12.0 JUN 17-18, 2016 - UBC CPD...Implementing Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT) Skills Group...

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ubccpd.ca KEYNOTE PRESENTERS Dr. Roderick McCormick (Kanienkehaka) BC Government endowed Research Chair in Aboriginal Child and Maternal Health, Thompson Rivers University Dr. Kathleen Pajer, Chief of Psychiatry at the Children’s Hospital of Eastern Ontario Dr. Nick Kates, Chair, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioural Neurosciences, MacMaster University Dr. Matthew Burkey, Child and youth psychiatrist and public health researcher, Williams Lake, BC THE COAST CAPRI HOTEL KELOWNA BC JUN 17-18, 2016 12.0 MOC SECTION 1 MAINPRO-M1 WHO SHOULD ATTEND Interprofessional/intersectoral teams, family physicians and other primary care providers, mental health care providers, psychiatrists and psychologists, administrators and policy makers, other health disciplines working with primary care and/or community care, consumers and family members, educators and their students, and researchers. SPECIAL PRESENTATION Clara Hughes - Six-Time Olympic Medalist | Mental Health Advocate

Transcript of 12.0 JUN 17-18, 2016 - UBC CPD...Implementing Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT) Skills Group...

Page 1: 12.0 JUN 17-18, 2016 - UBC CPD...Implementing Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT) Skills Group Medical Visits Within Primary Care Interactive Workshop Demonstrating Child And Youth

ubccpd.ca

KEYNOTE PRESENTERS

Dr. Roderick McCormick (Kanienkehaka) BC Government endowed Research Chair in Aboriginal Child and Maternal Health, Thompson Rivers University

Dr. Kathleen Pajer, Chief of Psychiatry at the Children’s Hospital of Eastern Ontario

Dr. Nick Kates, Chair, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioural Neurosciences, MacMaster University

Dr. Matthew Burkey, Child and youth psychiatrist and public health researcher, Williams Lake, BC

THE COAST CAPRI HOTEL KELOWNA BC

JUN 17-18, 2016 12.0

MOC SECTION 1 MAINPRO-M1

WHO SHOULD ATTEND

Interprofessional/intersectoral teams, family physicians and other primary care providers, mental health care providers, psychiatrists and psychologists, administrators and policy makers, other health disciplines working with primary care and/or community care, consumers and family members, educators and their students, and researchers.

SPECIAL PRESENTATION

Clara Hughes - Six-Time Olympic Medalist | Mental Health Advocate

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FRI JUN 17

0700 Breakfast, Registration & Exhibits Open

0745 Opening Remarks & Welcome

0815 Keynote: Sharing Mental Health Care with Family Doctors: Time for a Change?

∗List a brief history of e!orts to build shared care systems.

∗Identify three ways in which primary care and mental health care di!er.

∗List two shared care programs that have been shown to be e!ective.

Dr. Kathleen Pajer

0905 Keynote: Mental Health Collaboration with First Nations: Who is Steering The Canoe? This presentation will explore the relationship between mental health service providers and Indigenous peoples of Canada. The strengths and challenges of this relationship will be discussed as well as some suggestions for making the journey together more successful.

Dr. Rod McCormick

0950 Break, Posters and Exhibits

1015 Concurrent Sessions—choose one stream:

1115 Time to Move Rooms

1130 Concurrent Sessions– choose one stream:

1230 Lunch & Posters available for viewing

0900 Welcome by the Canadian Mental Health Commission Louise Bradley, MS, RN, CHE/President and Chief Executive O7cer

Child Stream A

Child Wksp Stream B

Innovative Stream C

Indigenous Stream D

Pot Pourri Stream E

1015

School-Based Wellness - A

Collaborative Primary Care Model Of Health

Delivery

The 3 C’S Of Integration: Cooperation, Coordination,

And Collaboration Amongst Primary Care And

Mental Health And Substance Use Service

Providers

Mental Wellness In Urban Indigenous

Adults: A Collaborative Approach To Wellness

Research

An Algorithm To Manage

Depression In Primary Care

1035

Innovating To Improve Child And Youth Mental Health And Substance Use Care In A Small BC

Town

Collaboration In Discharge Planning For Mental Health

Patients

Tasiurvik: Towards Holding Hands For Inuit Child Mental Health And Family

Wellbeing In Nunavik.

Web Of Culture: Building Culturally Relevant Online Mental Health Resources For

Aboriginal Youth Living

In Northern British Columbia

1055

Family Physician And Family Counseling Collaboration In The Primary Care O7ce

Setting

Strategies And Impacts Of Service User And Family

Involvement In Collaborative Mental Health Care: A Realist

Review

Counsellors, Interns, Doctors, First

Nations, Youth And Community Agencies – A Stone Soup Story Of Building A Youth Health

Centre

Implementing Cognitive

Behavioural Therapy (CBT) Skills Group

Medical Visits Within Primary Care

Interactive Workshop

Demonstrating Child And Youth Mental Health Toolkits In Primary Care

Child Stream A

Child Wksp Stream B

Innovative Stream C

Indigenous Stream D

Pot Pourri Stream E

1130

Growing A Collaborative:

Improving Mental Health And Substance Use Care For Children, Youth, And Families

Preparing “First Responders” To Promote Positive Mental Health In Children And Youth: What Is Happening, What Is

Needed?

A Guide To Building Interprofessional Relationships That

Facilitate Collaborative Mental Health Care

Aboriginal Concurrent Disorders Integrated Treatment

Program: A Collaborative

Journey

Implementing And Sustaining CBT In Busy Primary Care Practices – Tracking

Outcomes And Adapting To The

Setting And Population

Agenda is subject to change

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FRI JUN 17 CON’T

1330 Concurrent Sessions– choose one stream:

1430 Time to Move Rooms

Child Stream A

Child Wksp Stream B

Innovative Stream C

Indigenous Stream D

Pot Pourri Stream E

1330

The CHEO Post-Discharge

Psychopharmacology Clinic: Supporting Primary Care

Physicians To Enhance Continuity Of Care

Link - Connecting Vulnerable Children And Youth In Crisis, With Appropriate

Community Resources

From Disneyland To Depression Care:

Using A Person-Centred Pathway To Guide Best Care For Depression In Primary

Care

The First Nations Mental Wellness Continuum

Framework (FNMWC): A Coordinated, Comprehensive

Approach To Mental Health And Addictions Programs And Services

1350 Integrating Indigenous Practices And

Perspective Into Health Programs And Services: A Focus On Process

1400 Bringing Families And Professionals Together:

A Journey Toward Collaborative Practice

Using The ARC Framework

Driving Improvements In Collaborative Mental

Health Care: A Proposed Quality Framework And

Measures

1410

What Indigenous Ways Of Knowing And

Worldview Have To O!er Mental Health

Professionals?

TBC

1445 Concurrent Sessions—choose one stream:

1545 Return To The Main Plenary Ballroom

1600 Special Presentation “Open Heart, Open Mind” From one of Canada’s most decorated Olympians comes a raw but life-a7rming story of one woman’s struggle with depression. In a world where winning meant everything, her biggest competitor was herself. While most professional athletes devote their entire lives to training, Clara spent her teenage years using drugs and drinking to escape the stifling home life her alcoholic father had created. She was headed nowhere fast when, at sixteen, she watched transfixed in her living room as gold medal speed skater Gaétan Boucher e!ortlessly raced in the 1988 Calgary Olympics. Dreaming of one day competing herself, Clara channeled her anger, frustration and raw ambition into the endurance sports of speed skating and cycling. By 2010, she had become a six-time Olympic medalist. Told with honesty and passion, Open Heart, Open Mind is Clara’s personal journey through physical and mental pain to a life where love and understanding can thrive. This revelatory and inspiring story will touch the hearts of all Canadians.

Clara Hughes

1700 Time for Evaluations & Closing Remarks

1715 Reception & Poster Viewing

1915 Day Ends

Child Stream A

Child Wksp Stream B

Innovative Stream C

Indigenous Stream D

Pot Pourri Stream E

1445

Family Environment, Immigration, Poverty And Youth Mental Health: Understanding How Collaborative Youth

Mental Health Care Can Address These Factors

Child And Youth Mental Health In Primary Care: The Hamilton Family Health

Team’s Journey To Addressing The Mental Health

Needs Of Paediatric Populations

Through Its Groups Programming

An Emotional Debut: The Ottawa Shared Care

Team Introduces A New 12 Wk. Group, Developed In Collaboration With The

TOH Outpatient Department

The Koorie Men’s Health Day- A

Community Mental Health Service Model For Aboriginal Men In

Rural Victoria

Developing A Trauma-Informed

Treatment Option Within Primary Care: A

Skills-Based Model For Patients With Adverse Childhood Experiences

1505

1515

Access To Youth Mental Health Care: Engaging

Immigrant And Non-Immigrant Families And Youth In Services

Improving Access To Psychiatry Through Econsultations.

The Champlain Base Experience.

1525 New Journey New Understanding

The Jekkora Model Of Early Intervention For Suicidal Ideation And Psychological Distress Among Aboriginal

Communities

Agenda is subject to change

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SAT JUN 18 0700 Breakfast, Registration & Exhibits Open

0745 Opening Remarks & Welcome

0815 Keynote: Early Lessons From The Application Of A Collaborative Model For Child Mental Health Care in Rural BC

Dr. Matthew Burkey

0915 Concurrent Sessions– choose one stream:

1015 Refreshment Break & Room Change

1030 Concurrent Sessions– choose one stream:

1130 Lunch & Posters available for viewing

Child Stream A

Child Wksp Stream B

Innovative Stream C

Indigenous Stream D

Pot Pourri Stream E

0915

Reaching Consensus on Emerging Adult Mental

Health in Canada: Exploring Authentic Engagement in the

Policy Making Process

In Sync & On Track: Enhancing Executive Function To Promote Self-Regulation In Young Children

The Da Vinci Project: Depression And Alcoholism -

Validation Of An Integrated Care

Initiative

Reflecting Towards Change:

Integration Through Understanding The Self In The Context Of Systems Working Towards Cultural

Safety

Results Of Randomized Control Trial Evaluating The Replication Of The British Columbia Adult Mental Health

Physician Support Program In Nova Scotia

Child Stream A

Child Wksp Stream B

Innovative Stream C

Indigenous Stream D

Pot Pourri Stream E

1030 Life Is A Twitch: Insight Into Childhood Tics

Doing Better Together – DBT And DBT-Informed Care For Adolescents As

A Range Of Treatments In

Collaborative Care

Use Of Interdisciplinary Rounds To Help

Marginalized Patients E!ectively Navigate Our Local Health Care System

Learning From Traditional Health Care

Practices And Research: A Culturally Relevant Approach To Mental Healthcare In Urban Aboriginal

Settings

1050 Movies For Mental Health – A Powerful Platform For Engaging College Students On The Topic Of Mental

Health

TBC

1230 Concurrent Sessions—choose one stream:

1330 Break & Room Change

1345 Concurrent Sessions—choose one stream:

Child Stream A

Child Wksp Stream B

Innovative Stream C

Indigenous Stream D

Pot Pourri Stream E

1230

BC Integrated Youth Services

Initiative (BC-IYSI)

Waiting For Service: Evidence-Based

Planning To Improve Access For Children

And Youth

TBC Culture In The Clinic: CBIS Indigenous

Approach - Weaving Cultural Competency and CBT In Primary Mental

Health Care

A Psychiatric Clinic at Sts'ailes, A BC First

Nation: Description Of Service Development And First 18 Months

Of Operations

Child Stream A

Child Wksp Stream B

Innovative Stream C

Indigenous Stream D

Pot Pourri Stream E

1345

Sprockids “Pedaling for Well-Being”

Child And Adolescent Mental Health Training

In Primary Care In Canada: Where Have We Been And Where

Can We Go?

Addressing ADHD In Homeless Or Precariously Housed

Populations

Capacity Building Strategies In

Anishnawbe Mushkiki Clinics In Thunder Bay: A View From The Nurse

Practitioner And Psychiatrist

TBC

1415 Mindfulness and Youth: Wellness

Strategies for Diverse Learners and Settings

Agenda is subject to change

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SAT JUN 18—CON’T

1500 Return To The Main Plenary Ballroom

1510 Keynote: Increasing Equity – Why Isn’t It The Holy Grail of Collaborative Care? By the end of the presentation attendees will:

∗ Understand the ways in which inequities a!ect health outcomes

∗ Know three ways to “treat” poverty in primary care

∗ Recognise three simple steps collaborative partnerships can take to address inequities in access

Dr. Nick Kates

1540 Transition to 2017 Conference Team

1600 Fill Out Your Evaluations Before You Leave & Closing Remarks

1615 Conference Ends—Have a Safe Journey Home!

CONFERENCE VENUE &

ACCOMMODATION The Coast Capri Hotel 1171 Harvey Avenue Kelowna British Columbia V1Y 6E8 http://www.coastcaprihotel.com Group rates start at $99.00/night. Quote: “Canadian Collaborative Mental Health Care”, available before May 15, 2016. Please go ahead and book longer stays with families and enjoy the area! Toll-Free: 800.716.6199 TO MAKE A RESERVATION ONLINE: Go to: www.coastcaprihotel Select: Reservations Tab (along the top) Select: Coast Capri Hotel (see below) Enter: Date of Arrival and Date of Departure Enter: Number of Guests Enter: CCH-GFC18524 in the box with the name ‘group’

Agenda is subject to change

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KEYNOTE PRESENTERS Clara Hughes - Six-Time Olympic Medalist | Mental Health Advocate

“Being a champion is not just about winning,” says six-time Olympic medalist Clara Hughes. Believing that actions o! the track define us as much as those on it, Hughes inspires people toward success in all areas of their lives. Her candid, personal talks range from how she believes sports can change lives to her struggle with depression—fully embodying the idea that each of us can overcome challenges to become the champions we’re meant to be. Before retiring as an Olympian. In 2014, Hughes yet again figured prominently in the eyes of Canadians as the national spokesperson for Bell Let’s Talk, a campaign designed to end the stigma of mental health issues. Undertaking “Clara’s Big Ride,” Hughes completed a 110-day national bicycle tour through every province and territory in Canada. As part of the ride, she covered more than 11,000km and visited 105 communities along the way. Hughes is also the author of the bestselling and acclaimed memoir, Open Heart, Open Mind. Over the course of her distinguished career, Hughes has won countless awards and accolades. She was named Female Athlete of the Year by Speed Skating Canada; she received the International Olympic Committee’s Sport and Community Trophy; she was honoured with a star on Canada’s Walk of Fame; she was inducted into Canada’s Sports Hall of Fame; and she was named an O7cer of the Order of Canada. Hughes sits on the International Board of Directors for Right To Play, a global organization that uses the transformative power of play to educate and empower children facing adversity. She holds honorary doctorates from the University of Manitoba, the University of British Columbia, and the University of Alberta.

Dr. Kathleen Pajer

Dr. Pajer is the Chief of Psychiatry at the Children’s Hospital of Eastern Ontario (CHEO). Dr. Pajer received her medical degree from the University of South Alabama College of Medicine and did her residency in Psychiatry at Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center and at Yale University School of Medicine. She was a Robert Wood Johnson Clinical Scholar at Yale and also received her Master’s of Public Health from the Yale School of Public Health. Dr. Pajer has been on medical faculties of the University of Pittsburgh, The Ohio State University, and Dalhousie University before joining the University of Ottawa as Professor of Psychiatry. Her administrative interest is in care system transformation and her research focuses on the psychoneuroendocrinologic aspects of antisocial behaviors in girls and on developing a gene expression biomarker for early onset depression. Her work has been funded by the U.S. National Institutes of Health and a number of foundations.

Dr. Roderick McCormick

Dr. McCormick (Kanienkehaka) is a senior Professor and BC Government endowed Research Chair in Aboriginal Child and Maternal Health in the Faculty of Human, Social, and Educational Development at Thompson Rivers University. Before moving back to his partner’s home on the T’Kemlups Indian Reserve, Rod was a psychologist and counseling psychology professor at the University of British Columbia for 18 years. Rod has also been a therapist and clinical consultant/supervisor for the last 27 years. As a researcher, Rod been a Principal Investigator or Co-Investigator on 30 million dollars worth of federal or internationally funded research studies in Aboriginal health. Rod has published over 50 book chapters, journal articles, and numerous government research reports on Aboriginal health and mental health. One of his publications-Guiding Circles has sold over 75,000 copies worldwide. Rod has also been a keynote presenter or conference presenter at over 100 national and international conferences and is frequently called upon by the media to comment on Aboriginal mental health issues. Rod serves on numerous National committees/boards such as the Advisory Council of the Mental Health Commission of Canada and on the board of the CIHR Institute of Aboriginal Peoples Health.

Dr. Matthew Burkey

MD, PhD, is a child and youth psychiatrist and public health researcher. He completed his training at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine and conducted research as a faculty member in the Department of Psychiatry. His primary research interest is in improving access to e!ective, culturally compelling mental health services in underserved communities globally and in North America. He recently moved to Williams Lake, BC where he practices psychiatry at the Cariboo Chilcotin Child Development Centre. He is also involved in the BC Child and Youth Mental Health and Substance Use Collaborative, a multi-disciplinary local and provincial e!ort aimed at improving access to family-centered child mental health services.

Dr. Nick Kates

MD FRCPC MCFP (Hon.) Chair, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioural Neurosciences, Faculty of Health Sciences, MacMaster University.

He also has an associate membership in the Department of Family Medicine of the Michael G. DeGroote School of Medicine.

His major academic activities are in the area of community and social psychiatry, global mental health, the relationship between mental health and primary care, quality improvement and redesigning systems of care, chronic disease management and innovative approaches to education.

He is a quality improvement advisor to the Hamilton Family Health Team. For five years he was the Ontario lead for the Quality Improvement and Innovation Partnership, which assisted primary care practices to build capacity and capability for quality improvement. For 12 years he was director of the Hamilton HSO (now FHT) Mental Health and Nutrition Program, which won a significant achievement award from the American Psychiatric Association in 1998. Since 1997 he has been the co-chair of the Canadian Psychiatric Association / College of Family Physicians of Canada collaborative working group on

shared mental health care in Canada, and has played many other national and provincial roles in promoting collaboration between mental health and primary care services including chairing the Canadian Collaborative Mental Health Initiative funded through the National Primary Health Care Transition Fund from 2003 to 2007.

Dr. Kates is a Distinguished Fellow of the Canadian Psychiatry Association and a Distinguished Fellow of the American Psychiatric Association, and he has been awarded honorary membership in the College of Family Physicians of Canada. He has received several awards for his leadership and he has participated in provincial and national planning committees and initiatives for both mental health services and primary care. Dr. Kates has consulted to more than 100 Canadian and international governments, organizations and programs and he has published over 70 articles and authored two books.

SCIENTIFIC CHAIRS Dr. Terry Isomura & Dr. David Smith

SCIENTIFIC COMMITTEE Dr. Ellen Anderson

Dr. Michel Gervais

Dr. Marie Hayes

Dr. Terry Isomura

Dr. Nick Kates

Dr. Jim Ketch

Mr. Jamie Marshall

Dr. Sharman Naicker

Dr. Carol Ann Saari

Dr. David Smith

Dr. Helen Spenser

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ME8905

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Jun 17-18, 2016 17th Canadian Collaborative Mental Health Care Conference

The Coast Capri Hotel , Kelowna BC

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STREAM INTERESTS Which stream do you think you are most interested in? Please add your order of preference from 1 = most interested to 5 = least interested. You are not required to only attend one stream, we encourage you to move room to room, we only ask that you not leave a room midway or join a room midway through a session time to reduce disruptions.

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