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Category Archives: Professional Development

E-Book: How to Make the Most out of Your Therapy

How to Make the Most out of Your Therapy: A Guide for Clients receiving Talking Therapies from Psychologists, Counsellors and other Mental Health Professionals
An e-book by Tim Kilgour – clinical psychologist and fiction writer.

What is this e-book about? 

This easy to read guide is a relatively brief summary about how to make the most of your psychotherapy. It is designed for people who are planning to enter into a talking-based therapy with mental health professionals (e.g. psychologist, counsellor or other professional therapist). It outlines some ideas to help prepare for the therapeutic experience, outlines what the client may typically expect in early sessions, describes aspects of the therapeutic relationship, outlines helpful (and not so helpful) attitudes that a client may bring to enhance their progress, describes the purpose of homework, explains the value of others in the therapeutic setting, describes the closing stage of treatment, and gives tips on how to cope if therapy goes wrong. This text is designed to give you, the client, a “head start” in your therapeutic relationship to increase the likelihood of you having a useful experience and make the most of your “treatment dollar”.

The text will also assist psychologists and counsellors in preparing, managing and enhancing the experience of their clients prior to and during the therapeutic experience.

This text is published as an e-book at the following link:
http://www.amazon.com/Make-Most-Your-Therapy-ebook/dp/B006WW9L2S

Guide Provides Operational Advice to Councils on Early Intervention

Five steps for investing in early intervention in order to prevent mental ill health among children and adolescents

Early and improved interventions for children and adolescents are among the most important investments in our future! Mental health among children and adolescents is a synchronisation project under SKL (the Swedish Association of Local Authorities and Regions). They have developed a guide that aims to provide tangible, operational support to municipalities and county councils that want to invest systematically in early intervention for children and adolescents.

The guide is intended primarily for executives at municipal or county administrative level, such as the county council procurement director; the municipal social services director or director of education, as well as for civil servants who work in project management, analysis and drafting of management information in this area.

To review the article please click on the following link:

http://www.iimhl.com/iimhlupdates/swedish_document_specupdate_200213.pdf

 From the International Initiative for Mental Health Leadership Update List

Contact: David Robinson david@iimhl.com

Online Access to Free Psychology Lectures

Thanks to iTunes U, thousands of students, professionals and curious laypeople around the world now have access to free psychology lectures.

Find out more on the APA website

APA give the following sampling of some of the psychology courses available on iTunes U. To access the courses, download the iTunes app or go to the iTunes store.

 

ENVIRONMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY

University of California, Irvine

Instructor: Daniel Stokols, PhD, chancellor’s professor of social ecology in the departments of psychology and social behavior, and planning, policy and design

Why tune in? Environmental psychology is about how we’re influenced by our everyday surroundings, including our offices, dorm rooms, commutes and exposures to nature. Stokols’s course addresses a variety of issues, including how the design of an apartment influences the formation of friendships, why people litter and the consequences of a society suffering from information overload. “Today, there’s so much concern about issues of sustainability, public health, pollution and population growth that viewing the world as a system and in ecological terms … is very timely,” says Stokols.

Fun fact from the course: People are more likely to throw away trash in a garbage can that’s painted decoratively than one that’s plain.

HEALTH PSYCHOLOGY

American University

Instructor: Brian Yates, PhD, professor of psychology

Why tune in? Yates originally intended iTunes U to serve as a resource for his own students, who are challenged to evaluate and change their own habits to promote health. They assess their personal risks, identify what they want to change and maintain, and set up a system of “triggers and flags” that will signal when it’s time to seek professional help in the future. The material has caught on — his course is consistently one of the top 10 downloaded from iTunes U and had more than 35,000 enrollees in October. “The field is very exciting. It’s young, dynamic, it affects every one of us,” says Yates. “That’s what psychology is supposed to do.”

Surprising fact from the course: One study of HIV-positive men found that those who tended to blame themselves for negative outside events experienced a significantly faster decline in helper T cells, important for maintaining immune function.

HUMAN EMOTION

University of California, Berkeley

Instructor: Dacher Keltner, PhD, professor of psychology and director of Berkeley’s Social Interaction Laboratory

Why tune in? Keltner’s course has always been well-attended, so it was Berkeley’s idea to make it available to the public through iTunes U. The course details fascinating research on art and emotional expression, cultural similarities and differences in non-verbal expressions, and emotion’s neurobiological and hormonal underpinnings. “The study of human emotion is new, it’s growing and it’s relevant to people around the world,” says Keltner.

Interesting fact from the course: People can usually accurately convey — and interpret — emotion through nothing more than a brief touch. But in a study conducted by Keltner and his team, there were two instances in which the “touchee” was clueless: When women tried to convey anger to men, and when men tried to communicate sympathy to women. “That fits how emotions are gendered, and how families socialize women into the ways of sympathy and men into the ways of anger that might account for these differences,” he says.

AUTISM AND RELATED DISORDERS

Yale University

Instructor: Fred Volkmar, MD, chief of child psychiatry at Yale-New Haven Children’s Hospital

Why tune in? A rotating panel of mental health experts lead this course on the latest autism research, including a lecture by Volkmar’s co-instructor, James McPartland, PhD, that details how brain electrophysiology is informing researchers’ understanding of social perception in autism. “This is a happy story in the sense that outcomes seem to be getting better with early intervention and protection,” says Volkmar, who estimates the course’s first lecture has gotten about 21,000 views on iTunes.

Interesting fact from the course: One of the early theories of autism speculated that intelligent parents were more likely to have autistic children. But the idea was likely a selection bias: The people who knew about what’s now known as autism were predominantly researchers or other academics. “Now,” he says, “you see children with autism everywhere … from all social classes, from every continent on the globe — and it looks remarkably the same. What’s different is how people respond to it.”

GREAT IDEAS IN PSYCHOLOGY

Missouri State University

Instructor: Todd Daniel, professor of psychology and director of Missouri State’s RStats (Research, Statistical Training, Analysis and Technical Support) Institute

Why tune in? Daniel is a former radio producer who uses his storytelling skills to bring psychology to life in this introductory course. The course, which is Missouri State’s most downloaded podcast, begins with the “Myth of Psyche” and takes the listener through an engaging overview of psychology including lectures on dreaming and hypnosis, a health course dubbed “Why College Is Bad for You” and the truth about Freud. “After I do a lecture in front of a seated class, when it’s over, it’s gone like a vapor,” says Daniel. “I wanted to create something more permanent.”

Surprising fact from the course: In 1964, a man named Randy Gardner went 264 hours, or about 11 days, without sleep. He was trying to prove that sleep wasn’t all that important, but the changes noted in his cognitive and behavioral functioning proved otherwise — a lesson Daniel tries to impart on his students. “Your best strategy is to get a good night’s sleep,” he says.

Excerpts from Stories of Recovery from Being Suicidal are Now Live Online

The Butterfly Diaries creative book project is drawing close to completion. For nearly a year, six writers have been working to tell the stories of six Kiwis who survived the experience of being suicidal and found their way to a better place. The first three stories are now complete and excerpts are available for reading and sharing online. More samplers will be loaded as stories are finished.

Click here to read The Butterfly Diaries Samplers.

Read excerpts from…

Emerging from the Past Transformed: Raewyn Alexander’s creative essay about Mary’s Journey

Enough Angels: Owen Bullock’s haibun (a prose-poetry cross) about Sean’s journey

Breathe and Breathe and Breathe: Phoebe Wright’s short story about Brad’s journey.

Opening Doors to Reduce Seclusion

The Mental Health Foundation has launched Opening Doors, a video examining the use of seclusion and the long-lasting trauma it can cause to both patients and staff. Visit the Mental Health Foundation website for more information.

Learn a Waiata on Youtube

Do you wish you knew the words to join in singing waiata at events?

Here are a few clips from Youtube to get you started with some of the classics…

Learn Interactive Drawing Therapy: Course Starts 1 November 2012

The Interactive Drawing Therapy Foundation Course scheduled in Auckland is less than one month away.

1-2 & 5-6 November 2012

The offer to attend this course is the Early Bird rate at $750.00 (incl GST) – this is the final Foundation Course in Auckland for 2012.

The enrolment deadline is Monday 22nd October – contact the IDT Office for an enrolment form.

IDT – A way of working that is immediate, effective and proven!

Interactive Drawing Therapy Ltd
PO Box 47-419 Ponsonby,  Auckland 1144, New Zealand
Phone: (0064) 9 376 4789 | Fax (0064) 9 376 4759 | Email: idt@pl.net  

Website:  www.InteractiveDrawingTherapy.com

What is Good Medical Practice to you?

Under section 118 of the Health Practitioners Competence Assurance Act 2003 the Medical Council of New Zealand (the Council) is responsible for setting “standards of clinical competence, cultural competence and ethical conduct” for doctors.  In 1998 the Medical Council developed Good Medical Practice to be the foundation document for the standards they set…

Good Medical Practice aims to outline the duties of a good doctor in a simple and direct manner. It is intended to help doctors to monitor their own conduct and the conduct of their colleagues. It is also intended to serve as a source of education and reflection for medical students. The Council are also aware that it is often referred to by patients who are uncertain about the quality of care they have received. They have tried to make the resource accessible to all of these groups, and endeavoured to ensure that the standards outlined are clear and easy to follow.

Good Medical Practice also has another important function.  It is often used as a standard against which professional conduct is measured. It is used by the Health Practitioners’ Disciplinary Tribunal, the Council’s Professional Conduct Committees and the Health and Disability Commissioner in determining whether a doctor has acted appropriately or not.  The advice it contains therefore needs to establish a clear line in the sand against which conduct can be measured.

Good Medical Practice was last reviewed in 2006. The Council is seeking feedback from doctors, patients and other agencies engaged in the regulation and practise of medicine on this resource, and on changes that they are proposing to make.

While the Council believes that Good Medical Practice remains useful and relevant, they also think that it could be improved in a number of ways. They are seeking your comments on the proposed changes, and also your responses to a number of specific questions.

Quite a few of these changes they propose are minor, but a number outline new or different standards. The Council appreciates that your time is precious, so have tried to summarise the most important changes in a consultation paper.  However, if you do have the time they would also encourage you to review both the consultation paper and a complete copy of the draft Good Medical Practice that includes details of all of the suggested changes.

Download Good Medical Practice Consultation paper

Download draft Good Medical Practice

Please send your comments to Michael Thorn, the Council’s senior policy adviser and researcher by 12 October 2012. You can either complete the questions in the consultation paper or in the complete copy of the draft Good Medical Practice and send your responses to Michael at mthorn@mcnz.org.nz or post it to:

Michael Thorn
Senior Policy Adviser and Researcher
Medical Council of New Zealand
PO Box 11-649
Willis Street
Wellington 6011

Please also feel free to send Michael any other comments or suggestions you have about Good Medical Practice.

Interactive Drawing Therapy Training for Practitioners

IDT Foundation Course training in Auckland!

  • 5-6 & 9-10 July 2012
  • 1-2 & 5-6 November 2012

Interactive Drawing Therapy is a page based way of working with words, images and feelings.  You may have already heard of IDT.  Over the last six years, IDT training has become established throughout Australia with most participants enrolling because of a recommendation by a colleague.  That colleague may for example have attended one of the many in-house Agency courses delivered to well known organisations such as, Centacare, Anglicare, Uniting Care and Relationships Australia.

Class The page becomes a mirror for your client, helping them see themselves more objectively from new perspectives, and facilitating insight, inner resourcefulness, and profound change. A unique map of the stages of the therapeutic journey guides you through the tasks, challenges, risks and interventions of each stage, dramatically increasing your effectiveness and ability to work safely.

The effectiveness of IDT is confirmed by what the practitioners say:

“IDT is a little miracle – a universal therapy which I feel crosses the bridge of age, ability, ethnicity, willingness, and engages with ease and safety. Many thanks”

“….complements other therapies; a very good medium for people who find cognitive methods difficult and unable to express verbally”

“Very informative and great learning.  IDT is very effective at helping the client go from the cognitive to deeper layers and feelings.  This is something I will definitely use with clients”

“Very useful and relevant.  Provides an alternative to many “talking therapies” to engage and work with clients”

The Foundation Course covers:

Unit One
Key concepts; basic method; working with pages; writing; session management; guiding principles; applications; metaphors; drawing interventions; overwhelm; resistant clients and developing IDT competency

By the end of the two-day Unit One, participants will be able to employ the basic IDT method as a powerful  tool when working with clients.

Unit Two
Review of Unit One; key concepts; levels of issues; therapeutic process; parts work; predictable difficulties; words; thematic frameworks; farewells; transitions

By the end of the two-day Unit Two, participants will be able to recognise various thematic frameworks that clients commonly present, and be able to shape their interventions accordingly.

Enrolments are open – contact the IDT office, idt@pl.net to enrol at the Early Bird rate

IDT – THEORY AND PRACTICE THAT WORK!

IDT Foundation courses are fully accredited to earn P.D. points

Mental health promotion and prevention services to gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender and intersex populations in New Zealand: Needs assessment report

Te Pou has released a report on the results of an assessment of the mental-health promotion and prevention needs of people who identify as gay, lesbian, bi-sexual, transgender and intersex.

You can read a summary and download the full report here.