Sorry that this is arriving late. As I mentioned in my last post, I’ve been
behind in keeping up with the blog. I
think that’s about to change.
So this is our finalized schedule for the 2015-16 Main
Speaker’s Series. I hope that we have
again covered a wide area, while remaining true to our vision of this program.
For more information on the philosophy of this series,
please refer to my previous blog posting for the 2014-15 series. Again, we’re hearing lots of you would love
to have these small group experiences come to your city outside of
Toronto. I’ve been working hard,
devoting mad amounts of time and energy to networking with other organizations
(such as the Ontario College of Family Physicians, the Collaborative Mental
Health Care Network, the Ontario Medical Association and the General Practice
Psychotherapy Association). Promises
have been made, but none have yet come through.
I do want you to know that I am working on this, and hope that one day
these talks can be more widely disseminated, while providing the community
building and collegial interaction for which they were originally designed.
I hope to see some familiar faces between now and April.
And please add your comments. This is your blog too, and your opportunity
to share what’s important to you, and what’s true to your own calling and
vision.
October 21, 2015
Déjà vu all over again: Understanding
traumatic enactments and how to work with them
By definition, traumatic experiences overwhelm a survivor’s
capacity to cope. To manage psychological trauma, aspects of the trauma are
dissociated and not integrated in the survivor’s sense of self and personal
narrative. Traumatic enactments are the inevitable consequence as the survivor
unconsciously attempts to resolve the trauma. When enactments are played out
with the health care provider they have the potential to derail treatment.
However, when enactments are understood and appropriately addressed, they can
be critical in laying a path for healing. This presentation will address
traumatic enactments, including strategies for working effectively with those
challenging encounters.
By the end of the session participants will be able to:
•
Provide a theoretical framework for
understanding traumatic enactments.
•
Describe four types of enactments that are
common among trauma survivors.
•
Describe basic strategies for helping a
survivor work through a traumatic enactment.
Dr.
Catherine Classen is a full professor in the Department of
Psychiatry at the University of Toronto, director of the Mental Health Research
Program at the Women’s College Research Institute at Women’s College Hospital,
and the academic leader of the Trauma Therapy Program at Women’s College
Hospital. She is a past president of the International Society for the Study of
Trauma and Dissociation and past chair of the Traumatic Stress Section of the
Canadian Psychological Association. Dr. Classen has been working in the field
of psychological trauma for over 20 years as both a researcher and clinician.
Her research interests include investigating psychotherapy interventions for
trauma survivors and advancing trauma-informed care within the health care
system. She has over 100 publications and recently co-authored the book,
“Treating the trauma survivor: An essential guide to traumainformed care,”
published by Routledge. She is also co-author of an online accredited CME
course “Posttraumatic Stress Disorder: A Primer for Primary Care Physicians”
sponsored by the Mood Disorders Society of Canada in collaboration with Faculty
of Medicine, Memorial University, Newfoundland.
December 2, 2015
The Science of Yoga
Yoga and Meditation are becoming increasingly popular in
the West for treatment of mental health and chronic illness. While often
perceived as a mystical practice involving bends and twists, Yoga is actually
an ancient secular philosophy describing how to cease or slow down the racings
of the mind to achieve health and well-being.
This experiential workshop will clarify the misperceptions about this
transformative mind-body practice, as well as present the scientific evidence
for its neuroplastic and physiological effects. Through this workshop,
participants will:
- Understand key principles of the Philosophy and Psychology of Yoga and its common roots with Buddhism and other Eastern Practices
- Understand the Neurological and Physiological effects of Yoga, and its benefits as an adjuvant therapy in Chronic Illness, Mental Health, and Trauma.
- Appreciate the different styles of yoga, and which patient is suited for which practice.
- Experience simple and accessible yogic practices, connecting, body, mind and spirit.
Dr.
Shailla Vaidya practices Mind-Body Medicine for Stress
Resilience in Toronto. She completed her MD at Dalhousie University, followed
by a residency in Family and Emergency Medicine at the University of Ottawa.
She went on to provide both Primary and Acute Emergency care to isolated First
Nations communities, sub-urban immigrant populations and homeless, street
involved youth. Gaining insights into what plagues our health and wanting to
affect change, she went on to complete a Master’s in Public Health at the
Harvard School of Public Health. Upon return, she lead teams of health care
providers to improve efficiency, patient access, and safety. She also worked to
implement medical group visits, improving social connection and peer-support
for patients. She has served as a faculty member with the Departments of Family
Medicine at McMaster University and the University of Toronto. Dr Vaidya is
also trained as Yoga Teacher and Yoga Therapist, and has been incorporating
scientifically sound Yoga techniques in her medical practice since 2005. Her
clinical interests lie in how the social determinants of health, attachment,
and disconnection lead to physiological stress and the development of chronic
illness. Combining her knowledge, she applies an integrative, compassionate
approach to help her patients restore health and build resilience. To learn
more about her practice, please visit www.theYogaMD.ca
January 13, 2016
Understanding and Treating Chronic Shame
Chronic shame is a powerful and pervasive outcome of
relational trauma, but it is usually hidden behind other symptoms of
pathology. If chronic shame is ignored,
treatment of those symptoms will likely be effective only in the short term. If we can recognize the presence of chronic
shame in the symptomstories our patients present, and if we can imagine its
particular formation and operation within each patient’s self-system, we will
be in position to treat chronic shame directly and effectively. Effective treatment is grounded in understanding
that chronic shame is a problem with patients’ right-brain integration of
affect, relationship, and self.
Treatment requires attuned, nonshaming engagement with our patients, the
co-construction of narratives that integrate their sense of emotional/relational
(right-brain) self, direct attention paid to their shame whenever possible,
including shame-reduction strategies, and our own skillful, self-reflexive
handling of the many ways shame becomes enacted within the therapeutic
relationship.
Key Learning Points:
•
A definition of chronic shame as a relational
and right-brain phenomenon
•
Assessment markers for chronic shame across
symptomologies
•
How to make reparative right-brain connections
possible with and for chronically shamed clients
•
How to recognize and work through
shame-disturbances in the therapy relationship
•
Strategies for life-time shame reduction
Pat
DeYoung MSW, PhD is a psychotherapist and clinical supervisor
in private practice in Toronto. A
founding faculty member of the Toronto Institute for Relational Psychotherapy,
she has written Relational Psychotherapy, A Primer (Routledge, first edition,
2003, second edition, 2015) and Understanding and Treating Chronic Shame: A
Relational/Neurobiological Approach (Routledge, 2015).
February 10, 2016
ACT in Practice
Acceptance and Commitment Therapy is gaining recognition as
a mindfulness-based psychotherapy. Its
aim is to increase psychological flexibility through 6 ACT processes, including
defusion, acceptance, present moment, self-as-context, values, and committed
action. As it is a functional approach, it can be adapted for a wide variety of
applications in both clinical and nonclinical settings. It can also be flexibly
conducted in both individual and group format from single to multiple sessions.
This presentation will review the core ACT processes and discuss how it may be
potentially used in various contexts.
By the end of the seminar, participants will be able to
•
Describe the 6 core ACT processes
•
Identify potential applications of ACT
•
Discuss how it may be adapted to suit various
clinical and non-clinical contexts
Dr.
Kenneth Fung is a Staff Psychiatrist and Clinical Director
of the Asian Initiative in Mental Health Program at the Toronto Western
Hospital, University Health Network. He
is also Associate Professor with Equity, Gender, and Populations Division at
the Department of Psychiatry, University of Toronto. He completed a two-year fellowship in
Cultural Psychiatry at the University of Toronto, and his Master thesis was on
alexithymia among Chinese Canadians. His
primary research, teaching, and clinical interests include both cultural
psychiatry and psychotherapy. He co-leads the Pillar 4 Dialogue of the
Department of Psychiatry Strategic Plan, University of Toronto, which focuses
on issues regarding equity, social justice, and social responsibility, and is the
Block Co-coordinator of the Cultural Psychiatry Core Seminars for psychiatry
residents. He is the seminar co-lead and
psychotherapy supervisor in Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) at the
University Health Network, and teaches and conducts research in Acceptance and
Commitment Therapy (ACT). He has been
involved in community-based research projects related to HIV, mental health
stigma, and immigrant and refugee mental health. He is psychiatric consultant to the Hong Fook
Mental Health Association and is involved in various mental health promotion
and education projects in the community.
He offers consultations at Mon Sheong Scarborough Long-Term Care Centre.
He is the Vice-President (President-Elect) of the Society of the Study of
Psychiatry and Culture. He is the past
Chair and current Historian of the Federation of Chinese American and Chinese
Canadian Medical Societies. He is the
current Chair of the Ontario Chapter of the Association of Contextual
Behavioral Science. He is enthusiastic about art, and dabbles in various
expressions of art including sketching, painting, and piano playing. He is a
supporter of the arts, and is a Board Member of the Little Pear Garden Dance
Company.
March 2, 2016
Anxiety and the Gift of Imagination. A
new clinical model for helping children understand and manage anxiety
According to the U.S. Dept of Health and Human Services,
anxiety disorders are the most common mental health problem occurring during
childhood and adolescence (2010). In the
U.S. 13% of children and adolescents experience some kind of anxiety
disorder. The Public Health Agency of
Canada 2002 reports that in Canada 6% of children have an anxiety disorder
serious enough to require treatment. In
spite of anxiety being a debilitating condition that can prevent a child from
participating in many of the critical aspects of childhood, including school
attendance as well as recreational activities, many children are not motivated
to receive psychotherapeutic help, preferring instead to use avoidance as their
main defense against uncomfortable anxiety states. From the adult perspective,
this is not a viable solution and creates many secondary problems. Dr. Alter
will focus on a therapeutic formulation of anxiety that has worked extremely
well for hundreds of children in her private practice. She will explain her
discovery of the link between imagination and anxiety, and how this new
understanding can be used effectively for the treatment of anxiety. This new
approach starts and ends with an enhancement of self-esteem and puts children
in a place where they are motivated to use many of the tools and strategies
that have been developed by others. You
will also learn how children’s anxiety is different from adults’. As well you will learn how children’s
thinking is different from adults’ which will assist you in helping children
with many other problems besides anxiety. Key Learning Points:
•
Understand and appreciate the difference
between children’s and adult’s thinking processes
•
Understand the differences between children’s
and adult’s anxieties
•
Make the connection between anxiety and
imagination
•
Implement a concrete step-by-step approach to
applying this new understanding of anxiety
•
Incorporate some effective strategies into your
clinical practice to manage children’s anxiety
•
Find a new way to work with children around
anxiety that enhances their self-esteem and empowers and challenges them to
face their problems and their fears
•
Discover why motivating children to make
changes is key to effective clinical
practice and find new ways to increase their motivation for change
Dr.
Robin Alter was born in New Jersey and received her
undergraduate degree from Skidmore College, Saratoga Springs, New York. She
received her Master’s and Doctoral degree from the University of Florida in
Gainesville. She then moved to Toronto, Canada, where she has been working in
children’s mental health since 1980.
She has been employed by two of the largest children’s
mental health centre in the Toronto area for over 34 years— the
Hincks-Dellcrest Children’s Centre and Blue Hills Child and Family Centre. She
also works with Anishnawbe Health Toronto, providing fetal alcohol assessments
for the people of the First Nations community. She has taught psychology at
York University. She maintains a private practice with Alter Stuckler and
Associates in Thornhill, Ontario. She is trustee with the Psychology Foundation
of Canada. She gives many public lectures to parent groups, teachers and
principals, and has been on numerous radio and television programs talking
about children’s mental health issues.
Her second book, Taming the Anxiety Monster: A Workbook for
Kids, will be published by New Harbinger in the fall of 2015. You can find out
more about
Dr. Alter by visiting her website: http://www.docrobin.com/
April 6, 2016
Finding Familiarity in a New Frontier:
Psychotherapy for Adults with Autism Spectrum Disorder
Despite the increased numbers of children and adults being
diagnosed with Autism Spectrum Disorders (ASD) in Ontario, and the knowledge
that at least 1% of the adult population has ASD, relatively little attention
has been given to the provision of support and treatment to these individuals
and their families. Individual, couple, group and family psychotherapy, core components
of a lifespan approach to intervention, will be discussed in this session.
Considering the presentation of ASDs, Dr. Stoddart will highlight the issues
that ongoing psychotherapy that can be useful in addressing, and some of the
challenges that are unique to this group, reflecting on his practice of 25
years. Key Learning Points:
•
Identify Ontario trends in youth and adult ASD
diagnosis
•
Understand the psychosocial and mental health
issues that can be addressed in the context of psychotherapy
•
Articulate the lifespan challenges common to
youth and adults living with ASD, from entry into adulthood to aging with ASD
•
Increase knowledge of resources and interest in
working with this group
Dr.
Kevin Stoddart is Founding Director of The Redpath Centre and
Adjunct Professor, Factor-Inwentash Faculty of Social Work, University of
Toronto. Since the early 1990s, his clinical focus has been children, youth and
adults with primarily Asperger Syndrome and the co-morbid social and mental
health problems that affect them. His second book with Drs. Burke and King
entitled “Asperger Syndrome in Adulthood: A Comprehensive Guide for Clinicians”
was published by Norton Professional Books (2012). He is Co-Chair of the
Ontario Working Group on Mental Health and Adults with ASD and the Ontario
Partnership for Adults with Autism and Asperger.
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