Friday, May 28, 2010
Falling Through the Cracks
Thursday, May 27, 2010
From Recovery to Discovery Peer Support Group Meetings
From Recovery to Discovery Peer Support Group Meetings
Every Thursday Evening
6:30 pm to 8:30 pm
The Hub
2nd Floor, 1673 Barrington Street
Halifax, Nova Scotia
ALL ARE WELCOME!
FREE!
TODAY – Thursday, May 27th, 2010
An interactive presentation on Intensive Short-term Dynamic Psychotherapy (ISTDP) with Dr. Ravinder Bains
Dr. Bains is a psychiatrist at Connections Halifax (formerly known as Connections Clubhouse) and The Centre for Emotions and Health, as well as psychotherapist who specializes in ISTDP. The basic ISTDP understanding of many psychological disorders is based on attachment, and the emotional effects of broken attachments. Interruptions and trauma to human attachments may cause a cascade of complex emotions which may become blocked and avoided. When later life events stir up these feelings, anxiety and defence reactions may be activated; a basic finding derived from a large case series conducted by Dr. Habib Davanloo in the 1960’s and 1970‘s. The anxiety and these defence reactions may be completely unconscious to the person experiencing them, and the result may be ruined relationships, physical symptoms, and a range of psychiatric symptoms. The ISTDP treatment approach, as designed by Dr. Davanloo, is to first acquaint the patient with these unconscious processes and then to help them to overcome the emotional blocking processes. This often means focusing on the feelings that the patient has in the office during the moments of the interview, and pointing out the ways the patient blocks off both the emotions, and the connection with the therapist, during treatment. After exposure to the origins of these intense emotions, and learning to stay with them in the present moment, patients commonly experience an improvement in symptoms, and a reduction of defensive reactions.
Thursday, June 3rd, 2010
An interactive presentation on music therapy with Aileen McGinty
Aileen moved to Halifax from Scotland at the end of January 2010. She has been a practicing music therapy for eight years and is a qualified MTA. She proposed, initiated and very successfully ran a music therapy department within a psychiatric hospital for three years. As part of this work she undertook a two year study ofThe Effectiveness of Music Therapy in an Acute Psychiatric Setting. This work was written up and presented at a national health service conference. Aileen is also a qualified lawyer, has a Masters in Psychology and has just completed post-graduate study in psychology. She has a diagnosis of bipolar disorder and has been very involved in both the consumer movement and mental health policy development work, including working with the Scottish Government, Royal College of Psychiatrists (UK) and the Mental Health Commission of Canada. She has also been a Board member of the Healthy Minds Cooperative for the last two years.
Thursday, June 10th, 2010
An interactive presentation on mental health in the Christian community with Rev. Martin Zwicker
Rev. Zwicker graduated from Acadia University in 1995 with Master of Divinity degree. While he was student, he spent two summers working as a Hospital Chaplain at the IWK and the VG Hospitals. He has 15 years experience as a pastor, the last 9½ at First Baptist Church, Dartmouth. Rev. Zwicker also serves on the Baptist mental health working group: Rapha Initiative. In this role he speaks at seminars, and he has contributed to the recent DVD project, An Awakening of Compassion: A Christian Perspective on Mental Health. He has also been involved in spiritual care at Nova Scotia Hospital and the Central Nova Scotia Correctional Facility. He serves on the Board of Directors of Margaret's House (Feeding Others of Dartmouth), and he volunteers for the Out of the Cold Emergency Shelter. Rev. Zwicker is involved in advocacy, anti-stigma initiatives, and he provides direct support for individuals and families around issues of mental health. He is a trainer for safeTALK Suicide Alertness.
An additional upcoming From Recovery to Discovery Peer Support Group interactive presentation:
Thursday, June 17th, 2010 – Dr. Phil Tibbo, Early Psychosis and Current Research in Psychosis
Laura Burke
Peer Support Facilitator
Schizophrenia Society of Nova Scotia
Phone: (902) 465-2601
Toll-free: 1-800-465-2601
Website: www.ssns.ca
Weblog: www.blog.ssns.ca
Room B-23, E.C. Purdy Building
300 Pleasant Street
P.O. Box 1004, Station Main
Dartmouth, Nova Scotia
B2Y 3Z9
Thursday, May 20, 2010
safeTALK: suicide alertness for everyone
safeTALK: suicide alertness for everyone
Friday June 11, 1 – 4pm,
East Dartmouth Community Centre, Caledonia Road, Dartmouth
We are pleased to let you know about our upcoming safeTALK workshop. Please note that pre-registration is required and we will not be able to accept registrations at the door. Due to the generous support of the Dartmouth Community Health Board we are able to provide registration free of charge to people who live and/or work in the Dartmouth area.
Please forward through your networks. For more information refer to the attached document or contact me...
Angela Davis
Coordinator, Communities Addressing Suicide Together
Canadian Mental Health Association - Nova Scotia Division
63 King Street
Dartmouth, NS B2Y 2R7
(902) 466-6600
(902) 401-8070 (mobile)
1(877)466-6606 (toll-free)
(902) 466-3300 (fax)
davisacmhans@eastlink.ca
Monday, May 17, 2010
New program offers hopeful message to mentally ill
ANYONE with severe mental illnesses like schizophrenia, bipolar disorder and psychosis can find recovery and have good mental health.
That was Chris Summerville's message Friday in Winnipeg, where he introduced a free program, Your Recovery Journey, to help people do just that.
"The truth is mental illnesses are treatable, recovery of a quality of life is possible... people can live beyond the lived experience of mental illness," said Summerville, executive director of the Manitoba Schizophrenia Society.
To read the rest of the article click on the link below.
Real-time, evidence-based information at clinicians' fingertips to streamline mental health care
(Toronto, ON) May 12, 2010 -- Mental health, the second leading cause of disability and premature death in Canada, impacts the lives of every Canadian, much like technology. Mental health and technology are now being brought together with an innovative tool developed by University of Toronto Bloomberg nursing researchers in collaboration with Toronto-based software development company HInext and the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health (CAMH). This tool has the potential to improve mental health care planning in Ontario and beyond.
The e-Volution-TREAT system simplifies the integration of evidence-based research with care planning at point-of-care for people living with mental illness. The web-based electronic application pulls best practice information together and presents it to clinicians as they assess client information, allowing them to incorporate the information into their treatment plan.
To read the rest of this article click on the link below.
Saturday, May 15, 2010
From Recovery to Discovery Peer Support Group Meetings
From Recovery to Discovery Peer Support Group Meetings
Every Thursday Evening
6:30 pm to 8:30 pm
The Hub
2nd Floor, 1673 Barrington Street
Halifax, Nova Scotia
ALL ARE WELCOME!
FREE!
Tomorrow, Thursday, May 13th, 2010
An interactive presentation on recreation and mental health with Ms. Diana Bennett, Certified Recreation Therapist
Diana Bennett has extensive experience working with youth and adults with mental illness. She was one of the principal administrators of The Wellness Program at the Nova Scotia Early Psychosis Program, where she helped clients work toward personal and group fitness and health goals, and assisted them with their journey toward recovery. Diana has also worked with the Mental Health Day Treatment Program, and she is currently employed at the IWK's Adolescent Centre for Treatment, and at COMPASS, Centre for Collaborative Child and Family Treatment. Her enthusiastic yet sensitive approach addresses many of the issues facing people with mental illness, such as a lack of confidence and motivation. A main focus of her work in mental health is supporting clients to enhance their level of physical activity and realize the connection between mind and body. Diana’s skills with engagement as a group motivator will be sure to remind members of the From Recovery to Discovery Peer Support Group of the importance of meaningful recreation in achieving and maintaining mental health.
Thursday, May 20th, 2010
An interactive presentation on bipolar disorder with Dr. Martin Alda, Professor of Psychiatry, Acting Director of Research, Department of Psychiatry, Dalhousie University
Dr. Martin Alda is an expert in bipolar disorder and psychiatric genetics. He is the first holder of the Killam Chair in Mood Disorders at Dalhousie University, and he is a Faculty of Medicine Clinical Research Scholar. He provides clinical care in the Mood Disorders Program at the Queen Elizabeth II Health Sciences Centre in Halifax. Prior to his placement at Dalhousie Medical School in 1998, Dr. Alda taught and practiced psychiatry in Czechoslovakia and at the University of Ottawa and Royal Ottawa Hospital. The winner of three Young Scientist Awards from the Bi-Annual Workshop on Schizophrenia, Dr. Alda also received the New Clinical Drug Evaluation Unit (NCDEU) Young Investigator Award from the US-based National Institute of Mental Health, the Intermediate Research Fellowship from the Ontario Mental Health Foundation, and twice the Independent Investigator Award from National Alliance for Research on Schizophrenia and Depression (NARSAD). His research interests include long-term treatment of bipolar disorder and the phenomenology, clinical course, and neurobiology of mood disorders.
Thursday, May 27th, 2010
An interactive presentation on Intensive Short-term Dynamic Psychotherapy (ISTDP) with Dr. Ravinder Bains
Dr. Bains is a psychiatrist at Connections Halifax (formerly known as Connections Clubhouse) and The Centre for Emotions and Health, as well as psychotherapist who specializes in ISTDP. The basic ISTDP understanding of many psychological disorders is based on attachment, and the emotional effects of broken attachments. Interruptions and trauma to human attachments may cause a cascade of complex emotions which may become blocked and avoided. When later life events stir up these feelings, anxiety and defence reactions may be activated; a basic finding derived from a large case series conducted by Dr. Habib Davanloo in the 1960’s and 1970‘s. The anxiety and these defence reactions may be completely unconscious to the person experiencing them, and the result may be ruined relationships, physical symptoms, and a range of psychiatric symptoms. The ISTDP treatment approach, as designed by Dr. Davanloo, is to first acquaint the patient with these unconscious processes and then to help them to overcome the emotional blocking processes. This often means focusing on the feelings that the patient has in the office during the moments of the interview, and pointing out the ways the patient blocks off both the emotions, and the connection with the therapist, during treatment. After exposure to the origins of these intense emotions, and learning to stay with them in the present moment, patients commonly experience an improvement in symptoms, and a reduction of defensive reactions.
Further upcoming From Recovery to Discovery Peer Support Group interactive presentations:
Thursday, June 3rd, 2010 – Ms. Aileen McGinty, Music Therapy
Thursday, June 10th, 2010 – Rev. Martin Zwicker, Topic to be announced.
Date TBD – Dr. Phil Tibbo, Early Psychosis and Current Research in Psychosis
Laura Burke
Peer Support Facilitator
Schizophrenia Society of Nova Scotia
Phone: (902) 465-2601
Toll-free: 1-800-465-2601
Website: www.ssns.ca
Weblog: www.blog.ssns.ca
Room B-23, E.C. Purdy Building
300 Pleasant Street
P.O. Box 1004, Station Main
Dartmouth, Nova Scotia
B2Y 3Z9
Job Opportunity For Dartmouth Live In Support Person
DARTMOUTH LIVE IN SUPPORT PERSON
~An opportunity to work in community mental health~
Connections Halifax is looking for an individual or couple to provide support to people living independently in the community.
As support person, you will live in your own apartment in the same building as the people you are supporting. Your hours of work will be in the evenings, when you will help develop the community aspects of the building and provide various informal supports to approximately 5 tenants. You will also be required to be available throughout the night in your own unit, during which you can sleep unless otherwise needed. Your time off will be everyday during the daytime hours as well as 2 nights a week off.
The ideal candidate will have excellent communications skills based on flexibility, openness and warmth, and a strong capacity to develop relationships with a variety of people. You will work closely with Connections Halifax staff in carrying out all responsibilities of this position.
The position is located in North End Dartmouth and offers rent, basic utilities, a stipend and vacation time.
Forward resumes with cover letter:
Att: Cheyenne Smythe
Cheyenne.Smythe@cdha.nshealth.ca
CLOSING DATE: Open until filled
Strengthening Families Together Helping Canadians Live With Mental Illness
Do you have a relative or friend with a serious mental illness? Would you like to learn more about his/her illness? Strengthening Families Together provides information, skill-building, and support. This is your opportunity to attend a Saturday condensed version of Strengthening Families Together, which is normally a ten-week, two-hour per week series.
You will learn about:
· What psychosis is
· Communication
· Coping with challenges of daily living
· Medications and their side effects
Saturday, May 29th, 2010
9:00 am to 4:00 pm
NSCC Waterfront Campus, Room 4337
Dartmouth, Nova Scotia
Lunch Included
To register please contact Donna Methot at (902) 462-8658 or hrmchapterssns@accesswave.ca. No on-site registration please.
Please feel free to forward this email to others who you think might be interested, and to post the attached flyer in your workplace.
Thursday, May 6, 2010
Kings County Chapter of the SSNS Meeting Announcement
Kings County Chapter of the SSNS Presents
Dr. Rex Deverell
noted Canadian dramatist will make a presentation on Stigma and Mental Illness
- At the Kentville Lions Club Hall, 78 River Street
- Wednesday May 19th, 2010 at 7:00pm
REFRESHMENTS & CONVERSATION
MEMBERS OF THE PUBLIC ARE URGED TO ATTEND
- Annual Meeting of the Chapter
- Election of Board of Directors
- Approval of budget for the year