apply the information and skills that they learn in the sessions to their day-to-day lives, the practitioner and the person collaborate to develop homework assignments at the end of each session. These homework assignments are tailored to the individual, to help him or her practice strategies in “the real world.” Because developing and enhancing natural supports is a goal of Illness Management and Recovery, people are encouraged to identify significant others with whom they can share the handout materials and who may support them in applying newly acquired skills or completing homework.
The amount of time required to teach Illness Management and Recovery depends on a variety of factors, including people’s prior knowledge and level of skills, the problem areas that they would like to work on, and the presence of either cognitive difficulties or severe symptoms that may slow the learning process. In general, between three and six months of weekly sessions of 45 to 60 minutes may be required to teach Illness Management and Recovery. Following the completion of the nine topic areas, people may also benefit from either booster sessions or participation in support groups aimed at using and expanding skills.
March 02, 2010
Helping Children Cope With Fear & Anxiety
Helping Children Cope With Fear & Anxiety
Whether tragic events touch your family personally or are brought into your home via newspapers and television, you can help children cope with the anxiety that violence, death and disasters can cause.
The Caring for Every Child's Mental Health Campaign offers these pointers for parents and other caregivers:
Encourage children to ask questions. Listen to what they say. Provide comfort and assurance that address their specific fears. It's okay to admit you can't answer all of their questions.
Talk on their level. Communicate with your children in a way they can understand. Don't get too technical or complicated.
Be honest. Tell them exactly what has happened. For example, don't say that someone who has died has "gone to sleep;" children may become afraid of going to bed.
Find out what frightens them. Encourage your children to talk about fears they may have. They may worry that someone will harm them at school or that someone will try to hurt you.
Focus on the positive. Reinforce the fact that most people are kind and caring. Remind your child of the heroic actions taken by ordinary people to help victims of tragedy.
Pay attention. Your children's play and drawings may give you a glimpse into their questions or concerns. Ask them to tell you what is going on in the game or the picture. It's an opportunity to clarify any misconceptions, answer questions and give reassurance.
Develop a plan. Establish a family emergency plan for the future, such as a meeting place where everyone should gather if something unexpected happens in your family or neighborhood. It can help you and your child feel safer.
If you are concerned about your child's reaction to stress or trauma, call your physician or a community mental health center.
To learn more about children's mental health:
Call toll-free: 1.800.789.2647
(TDD): 301.443.9006
Web site: mentalhealth.samhsa.gov/child
Comprehensive Community Mental Health Services
for Children and Their Families Program
Child, Adolescent and Family Branch
Center for Mental Health Services
Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
Whether tragic events touch your family personally or are brought into your home via newspapers and television, you can help children cope with the anxiety that violence, death and disasters can cause.
The Caring for Every Child's Mental Health Campaign offers these pointers for parents and other caregivers:
Encourage children to ask questions. Listen to what they say. Provide comfort and assurance that address their specific fears. It's okay to admit you can't answer all of their questions.
Talk on their level. Communicate with your children in a way they can understand. Don't get too technical or complicated.
Be honest. Tell them exactly what has happened. For example, don't say that someone who has died has "gone to sleep;" children may become afraid of going to bed.
Find out what frightens them. Encourage your children to talk about fears they may have. They may worry that someone will harm them at school or that someone will try to hurt you.
Focus on the positive. Reinforce the fact that most people are kind and caring. Remind your child of the heroic actions taken by ordinary people to help victims of tragedy.
Pay attention. Your children's play and drawings may give you a glimpse into their questions or concerns. Ask them to tell you what is going on in the game or the picture. It's an opportunity to clarify any misconceptions, answer questions and give reassurance.
Develop a plan. Establish a family emergency plan for the future, such as a meeting place where everyone should gather if something unexpected happens in your family or neighborhood. It can help you and your child feel safer.
If you are concerned about your child's reaction to stress or trauma, call your physician or a community mental health center.
To learn more about children's mental health:
Call toll-free: 1.800.789.2647
(TDD): 301.443.9006
Web site: mentalhealth.samhsa.gov/child
Comprehensive Community Mental Health Services
for Children and Their Families Program
Child, Adolescent and Family Branch
Center for Mental Health Services
Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
February 23, 2010
MFT CEUS and MFT Resources
MFT CEUS and MFT Resources
Online Continuing Education for LMFT, MFTI, LCSW, ASW
Satisfy your CE requirements conveniently anywhere you have online access.
Take your test and even print your completion certificate at any time.
Take as much time as needed to complete the exam.
Take the exam as many times necessary to receive a 70% passing score.
Pay only after you have passed your exam.
Earn hours for passing exams based on books you may have already read.
Listen to selected audio courses directly from your computer or MP3 player.
Take some time to browse our courses, and become a part of the Aspira family.
Course Listing:
Domestic Violence/Spousal and Partner Abuse
Substance Abuse and Dependence
Law and Ethics (Califonia only)
HIV and Aids
Aging and Long Term Care
Child Abuse
Crisis Counseling
Cross Cultural Counseling
Managed Care
PTSD
Anxiety Disorders
Depressive Disorder
Medical Necessity
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy
Pychopharmacology
BipolarDisorder
Conflict Resolution
Anger Management
Assessment and Diagnosis
Elder Abuse
Family Therapy
Group Therapy
Human Sexuality
Online Continuing Education for LMFT, MFTI, LCSW, ASW
Satisfy your CE requirements conveniently anywhere you have online access.
Take your test and even print your completion certificate at any time.
Take as much time as needed to complete the exam.
Take the exam as many times necessary to receive a 70% passing score.
Pay only after you have passed your exam.
Earn hours for passing exams based on books you may have already read.
Listen to selected audio courses directly from your computer or MP3 player.
Take some time to browse our courses, and become a part of the Aspira family.
Course Listing:
Domestic Violence/Spousal and Partner Abuse
Substance Abuse and Dependence
Law and Ethics (Califonia only)
HIV and Aids
Aging and Long Term Care
Child Abuse
Crisis Counseling
Cross Cultural Counseling
Managed Care
PTSD
Anxiety Disorders
Depressive Disorder
Medical Necessity
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy
Pychopharmacology
BipolarDisorder
Conflict Resolution
Anger Management
Assessment and Diagnosis
Elder Abuse
Family Therapy
Group Therapy
Human Sexuality
February 22, 2010
Women's Mental Health
Since the publication of Mental Health: A Report of the Surgeon General in 1999, an increasing body of evidence from the research base, public policy analysis, consumer advocacy, and health care practice has underscored the critical importance of mental health to the overall health of women—and to our Nation as a whole. Many advances have been made in our understanding of mental illnesses, effective treatments, and promising approaches for promoting mental health, resilience, and fulfilling lives for those living with mental illnesses. A key component of this progress has been the increased understanding of the critical role of gender in the risks, course, and treatment of mental illnesses. New research findings also have pointed to the effectiveness of a growing array of treatment options for mental illnesses and of a new model of treatment that is recovery-oriented, strengths-based, and includes the active participation of individuals in their treatment. The recent advances in the science and practice of women’s mental health provide an unprecedented opportunity to address the burden of mental illnesses on women’s lives and increase the capacity for recovery. However, for this knowledge to be effective, it must be translated into tangible actions that can promote change and support progress to improve the mental and overall health of our Nation’s women and girls. Thus, this report proposes the following actions:
Promote the widespread understanding that women’s mental health is an essential part of their overall health.
Improve the interface of primary care and mental health services for women.
Accelerate research to increase the knowledge base of the role of gender in mental health and to reduce the burden of mental illnesses in both women and men.
Increase gender and cultural diversity in academic research and medicine.
Support efforts to track the mental health, distress, and well-being of women and girls in national, State, and large community-based surveillance systems.
Decrease the amount of time it requires to translate research findings on women’s mental health into practice.
Recognize the unique prevalence of trauma, violence, and abuse in the lives and mental health of girls, women, and female veterans. Address their effects and support promising new approaches that enhance recovery.
Address the cultural and social disparities that place women at greater risk for certain mental illnesses by including considerations of these disparities in diagnosis and intervention and by investigating ways to increase cultural competence in treatment approaches.
Promote a recovery-oriented, strengths-based approach to treatment for women promulgated by the recommendations of the President’s New Freedom Commission.
Build resilience and protective factors to promote the mental health of girls and women and aid recovery.
Meet the mental health needs of girls and young women as part of overall health care.
for more on this topic visit link below
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Incorporate gender issues and considerations in emergency preparedness and disaster planning, including mental health issues.
The Action Steps for Improving Women’s Mental Health represent a collaborative effort of women’s health experts across multiple agencies and offices of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) including the HHS Office on Women’s Health, Office of the Surgeon General, Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, Office of Minority Health, National Institute of Mental Health, National Institute on Drug Abuse, Indian Health Service, and Office of the Assistant Secretary for Policy and Evaluation. Its purpose is to spur positive changes. The hope is that policy planners, healthcare providers, researchers, and others will take up its suggested actions and help translate them into reality. In this way, we can promote improved mental health and a healthier future for the women and girls of America.
Promote the widespread understanding that women’s mental health is an essential part of their overall health.
Improve the interface of primary care and mental health services for women.
Accelerate research to increase the knowledge base of the role of gender in mental health and to reduce the burden of mental illnesses in both women and men.
Increase gender and cultural diversity in academic research and medicine.
Support efforts to track the mental health, distress, and well-being of women and girls in national, State, and large community-based surveillance systems.
Decrease the amount of time it requires to translate research findings on women’s mental health into practice.
Recognize the unique prevalence of trauma, violence, and abuse in the lives and mental health of girls, women, and female veterans. Address their effects and support promising new approaches that enhance recovery.
Address the cultural and social disparities that place women at greater risk for certain mental illnesses by including considerations of these disparities in diagnosis and intervention and by investigating ways to increase cultural competence in treatment approaches.
Promote a recovery-oriented, strengths-based approach to treatment for women promulgated by the recommendations of the President’s New Freedom Commission.
Build resilience and protective factors to promote the mental health of girls and women and aid recovery.
Meet the mental health needs of girls and young women as part of overall health care.
for more on this topic visit link below
mft ceussit link below
Incorporate gender issues and considerations in emergency preparedness and disaster planning, including mental health issues.
The Action Steps for Improving Women’s Mental Health represent a collaborative effort of women’s health experts across multiple agencies and offices of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) including the HHS Office on Women’s Health, Office of the Surgeon General, Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, Office of Minority Health, National Institute of Mental Health, National Institute on Drug Abuse, Indian Health Service, and Office of the Assistant Secretary for Policy and Evaluation. Its purpose is to spur positive changes. The hope is that policy planners, healthcare providers, researchers, and others will take up its suggested actions and help translate them into reality. In this way, we can promote improved mental health and a healthier future for the women and girls of America.
February 20, 2010
BUSINESS AND PROFESSIONS CODE OF CALIFORNIA
BUSINESS AND PROFESSIONS CODE OF CALIFORNIA
CHAPTER 13. MARRIAGE AND FAMILY THERAPISTS
ARTICLE 1. REGULATION
§4980. NECESSITY OF LICENSE
(a) Many California families and many individual Californians are experiencing difficulty and distress, and are in need of wise, competent, caring, compassionate, and effective counseling in order to enable them to improve and maintain healthy family relationships. Healthy individuals and healthy families and healthy relationships are inherently beneficial and crucial to a healthy society, and are our most precious and valuable natural resource. Marriage and family therapists provide a crucial support for the well-being of the people and the State of California. (b) No person may engage in the practice of marriage and family therapy as defined by Section 4980.02, unless he or she holds a valid license as a marriage and family therapist, or unless he or she is specifically exempted from that requirement, nor may any person advertise himself or herself as performing the services of a marriage, family, child, domestic, or marital consultant, or in any way use these or any similar titles, including the letters “M.F.T.” or “M.F.C.C.,” or other name, word initial, or symbol in connection with or following his or her name to imply that he or she performs these services without a license as provided by this chapter. Persons licensed under Article 4 (commencing with Section 4996) of Chapter 14 of Division 2, or under Chapter 6.6 (commencing with Section 2900) may engage in such practice or advertise that they practice marriage and family therapy but may not advertise that they hold the marriage and family therapist’s license.
§4980.01. CONSTRUCTION WITH OTHER LAWS; NONAPPLICATION TO CERTAIN PROFESSIONALS AND EMPLOYEES
(a) Nothing in this chapter shall be construed to constrict, limit, or withdraw the Medical Practice Act, the Social Work Licensing Law, the Nursing Practice Act, or the Psychology Licensing Act. (b) This chapter shall not apply to any priest, rabbi, or minister of the gospel of any religious denomination when performing counseling services as part of his or her pastoral or professional duties, or to any person who is admitted to practice law in the state, or who is licensed to practice medicine, when providing counseling services as part of his or her professional practice. (c) (1) This chapter shall not apply to an employee working in any of the following settings if his or her work is performed solely under the supervision of the employer: (A) A governmental entity. (B) A school, college, or university. (C) An institution that is both nonprofit and charitable. (2) This chapter shall not apply to a volunteer working in any of the settings described in paragraph (1) if his or her work is performed solely under the supervision of the entity, school, or institution.
10
(d) A marriage and family therapist licensed under this chapter is a licentiate for purposes of paragraph (2) of subdivision (a) of Section 805, and thus is a health care practitioner subject to the provisions of Section 2290.5 pursuant to subdivision (b) of that section. (e) Notwithstanding subdivisions (b) and (c), all persons registered as interns or licensed under this chapter shall not be exempt from this chapter or the jurisdiction of the board
§4980.02. PRACTICE OF MARRIAGE, FAMILY AND CHILD COUNSELING; APPLICATION OF PRINCIPLES AND METHODS
For the purposes of this chapter, the practice of marriage and family therapy shall mean that service performed with individuals, couples, or groups wherein interpersonal relationships are examined for the purpose of achieving more adequate, satisfying, and productive marriage and family adjustments. This practice includes relationship and pre-marriage counseling. The application of marriage and family therapy principles and methods includes, but is not limited to, the use of applied psychotherapeutic techniques, to enable individuals to mature and grow within marriage and the family, the provision of explanations and interpretations of the psychosexual and psychosocial aspects of relationships, and the use, application, and integration of the coursework and training required by Sections 4980.36, 4980.37, and 4980.41.
§4980.03. DEFINITIONS
(a) "Board," as used in this chapter, means the Board of Behavioral Sciences. (b) "Intern," as used in this chapter, means an unlicensed person who has earned his or her master's or doctor's degree qualifying him or her for licensure and is registered with the board. (c) "Trainee," as used in this chapter, means an unlicensed person who is currently enrolled in a master's or doctor's degree program, as specified in Section 4980.36 and 4980.37, that is designed to qualify him or her for licensure under this chapter, and who has completed no less than 12 semester units or 18 quarter units of coursework in any qualifying degree program. (d) "Applicant," as used in this chapter, means an unlicensed person who has completed a master's or doctoral degree program, as specified in Section 4980.36 and 4980.37, and whose application for registration as an intern is pending, or an unlicensed person who has completed the requirements for licensure as specified in this chapter, is no longer registered with the board as an intern, and is currently in the examination process. (e) "Advertise," as used in this chapter, includes, but is not limited to, any public communication, as define din subdivision (a) of Section 651, the issuance of any card, sign, or device to any person, or the causing, permitting, or allowing of any sign or marking on, or in, any building or structure, or in any newspaper or magazine or in any directory, or any printed matter whatsoever, with or without any limiting qualification. Signs within church buildings or notices in church bulletins mailed to a congregation shall not be construed as advertising within the meaning of this chapter. (f) "Experience," as used in this chapter, means experience in interpersonal relationships, psychotherapy, marriage and family therapy, and professional enrichment activities that satisfies the requirement for licensure as a marriage and family therapist pursuant to Section 4980.40. (g) "Supervisor," as used in this chapter, means an individual who meets all of the following requirements:
(1) Has been licensed by a state regulatory agency for at least two years as a marriage and family therapist,
11
licensed clinical social worker, licensed psychologist, or licensed physician certified in psychiatry by the American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology. (2) Has not provided therapeutic services to the trainee or intern. (3) Has a current and valid license that is not under suspension or probation. (4) Complies with supervision requirements established by this chapter and by board regulations. (h) "Client centered advocacy," as used in this chapter, includes, but is not limited to, researching, identifying, and accessing resources, or other activities, related to obtaining or providing services and supports for clients or groups of clients receiving psychotherapy or counseling services.
§4980.04. MARRIAGE AND FAMILY THERAPIST ACT
This chapter shall be known and may be cited as the Marriage and Family Therapist Act.
§4980.07. ADMINISTRATION OF CHAPTER
The board shall administer the provisions of this chapter.
§4980.08. LICENSE TITLE NAME CHANGE
(a) The title “licensed marriage, family and child counselor” or “marriage, family and child counselor” is hereby renamed “licensed marriage and family therapist” or “marriage and family therapist,” respectively. Any reference in any statute or regulation to a “licensed marriage, family and child counselor” or “marriage, family and child counselor” shall be deemed a reference to a “licensed marriage and family therapist” or “marriage and family therapist”. (b) Nothing in this section shall be construed to expand or constrict the scope of practice of a person licensed pursuant to this chapter. (c) This section shall become operative July 1, 1999.
§4980.10. ENGAGING IN PRACTICE
A person engages in the practice of marriage and family therapy who performs or offers to perform or holds himself or herself out as able to perform this service for remuneration in any form, including donations.
§4980.30. APPLICATION FOR LICENSE; PAYMENT OF FEE
Except as otherwise provided herein, a person desiring to practice and to advertise the performance of marriage and family therapy services shall apply to the board for a license, pay the license fee required by this chapter, and obtain a license from the board.
§4980.31. DISPLAY OF LICENSE
A licensee shall display his or her license in a conspicuous place in the licensee’s primary place of practice.
CHAPTER 13. MARRIAGE AND FAMILY THERAPISTS
ARTICLE 1. REGULATION
§4980. NECESSITY OF LICENSE
(a) Many California families and many individual Californians are experiencing difficulty and distress, and are in need of wise, competent, caring, compassionate, and effective counseling in order to enable them to improve and maintain healthy family relationships. Healthy individuals and healthy families and healthy relationships are inherently beneficial and crucial to a healthy society, and are our most precious and valuable natural resource. Marriage and family therapists provide a crucial support for the well-being of the people and the State of California. (b) No person may engage in the practice of marriage and family therapy as defined by Section 4980.02, unless he or she holds a valid license as a marriage and family therapist, or unless he or she is specifically exempted from that requirement, nor may any person advertise himself or herself as performing the services of a marriage, family, child, domestic, or marital consultant, or in any way use these or any similar titles, including the letters “M.F.T.” or “M.F.C.C.,” or other name, word initial, or symbol in connection with or following his or her name to imply that he or she performs these services without a license as provided by this chapter. Persons licensed under Article 4 (commencing with Section 4996) of Chapter 14 of Division 2, or under Chapter 6.6 (commencing with Section 2900) may engage in such practice or advertise that they practice marriage and family therapy but may not advertise that they hold the marriage and family therapist’s license.
§4980.01. CONSTRUCTION WITH OTHER LAWS; NONAPPLICATION TO CERTAIN PROFESSIONALS AND EMPLOYEES
(a) Nothing in this chapter shall be construed to constrict, limit, or withdraw the Medical Practice Act, the Social Work Licensing Law, the Nursing Practice Act, or the Psychology Licensing Act. (b) This chapter shall not apply to any priest, rabbi, or minister of the gospel of any religious denomination when performing counseling services as part of his or her pastoral or professional duties, or to any person who is admitted to practice law in the state, or who is licensed to practice medicine, when providing counseling services as part of his or her professional practice. (c) (1) This chapter shall not apply to an employee working in any of the following settings if his or her work is performed solely under the supervision of the employer: (A) A governmental entity. (B) A school, college, or university. (C) An institution that is both nonprofit and charitable. (2) This chapter shall not apply to a volunteer working in any of the settings described in paragraph (1) if his or her work is performed solely under the supervision of the entity, school, or institution.
10
(d) A marriage and family therapist licensed under this chapter is a licentiate for purposes of paragraph (2) of subdivision (a) of Section 805, and thus is a health care practitioner subject to the provisions of Section 2290.5 pursuant to subdivision (b) of that section. (e) Notwithstanding subdivisions (b) and (c), all persons registered as interns or licensed under this chapter shall not be exempt from this chapter or the jurisdiction of the board
§4980.02. PRACTICE OF MARRIAGE, FAMILY AND CHILD COUNSELING; APPLICATION OF PRINCIPLES AND METHODS
For the purposes of this chapter, the practice of marriage and family therapy shall mean that service performed with individuals, couples, or groups wherein interpersonal relationships are examined for the purpose of achieving more adequate, satisfying, and productive marriage and family adjustments. This practice includes relationship and pre-marriage counseling. The application of marriage and family therapy principles and methods includes, but is not limited to, the use of applied psychotherapeutic techniques, to enable individuals to mature and grow within marriage and the family, the provision of explanations and interpretations of the psychosexual and psychosocial aspects of relationships, and the use, application, and integration of the coursework and training required by Sections 4980.36, 4980.37, and 4980.41.
§4980.03. DEFINITIONS
(a) "Board," as used in this chapter, means the Board of Behavioral Sciences. (b) "Intern," as used in this chapter, means an unlicensed person who has earned his or her master's or doctor's degree qualifying him or her for licensure and is registered with the board. (c) "Trainee," as used in this chapter, means an unlicensed person who is currently enrolled in a master's or doctor's degree program, as specified in Section 4980.36 and 4980.37, that is designed to qualify him or her for licensure under this chapter, and who has completed no less than 12 semester units or 18 quarter units of coursework in any qualifying degree program. (d) "Applicant," as used in this chapter, means an unlicensed person who has completed a master's or doctoral degree program, as specified in Section 4980.36 and 4980.37, and whose application for registration as an intern is pending, or an unlicensed person who has completed the requirements for licensure as specified in this chapter, is no longer registered with the board as an intern, and is currently in the examination process. (e) "Advertise," as used in this chapter, includes, but is not limited to, any public communication, as define din subdivision (a) of Section 651, the issuance of any card, sign, or device to any person, or the causing, permitting, or allowing of any sign or marking on, or in, any building or structure, or in any newspaper or magazine or in any directory, or any printed matter whatsoever, with or without any limiting qualification. Signs within church buildings or notices in church bulletins mailed to a congregation shall not be construed as advertising within the meaning of this chapter. (f) "Experience," as used in this chapter, means experience in interpersonal relationships, psychotherapy, marriage and family therapy, and professional enrichment activities that satisfies the requirement for licensure as a marriage and family therapist pursuant to Section 4980.40. (g) "Supervisor," as used in this chapter, means an individual who meets all of the following requirements:
(1) Has been licensed by a state regulatory agency for at least two years as a marriage and family therapist,
11
licensed clinical social worker, licensed psychologist, or licensed physician certified in psychiatry by the American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology. (2) Has not provided therapeutic services to the trainee or intern. (3) Has a current and valid license that is not under suspension or probation. (4) Complies with supervision requirements established by this chapter and by board regulations. (h) "Client centered advocacy," as used in this chapter, includes, but is not limited to, researching, identifying, and accessing resources, or other activities, related to obtaining or providing services and supports for clients or groups of clients receiving psychotherapy or counseling services.
§4980.04. MARRIAGE AND FAMILY THERAPIST ACT
This chapter shall be known and may be cited as the Marriage and Family Therapist Act.
§4980.07. ADMINISTRATION OF CHAPTER
The board shall administer the provisions of this chapter.
§4980.08. LICENSE TITLE NAME CHANGE
(a) The title “licensed marriage, family and child counselor” or “marriage, family and child counselor” is hereby renamed “licensed marriage and family therapist” or “marriage and family therapist,” respectively. Any reference in any statute or regulation to a “licensed marriage, family and child counselor” or “marriage, family and child counselor” shall be deemed a reference to a “licensed marriage and family therapist” or “marriage and family therapist”. (b) Nothing in this section shall be construed to expand or constrict the scope of practice of a person licensed pursuant to this chapter. (c) This section shall become operative July 1, 1999.
§4980.10. ENGAGING IN PRACTICE
A person engages in the practice of marriage and family therapy who performs or offers to perform or holds himself or herself out as able to perform this service for remuneration in any form, including donations.
§4980.30. APPLICATION FOR LICENSE; PAYMENT OF FEE
Except as otherwise provided herein, a person desiring to practice and to advertise the performance of marriage and family therapy services shall apply to the board for a license, pay the license fee required by this chapter, and obtain a license from the board.
§4980.31. DISPLAY OF LICENSE
A licensee shall display his or her license in a conspicuous place in the licensee’s primary place of practice.
February 14, 2010
Building Self-Esteem in Children
Building Self-Esteem in Children
Most parents have heard that "an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure" and it's especially true with self-esteem in children. All children need love and appreciation and thrive on positive attention. Yet, how often do parents forget to use words of encouragement such as, "that's right," "wonderful," or "good job"? No matter the age of children or adolescents, good parent-child communication is essential for raising children with self-esteem and confidence.
Self-esteem is an indicator of good mental health. It is how we feel about ourselves. Poor self-esteem is nothing to be blamed for, ashamed of, or embarrassed about. Some self-doubt, particularly during adolescence, is normal—even healthy-but poor self—esteem should not be ignored. In some instances, it can be a symptom of a mental health disorder or emotional disturbance.
Parents can play important roles in helping their children feel better about themselves and developing greater confidence. Doing this is important because children with good self-esteem:
Act independently
Assume responsibility
Take pride in their accomplishments
Tolerate frustration
Handle peer pressure appropriately
Attempt new tasks and challenges
Handle positive and negative emotions
Offer assistance to others
Words and actions have great impact on the confidence of children, and children, including adolescents, remember the positive statements parents and caregivers say to them. Phrases such as "I like the way you…" or "You are improving at…" or "I appreciate the way you…" should be used on a daily basis. Parents also can smile, nod, wink, pat on the back, or hug a child to show attention and appreciation.
What else can parents do?
Be generous with praise. Parents must develop the habit of looking for situations in which children are doing good jobs, displaying talents, or demonstrating positive character traits. Remember to praise children for jobs well done and for effort.
Teach positive self-statements. It is important for parents to redirect children's inaccurate or negative beliefs about themselves and to teach them how to think in positive ways.
Avoid criticism that takes the form of ridicule or shame. Blame and negative judgments are at the core of poor self-esteem and can lead to emotional disorders.
Teach children about decisionmaking and to recognize when they have made good decisions. Let them "own" their problems. If they solve them, they gain confidence in themselves. If you solve them, they'll remain dependent on you. Take the time to answer questions. Help children think of alternative options.
Show children that you can laugh at yourself. Show them that life doesn't need to be serious all the time and that some teasing is all in fun. Your sense of humor is important for their well-being.
The Caring for Every Child's Mental Health Campaign Campaign is part of The Comprehensive Community Mental Health Services Program for Children and Their Families of the Federal Center for Mental Health Services. Parents and caregivers who wish to learn more about mental well-being in children should call 1-800-789-2647 (toll-free) or visit mentalhealth.samhsa.gov/child/ to download a free publications catalog (Order No. CA-0000). The Federal Center for Mental Health Services is an agency of the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
Most parents have heard that "an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure" and it's especially true with self-esteem in children. All children need love and appreciation and thrive on positive attention. Yet, how often do parents forget to use words of encouragement such as, "that's right," "wonderful," or "good job"? No matter the age of children or adolescents, good parent-child communication is essential for raising children with self-esteem and confidence.
Self-esteem is an indicator of good mental health. It is how we feel about ourselves. Poor self-esteem is nothing to be blamed for, ashamed of, or embarrassed about. Some self-doubt, particularly during adolescence, is normal—even healthy-but poor self—esteem should not be ignored. In some instances, it can be a symptom of a mental health disorder or emotional disturbance.
Parents can play important roles in helping their children feel better about themselves and developing greater confidence. Doing this is important because children with good self-esteem:
Act independently
Assume responsibility
Take pride in their accomplishments
Tolerate frustration
Handle peer pressure appropriately
Attempt new tasks and challenges
Handle positive and negative emotions
Offer assistance to others
Words and actions have great impact on the confidence of children, and children, including adolescents, remember the positive statements parents and caregivers say to them. Phrases such as "I like the way you…" or "You are improving at…" or "I appreciate the way you…" should be used on a daily basis. Parents also can smile, nod, wink, pat on the back, or hug a child to show attention and appreciation.
What else can parents do?
Be generous with praise. Parents must develop the habit of looking for situations in which children are doing good jobs, displaying talents, or demonstrating positive character traits. Remember to praise children for jobs well done and for effort.
Teach positive self-statements. It is important for parents to redirect children's inaccurate or negative beliefs about themselves and to teach them how to think in positive ways.
Avoid criticism that takes the form of ridicule or shame. Blame and negative judgments are at the core of poor self-esteem and can lead to emotional disorders.
Teach children about decisionmaking and to recognize when they have made good decisions. Let them "own" their problems. If they solve them, they gain confidence in themselves. If you solve them, they'll remain dependent on you. Take the time to answer questions. Help children think of alternative options.
Show children that you can laugh at yourself. Show them that life doesn't need to be serious all the time and that some teasing is all in fun. Your sense of humor is important for their well-being.
The Caring for Every Child's Mental Health Campaign Campaign is part of The Comprehensive Community Mental Health Services Program for Children and Their Families of the Federal Center for Mental Health Services. Parents and caregivers who wish to learn more about mental well-being in children should call 1-800-789-2647 (toll-free) or visit mentalhealth.samhsa.gov/child/ to download a free publications catalog (Order No. CA-0000). The Federal Center for Mental Health Services is an agency of the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
February 13, 2010
CEU Training Video for MFTs, LCSWs, LPCs, Social Workers and Counselors
Click link below for ceus video training
Continuing Education CEU Training Video for MFTs, LCSWs, LPCs, Social Workers and Counselors
Approved in many states including California BBS, Florida, New Jersey, New York, Texas, Hawaii, Nevada and Ohio.
Continuing Education CEU Training Video for MFTs, LCSWs, LPCs, Social Workers and Counselors
Approved in many states including California BBS, Florida, New Jersey, New York, Texas, Hawaii, Nevada and Ohio.
Anxiety Disorders
What are anxiety disorders?
for more information and ceus on anxiety disorders ceus, click link below
Anxiety Disorders CEUs Panic Disorders CEUs BBS Approved MFT LCSW
Anxiety disorders range from feelings of uneasiness to immobilizing bouts of terror. This fact sheet briefly describes the different types of anxiety disorders. This fact sheet is not exhaustive, nor does it include the full range of symptoms and treatments. Keep in mind that new research can yield rapid and dramatic changes in our understanding of and approaches to mental disorders. If you believe you or a loved one has an anxiety disorder, seek competent, professional advice or another form of support.
Generalized Anxiety Disorder: Most people experience anxiety at some point in their lives and some nervousness in anticipation of a real situation. However if a person cannot shake unwarranted worries, or if the feelings are jarring to the point of avoiding everyday activities, he or she most likely has an anxiety disorder.
Symptoms: Chronic, exaggerated worry, tension, and irritability that appear to have no cause or are more intense than the situation warrants. Physical signs, such as restlessness, trouble falling or staying asleep, headaches, trembling, twitching, muscle tension, or sweating, often accompany these psychological symptoms.
Formal diagnosis: When someone spends at least six months worried excessively about everyday problems. However, incapacitating or troublesome symptoms warranting treatment may exist for shorter periods of time.
Treatment: Anxiety is among the most common, most treatable mental disorders. Effective treatments include cognitive behavioral therapy, relaxation techniques, and biofeedback to control muscle tension. Medication, most commonly anti-anxiety drugs, such as benzodiazepine and its derivatives, also may be required in some cases. Some commonly prescribed anti-anxiety medications are diazepam, alprazolam, and lorazepam. The non-benzodiazepine anti-anxiety medication buspirone can be helpful for some individuals.
Panic Disorder: People with panic disorder experience white-knuckled, heart-pounding terror that strikes suddenly and without warning. Since they cannot predict when a panic attack will seize them, many people live in persistent worry that another one could overcome them at any moment.
Symptoms: Pounding heart, chest pains, lightheadedness or dizziness, nausea, shortness of breath, shaking or trembling, choking, fear of dying, sweating, feelings of unreality, numbness or tingling, hot flashes or chills, and a feeling of going out of control or going crazy.
Formal Diagnosis: Either four attacks within four weeks or one or more attacks followed by at least a month of persistent fear of having another attack. A minimum of four of the symptoms listed above developed during at least one of the attacks. Most panic attacks last only a few minutes, but they occasionally go on for ten minutes, and, in rare cases, have been known to last for as long as an hour. They can occur at any time, even during sleep.
Treatment: Cognitive behavioral therapy and medications such as high-potency anti-anxiety drugs like alprazolam. Several classes of antidepressants (such as paroxetine, one of the newer selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors) and the older tricyclics and monoamine oxidase inhibitors (MAO inhibitors) are considered "gold standards" for treating panic disorder. Sometimes a combination of therapy and medication is the most effective approach to helping people manage their symptoms. Proper treatment helps 70 to 90 percent of people with panic disorder, usually within six to eight weeks.
Phobias: Most of us steer clear of certain, hazardous things. Phobias however, are irrational fears that lead people to altogether avoid specific things or situations that trigger intense anxiety. Phobias occur in several forms, for example, agoraphobia is the fear of being in any situation that might trigger a panic attack and from which escape might be difficult. Social phobia is a fear of being extremely embarrassed in front of other people. The most common social phobia is fear of public speaking.
Symptoms: Many of the physical symptoms that accompany panic attacks - such as sweating, racing heart, and trembling - also occur with phobias.
Formal Diagnosis: The person experiences extreme anxiety with exposure to the object or situation; recognizes that his or her fear is excessive or unreasonable; and finds that normal routines, social activities, or relationships are significantly impaired as a result of these fears.
Treatment: Cognitive behavioral therapy has the best track record for helping people overcome most phobic disorders. The goals of this therapy are to desensitize a person to feared situations or to teach a person how to recognize, relax, and cope with anxious thoughts and feelings. Medications, such as anti-anxiety agents or antidepressants, can also help relieve symptoms. Sometimes therapy and medication are combined to treat phobias.
Post-traumatic Stress Disorder: Researchers now know that anyone, even children, can develop PTSD if they have experienced, witnessed, or participated in a traumatic occurrence-especially if the event was life threatening. PTSD can result from terrifying experiences such as rape, kidnapping, natural disasters, or war or serious accidents such as airplane crashes. The psychological damage such incidents cause can interfere with a person's ability to hold a job or to develop intimate relationships with others.
Symptoms: The symptoms of PTSD can range from constantly reliving the event to a general emotional numbing. Persistent anxiety, exaggerated startle reactions, difficulty concentrating, nightmares, and insomnia are common. People with PTSD typically avoid situations that remind them of the traumatic event, because they provoke intense distress or even panic attacks.
Formal Diagnosis: Although the symptoms of PTSD may be an appropriate initial response to a traumatic event, they are considered part of a disorder when they persist beyond three months.
Treatment: Psychotherapy can help people who have PTSD regain a sense of control over their lives. They also may need cognitive behavior therapy to change painful and intrusive patterns of behavior and thought and to learn relaxation techniques. Support from family and friends can help speed recovery and healing. Medications, such as antidepressants and anti-anxiety agents to reduce anxiety, can ease the symptoms of depression and sleep problems. Treatment for PTSD often includes both psychotherapy and medication.
For more information, as well as referrals to specialists and self-help groups in your State, contact:
Anxiety Disorders Association of America
8730 Georgia Avenue - Suite 600
Silver Spring, MD 20910
Telephone: 240-485-1001
Fax: 240-485-1035
www.adaa.org
Mental Help Net
CenterSite, LLC
570 Metro Place
Dublin, OH 43017
http://mentalhelp.net/poc/center_index.php?id=1
National Mental Health Association
2001 Beauregard Street, 12th Floor
Alexandria, VA 22311
Telephone: 800-969-6642
Fax: 703-684-5968
(TDD): 800-433-5959
www.nmha.org/infoctr/factsheets/index.cfm
The National Institute of Mental Health's toll-free information line is
1-866-615-6464; their web address is www.nimh.nih.gov/healthinformation/anxietymenu.cfm.
for more information and ceus on anxiety disorders ceus, click link below
Anxiety Disorders CEUs Panic Disorders CEUs BBS Approved MFT LCSW
Anxiety disorders range from feelings of uneasiness to immobilizing bouts of terror. This fact sheet briefly describes the different types of anxiety disorders. This fact sheet is not exhaustive, nor does it include the full range of symptoms and treatments. Keep in mind that new research can yield rapid and dramatic changes in our understanding of and approaches to mental disorders. If you believe you or a loved one has an anxiety disorder, seek competent, professional advice or another form of support.
Generalized Anxiety Disorder: Most people experience anxiety at some point in their lives and some nervousness in anticipation of a real situation. However if a person cannot shake unwarranted worries, or if the feelings are jarring to the point of avoiding everyday activities, he or she most likely has an anxiety disorder.
Symptoms: Chronic, exaggerated worry, tension, and irritability that appear to have no cause or are more intense than the situation warrants. Physical signs, such as restlessness, trouble falling or staying asleep, headaches, trembling, twitching, muscle tension, or sweating, often accompany these psychological symptoms.
Formal diagnosis: When someone spends at least six months worried excessively about everyday problems. However, incapacitating or troublesome symptoms warranting treatment may exist for shorter periods of time.
Treatment: Anxiety is among the most common, most treatable mental disorders. Effective treatments include cognitive behavioral therapy, relaxation techniques, and biofeedback to control muscle tension. Medication, most commonly anti-anxiety drugs, such as benzodiazepine and its derivatives, also may be required in some cases. Some commonly prescribed anti-anxiety medications are diazepam, alprazolam, and lorazepam. The non-benzodiazepine anti-anxiety medication buspirone can be helpful for some individuals.
Panic Disorder: People with panic disorder experience white-knuckled, heart-pounding terror that strikes suddenly and without warning. Since they cannot predict when a panic attack will seize them, many people live in persistent worry that another one could overcome them at any moment.
Symptoms: Pounding heart, chest pains, lightheadedness or dizziness, nausea, shortness of breath, shaking or trembling, choking, fear of dying, sweating, feelings of unreality, numbness or tingling, hot flashes or chills, and a feeling of going out of control or going crazy.
Formal Diagnosis: Either four attacks within four weeks or one or more attacks followed by at least a month of persistent fear of having another attack. A minimum of four of the symptoms listed above developed during at least one of the attacks. Most panic attacks last only a few minutes, but they occasionally go on for ten minutes, and, in rare cases, have been known to last for as long as an hour. They can occur at any time, even during sleep.
Treatment: Cognitive behavioral therapy and medications such as high-potency anti-anxiety drugs like alprazolam. Several classes of antidepressants (such as paroxetine, one of the newer selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors) and the older tricyclics and monoamine oxidase inhibitors (MAO inhibitors) are considered "gold standards" for treating panic disorder. Sometimes a combination of therapy and medication is the most effective approach to helping people manage their symptoms. Proper treatment helps 70 to 90 percent of people with panic disorder, usually within six to eight weeks.
Phobias: Most of us steer clear of certain, hazardous things. Phobias however, are irrational fears that lead people to altogether avoid specific things or situations that trigger intense anxiety. Phobias occur in several forms, for example, agoraphobia is the fear of being in any situation that might trigger a panic attack and from which escape might be difficult. Social phobia is a fear of being extremely embarrassed in front of other people. The most common social phobia is fear of public speaking.
Symptoms: Many of the physical symptoms that accompany panic attacks - such as sweating, racing heart, and trembling - also occur with phobias.
Formal Diagnosis: The person experiences extreme anxiety with exposure to the object or situation; recognizes that his or her fear is excessive or unreasonable; and finds that normal routines, social activities, or relationships are significantly impaired as a result of these fears.
Treatment: Cognitive behavioral therapy has the best track record for helping people overcome most phobic disorders. The goals of this therapy are to desensitize a person to feared situations or to teach a person how to recognize, relax, and cope with anxious thoughts and feelings. Medications, such as anti-anxiety agents or antidepressants, can also help relieve symptoms. Sometimes therapy and medication are combined to treat phobias.
Post-traumatic Stress Disorder: Researchers now know that anyone, even children, can develop PTSD if they have experienced, witnessed, or participated in a traumatic occurrence-especially if the event was life threatening. PTSD can result from terrifying experiences such as rape, kidnapping, natural disasters, or war or serious accidents such as airplane crashes. The psychological damage such incidents cause can interfere with a person's ability to hold a job or to develop intimate relationships with others.
Symptoms: The symptoms of PTSD can range from constantly reliving the event to a general emotional numbing. Persistent anxiety, exaggerated startle reactions, difficulty concentrating, nightmares, and insomnia are common. People with PTSD typically avoid situations that remind them of the traumatic event, because they provoke intense distress or even panic attacks.
Formal Diagnosis: Although the symptoms of PTSD may be an appropriate initial response to a traumatic event, they are considered part of a disorder when they persist beyond three months.
Treatment: Psychotherapy can help people who have PTSD regain a sense of control over their lives. They also may need cognitive behavior therapy to change painful and intrusive patterns of behavior and thought and to learn relaxation techniques. Support from family and friends can help speed recovery and healing. Medications, such as antidepressants and anti-anxiety agents to reduce anxiety, can ease the symptoms of depression and sleep problems. Treatment for PTSD often includes both psychotherapy and medication.
For more information, as well as referrals to specialists and self-help groups in your State, contact:
Anxiety Disorders Association of America
8730 Georgia Avenue - Suite 600
Silver Spring, MD 20910
Telephone: 240-485-1001
Fax: 240-485-1035
www.adaa.org
Mental Help Net
CenterSite, LLC
570 Metro Place
Dublin, OH 43017
http://mentalhelp.net/poc/center_index.php?id=1
National Mental Health Association
2001 Beauregard Street, 12th Floor
Alexandria, VA 22311
Telephone: 800-969-6642
Fax: 703-684-5968
(TDD): 800-433-5959
www.nmha.org/infoctr/factsheets/index.cfm
The National Institute of Mental Health's toll-free information line is
1-866-615-6464; their web address is www.nimh.nih.gov/healthinformation/anxietymenu.cfm.
February 08, 2010
substance abuse ceus
Click link below to view full text
substance abuse ceus
Alcoholism and Substance Abuse Dependency (15 hours)
Description CH 1-Definitions
CH 2-History
CH 3-DSM Criteria
CH 4-Types of Substance Abuse
CH 5-Prescription Drug Addiction and Dependence
CH 6-Demographic Characteristics
CH 7-Substance Abuse Treatments and Outcomes
Become familiar with clinical and statistical information regarding substance abuse history, DSM criteria, types of abuse, demographic characteristics, treatment, and outcomes.
Define substance abuse and identify its effects.
Become familiar with the medical aspects of alcohol abuse/dependence and other types of chemical dependency.
Apply current theories of the etiology of substance abuse.
Recognize the role of persons and systems that support or compound the abuse.
Become familiar with the major treatment approaches to alcoholism and chemical dependency.
Learn the national legal aspects of substance abuse.
Obtain knowledge of certain populations at risk with regard to substance abuse.
Access community resources offering assessment, treatment and follow-up for the abuser and family.
Learn the process of referring affected persons.
substance abuse ceus
Alcoholism and Substance Abuse Dependency (15 hours)
Description CH 1-Definitions
CH 2-History
CH 3-DSM Criteria
CH 4-Types of Substance Abuse
CH 5-Prescription Drug Addiction and Dependence
CH 6-Demographic Characteristics
CH 7-Substance Abuse Treatments and Outcomes
Become familiar with clinical and statistical information regarding substance abuse history, DSM criteria, types of abuse, demographic characteristics, treatment, and outcomes.
Define substance abuse and identify its effects.
Become familiar with the medical aspects of alcohol abuse/dependence and other types of chemical dependency.
Apply current theories of the etiology of substance abuse.
Recognize the role of persons and systems that support or compound the abuse.
Become familiar with the major treatment approaches to alcoholism and chemical dependency.
Learn the national legal aspects of substance abuse.
Obtain knowledge of certain populations at risk with regard to substance abuse.
Access community resources offering assessment, treatment and follow-up for the abuser and family.
Learn the process of referring affected persons.
February 03, 2010
Managed Care and MFTs
For more on the topic of
managed care and associated ceus,
click link below
Managed Care CEUs
In 2009, legislation that would provide Medicare coverage for MFTs was passed in the House of Representatives (H.R. 3962) version of Health Care Reform (“HCR”). Further, a commitment was made to include the MFT provision in the Senate version of HCR. Although CAMFT was hopeful that Medicare inclusion for MFTs be placed in the final HCR bill (which was scheduled to go forward in 2010), based on the new make-up of Congress, it is unlikely that HCR will move forward. Whether or not HCR does move forward, does not mean our issue is dead. Congress is likely to enact some type of Medicare legislation in 2010, and our challenge will be to get into the vehicle that will go to the President.
The Department of Veterans Affairs (“DVA”) recently indicated that their plan was to complete the new MFT qualification standards by September 2010. Subject Matter Expert (SME) workgroups have been established and are meeting weekly to develop separate qualification standards. Once the draft qualification standards are developed, the DVA will formally submit a request to the Office of Personnel Management (OPM) to establish a new, separate occupational series for MFTs. CAMFT remains committed to helping usher these long overdue standards into reality to enable the VA facilities to recruit and hire MFTs in VA Medical Centers, Outpatient Clinics, and Veterans Outreach Centers.
Federal Mental Health Parity Regulations
Federal regulations (which are necessary to implement the Federal Mental Health Parity law which passed in 2009) were released on January 29, 2010. The public comment period to express concerns or suggestions about the parity regulations will close April 29, 2010. CAMFT will be submitting comments requesting greater clarification of certain sections, including but not limited to scope of services, and exact conditions/diagnoses included within mental health and substance use coverage. If you wish to view or comment on the parity regulations, please see the following link: http://www.regulations.gov/search/Regs/home.html#documentDetail?R=090000648096e4d2
U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission
Currently, federal regulations only allow licensed psychiatrists, licensed psychologists, and licensed clinical social workers to work as “Substance Abuse Experts” within the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (“NRC”.) The stated knowledge, training, and education requirements to become an NRC Substance Abuse Expert are well within the MFT scope of practice, and therefore MFTs should be included as potential providers. CAMFT will submit a Petition for Rulemaking (or a 10 CFR 2.802 action) to request that the NRC amend their regulations to allow MFTs to be included as Substance Abuse Experts.
Government Employees Health Association
Effective January 1, 2010, the Government Employees Health Association (a company that provides health care insurance to federal employees/retirees) will include MFTs as covered health care providers. The Government Employees Health Association provides health care insurance to over 400,000 employees/retirees. For more information about becoming a panel provider for the Government Employees Health Association, please call 816-257-5500.
managed care and associated ceus,
click link below
Managed Care CEUs
In 2009, legislation that would provide Medicare coverage for MFTs was passed in the House of Representatives (H.R. 3962) version of Health Care Reform (“HCR”). Further, a commitment was made to include the MFT provision in the Senate version of HCR. Although CAMFT was hopeful that Medicare inclusion for MFTs be placed in the final HCR bill (which was scheduled to go forward in 2010), based on the new make-up of Congress, it is unlikely that HCR will move forward. Whether or not HCR does move forward, does not mean our issue is dead. Congress is likely to enact some type of Medicare legislation in 2010, and our challenge will be to get into the vehicle that will go to the President.
The Department of Veterans Affairs (“DVA”) recently indicated that their plan was to complete the new MFT qualification standards by September 2010. Subject Matter Expert (SME) workgroups have been established and are meeting weekly to develop separate qualification standards. Once the draft qualification standards are developed, the DVA will formally submit a request to the Office of Personnel Management (OPM) to establish a new, separate occupational series for MFTs. CAMFT remains committed to helping usher these long overdue standards into reality to enable the VA facilities to recruit and hire MFTs in VA Medical Centers, Outpatient Clinics, and Veterans Outreach Centers.
Federal Mental Health Parity Regulations
Federal regulations (which are necessary to implement the Federal Mental Health Parity law which passed in 2009) were released on January 29, 2010. The public comment period to express concerns or suggestions about the parity regulations will close April 29, 2010. CAMFT will be submitting comments requesting greater clarification of certain sections, including but not limited to scope of services, and exact conditions/diagnoses included within mental health and substance use coverage. If you wish to view or comment on the parity regulations, please see the following link: http://www.regulations.gov/search/Regs/home.html#documentDetail?R=090000648096e4d2
U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission
Currently, federal regulations only allow licensed psychiatrists, licensed psychologists, and licensed clinical social workers to work as “Substance Abuse Experts” within the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (“NRC”.) The stated knowledge, training, and education requirements to become an NRC Substance Abuse Expert are well within the MFT scope of practice, and therefore MFTs should be included as potential providers. CAMFT will submit a Petition for Rulemaking (or a 10 CFR 2.802 action) to request that the NRC amend their regulations to allow MFTs to be included as Substance Abuse Experts.
Government Employees Health Association
Effective January 1, 2010, the Government Employees Health Association (a company that provides health care insurance to federal employees/retirees) will include MFTs as covered health care providers. The Government Employees Health Association provides health care insurance to over 400,000 employees/retirees. For more information about becoming a panel provider for the Government Employees Health Association, please call 816-257-5500.
February 02, 2010
bbs approved ceus online
bbs approved ceus online
For mental health professionals
Aspira Continuing Education’s courses are focused strictly on mental health CEU requirements. Our founders and course writers include practicing clinical mental health professionals, making our courses relevant to today’s continuing education requirements. Our courses satisfy CEU requirements for the following professions in the following states:
Marriage and Family Therapists (MFT/LMFT/MFTI)
California, Colorado, Florida, Kentucky, Louisiana, Massachusetts, Nevada, Ohio, Oregon, Texas
Clinical Social Worker (CSW/LCSW/ASW)
Arkansas, California, Colorado, Florida, Hawaii, Michigan, Missouri, New York, Oregon
Alcohol and Drug Counselors (CADC I/CADC II)
California
Prevention Specialists (CPS)
California
Clinical Supervisors (CCS)
California
Professional Counselors (LPC/CPC)
Colorado, Hawaii, Kentucky, Louisiana, Missouri, Oregon, Texas
Mental Health Counselor (MHC)
Florida
For mental health professionals
Aspira Continuing Education’s courses are focused strictly on mental health CEU requirements. Our founders and course writers include practicing clinical mental health professionals, making our courses relevant to today’s continuing education requirements. Our courses satisfy CEU requirements for the following professions in the following states:
Marriage and Family Therapists (MFT/LMFT/MFTI)
California, Colorado, Florida, Kentucky, Louisiana, Massachusetts, Nevada, Ohio, Oregon, Texas
Clinical Social Worker (CSW/LCSW/ASW)
Arkansas, California, Colorado, Florida, Hawaii, Michigan, Missouri, New York, Oregon
Alcohol and Drug Counselors (CADC I/CADC II)
California
Prevention Specialists (CPS)
California
Clinical Supervisors (CCS)
California
Professional Counselors (LPC/CPC)
Colorado, Hawaii, Kentucky, Louisiana, Missouri, Oregon, Texas
Mental Health Counselor (MHC)
Florida
Child and Adolescent Mental Health
Child and Adolescent Mental Health
Children's and Adolescents' Mental Health
For more on this subject, click below
Online CEUs for MFTs, LCSWs, Social
Workers
Like adults, children and adolescents can have mental health disorders that interfere with the way they think, feel, and act. Mental health influences the ways individuals look at themselves, their lives, and others in their lives. Like physical health, mental health is important at every stage of life.
Child, Adolescent and Family Branch
The Child, Adolescent, and Family Branch of the Federal Center for Mental Health Services promotes and ensures that the mental health needs of children and their families are met within the context of community-based systems of care. Systems of care are developed on the premise that the mental health needs of children, adolescents, and their families can be met within their home, school, and community environments.
Caring for Every Child's Mental Health
Systems of Care the Caring for Every Child's Mental Health communications campaign is a public information and education program to:
Increase public awareness about the importance of protecting and nurturing the mental health of young people.
Foster recognition that many children have mental health problems that are real, painful, and sometimes severe.
Encourage caregivers to seek early, appropriate treatment and services.
The National Child Traumatic Stress Network
The mission of the National Child Traumatic Stress Network (NCTSN) is to raise the standard of care and improve access to services for traumatized children, their families and communities throughout the United States. This site includes an article on school planning for disasters and the aftermath of September 11, 2001.
Youth Violence Prevention
The CMHS initiative on school violence focuses on the collective involvement of families, communities, and schools to build resiliency to disruptive behavior disorders.
Make Time to Listen,
Take Time to Talk 15+
The campaign is part of the CMHS School Violence Prevention Initiative and is designed to provide practical guidance to parents and caregivers about "how to" create time to listen and take time to talk with their children.
Listening Dads Are Champs 15+
Children whose fathers are highly involved with them in a positive way do better in school, demonstrate better psychological well-being and lower levels of delinquency, and ultimately attain higher levels of education and economic self-sufficiency.
Family Guide To Keeping Youth Mentally Healthy and Drug Free
A public education Web site, developed to support the efforts of parents and other caring adults to promote mental health and prevent the use of alcohol, tobacco, and illegal drugs among 7- to 18-year-olds.
Youth Violence: A Report of the Surgeon General
This Surgeon General's report seeks to focus on action steps that all Americans can take to help address the problem, and continue to build a legacy of health and safety for our young people and the Nation as a whole.
Publications on Children and Families
Free information from the Center for Mental Health Services about children and families.
Children's and Adolescents' Mental Health
For more on this subject, click below
Online CEUs for MFTs, LCSWs, Social
Workers
Like adults, children and adolescents can have mental health disorders that interfere with the way they think, feel, and act. Mental health influences the ways individuals look at themselves, their lives, and others in their lives. Like physical health, mental health is important at every stage of life.
Child, Adolescent and Family Branch
The Child, Adolescent, and Family Branch of the Federal Center for Mental Health Services promotes and ensures that the mental health needs of children and their families are met within the context of community-based systems of care. Systems of care are developed on the premise that the mental health needs of children, adolescents, and their families can be met within their home, school, and community environments.
Caring for Every Child's Mental Health
Systems of Care the Caring for Every Child's Mental Health communications campaign is a public information and education program to:
Increase public awareness about the importance of protecting and nurturing the mental health of young people.
Foster recognition that many children have mental health problems that are real, painful, and sometimes severe.
Encourage caregivers to seek early, appropriate treatment and services.
The National Child Traumatic Stress Network
The mission of the National Child Traumatic Stress Network (NCTSN) is to raise the standard of care and improve access to services for traumatized children, their families and communities throughout the United States. This site includes an article on school planning for disasters and the aftermath of September 11, 2001.
Youth Violence Prevention
The CMHS initiative on school violence focuses on the collective involvement of families, communities, and schools to build resiliency to disruptive behavior disorders.
Make Time to Listen,
Take Time to Talk 15+
The campaign is part of the CMHS School Violence Prevention Initiative and is designed to provide practical guidance to parents and caregivers about "how to" create time to listen and take time to talk with their children.
Listening Dads Are Champs 15+
Children whose fathers are highly involved with them in a positive way do better in school, demonstrate better psychological well-being and lower levels of delinquency, and ultimately attain higher levels of education and economic self-sufficiency.
Family Guide To Keeping Youth Mentally Healthy and Drug Free
A public education Web site, developed to support the efforts of parents and other caring adults to promote mental health and prevent the use of alcohol, tobacco, and illegal drugs among 7- to 18-year-olds.
Youth Violence: A Report of the Surgeon General
This Surgeon General's report seeks to focus on action steps that all Americans can take to help address the problem, and continue to build a legacy of health and safety for our young people and the Nation as a whole.
Publications on Children and Families
Free information from the Center for Mental Health Services about children and families.
January 29, 2010
January 28, 2010
January 27, 2010
From Panic to Power
From Panic to Power
3 Hours
AR, CA, CO, FL, HI, KY, LA, MA, MI, MO, NV, NY, OH, OR, TX
Bassett, executive director and founder of the Midwest Center for Stress and Anxiety, is perhaps best known for her successful infomercial, "Attacking Anxiety." Prior to this, she suffered from a serious anxiety disorder. Not only did she ultimately overcome that disability but she also found an extraordinary talent for helping others, which shines through in her first book. Her experiences will strike a chord in anyone who has problems with anxiety.
3 Hours
AR, CA, CO, FL, HI, KY, LA, MA, MI, MO, NV, NY, OH, OR, TX
Bassett, executive director and founder of the Midwest Center for Stress and Anxiety, is perhaps best known for her successful infomercial, "Attacking Anxiety." Prior to this, she suffered from a serious anxiety disorder. Not only did she ultimately overcome that disability but she also found an extraordinary talent for helping others, which shines through in her first book. Her experiences will strike a chord in anyone who has problems with anxiety.
January 26, 2010
CEU Ethics
CEU Ethics: Ethics Online CEU Course
Click here for full text
Ethics CEUs for Social Workers
Ethics CEUs for Counselors
Ethics CEUs for MFTs
Social Work CEU Ethics
Also See CAMFT Revised Ethical Standards Available on the CAMFT website
Law and Ethics (10 hours)
Description
This course is designed to help you:
Identify scope of practice issues and definitions
Increase familiarity with the characteristics of unprofessional conduct, negligence, and standard of care
Explore the legal issues of privilege, confidentiality, treatment of minors, record retention/storage, termination, informed consent, malpractice, and sex with clients.
Increase familiarity with HIPAA and third party reimbursement
Explore professional ethics information including CAMFT and NASW Ethical Standards.
Board/state approvals Professions
State Licensing Authority CADC I CADC II CADCA CCPS CCS CSWI LCSW LMFT LPC MFTI MHC
California California Board of Behavioral Sciences
Click here for full text
Ethics CEUs for Social Workers
Ethics CEUs for Counselors
Ethics CEUs for MFTs
Social Work CEU Ethics
Also See CAMFT Revised Ethical Standards Available on the CAMFT website
Law and Ethics (10 hours)
Description
This course is designed to help you:
Identify scope of practice issues and definitions
Increase familiarity with the characteristics of unprofessional conduct, negligence, and standard of care
Explore the legal issues of privilege, confidentiality, treatment of minors, record retention/storage, termination, informed consent, malpractice, and sex with clients.
Increase familiarity with HIPAA and third party reimbursement
Explore professional ethics information including CAMFT and NASW Ethical Standards.
Board/state approvals Professions
State Licensing Authority CADC I CADC II CADCA CCPS CCS CSWI LCSW LMFT LPC MFTI MHC
California California Board of Behavioral Sciences
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