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ISPS-US 23rd Annual Conference | November 1-3, 2024 | University of Pittsburgh & Duquesne University | Pittsburgh, PA & Hybrid Online | Preliminary Schedule
Union Room 613 clear filter
Saturday, November 2
 

9:45am EDT

Innovative Approaches in Assessment, Treatment and Residential Care (In-Person Only)
Saturday November 2, 2024 9:45am - 11:15am EDT
Innovative Approaches in Assessment, Treatment, and Residential Care (3 x 30 minute sessions)  
  • The Utility of Psychological Assessment in Detecting Psychosis: A Case Illustration - Connor Adams, PsyD
  • EMDR and Psychosis: Nudging the United States Into the Modern Age of Trauma Treatment - Chris Perry, MS, MA, LMFT
  • Creating an effective natural team based on the Windhorse approach - Eric Friedland-Kays, MA Victoria Yoshen

The Utility of Psychological Assessment in Detecting Psychosis: A Case Illustration - Connor Adams, PsyD
This presentation with utilize a clinical case to illustrate the utility of psychological assessment when detecting psychosis and creating an individualized treatment plan. The case will feature Mr. G, who was referred for psychological assessment by his therapist to better understand what factors were contributing to Mr. G feeling “stuck” in both life and therapy. Mr. G initially sought therapy due to feeling he was experiencing a “failure to launch” as a young adult. Specifically, he reported starting and stopping graduate school several times, finding it difficult to maintain friendships and romantic relationships, and struggling to engage in daily self-care activities such as personal hygiene and meal prep, despite having previously been successful in all these domains. After approximately one year of therapy both he and his therapist felt their work was not progressing and sought a psychological assessment to gain a deeper understanding of any cognitive difficulties, behavioral patterns, or intrapsychic conflicts that might contribute to his “stuckness.” Mr. G completed a multimethod psychological assessment. Multimethod assessment procedures included a thorough record review, a clinical interview, the Bender-Gestalt, Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory-2 Restructured Form (MMPI-2-RF), Rorschach Performance Assessment System (R-PAS), Projective Drawings, Rotter Incomplete Sentences Blank (RISB), Thematic Apperception Test (TAT), Woodcock-Johnson IV Achievement (WJ IV ACH), and Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale (WAIS-IV). This case presentation will highlight the role of psychological assessment in bringing to light previously unrecognized disordered thinking that notably contributed to Mr. G’s difficulty getting “unstuck” in his life. Moreover, the assessment provided information regarding the conditions under which Mr. G’s thinking was more vulnerable to becoming disorganized, such as during instances of emotional flooding. This presentation will provide an orientation to the utility of psychological assessment, in particular for individuals experiencing psychosis, emphasizing the utility of this intervention in addition to psychotherapy.

EMDR and Psychosis: Nudging the United States Into the Modern Age of Trauma Treatment - Chris Perry, MS, MA, LMFT
The most cursory glance at the literature regarding trauma and psychosis demonstrates a strong correlation between the two. Given this, it would seem axiomatic that a trauma-informed system of care would make evidence-based therapies for posttraumatic sequelae readily available to people who have experienced both trauma and psychosis. In the United States, however, the opposite is true: psychosis is often considered an exclusionary criterion for the exact modalities of trauma treatment that have the strongest evidence base.

This presentation will focus on Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing Therapy (EMDR) as a specific example of an evidence-based treatment for trauma that is systematically denied to people who have had experiences of psychosis and are seeking care in the United States. This reality contrasts sharply with the literature and with clinical practice in other parts of the world. There is a robust literature demonstrating that EMDR is both safe and effective for individuals with past and present experiences of psychosis. A review of this literature identifies clear geographic delineations: of all the available published works on this topic, only a few have been written by authors based in the United States, and none of these are systematic reviews or based on new research. In fact, almost all are cautionary tales about the use of EMDR in the context of psychosis.

This divide in the literature is reflected in clinical training and practice in the United States, which rests on unsubstantiated beliefs about the risk-benefit ratio for this practice and excludes individuals who have experienced psychosis from receiving EMDR treatment. This presentation will present a review of the literature about this practice and a case study of the process of introducing EMDR as a clinical tool in an early psychosis program at UCSF. 

Creating an effective natural team based on the Windhorse approach - Eric Friedland-Kays, MA, Victoria Yoshen
Imagine someone you love needs support because they experience extreme states of mind that make it difficult to cope with their life in an independent, functional way. Their mind makes it difficult to navigate basic tasks, and causes difficulty in relationships with friends, family, and at their job. You find them a well-meaning outpatient therapist who may not have the skill or time to engage with your loved one sufficiently. This situation becomes increasingly isolating and chaotic. What might you do to establish an effective therapeutic environment for your loved one outside of sending them to a hospital or residential program?

Now imagine creating a comprehensive mental health support system in the community for your loved one so that they can continue to engage with their life as it is. This support system consists of providers who establish one-on-one safety with this person, coach them in the real world, and all communicate weekly. This team consists of a therapeutic housemate,a skilled and humble facilitator, therapeutic mentors, and can include a psychiatrist and family members. The team is cohesive and the conflicts that arise within it are held in a therapeutic context. These relationships are consistent and flexible enough so that your loved one has enough support in the world to continue to lead a functional life with a trajectory of healing and growth.

This presentation from Windhorse Integrative Mental Health explores the unique elements of a community-based Windhorse team for individuals in psychiatric distress. For over forty years, our approach has been utilized at sites in North America and Europe with impressive results. This presentation will describe the key elements of a Windhorse team, explore its usefulness, and will cultivate dialogue about its applicability in home and community settings independent of enrolling in a Windhorse program.

Speakers
avatar for Connor Adams

Connor Adams

Stanford University
Connor Adams (she/they) is a Clinical Assistant Professor who received her doctorate in psychology from the George Washington University and completed her internship training at Harvard Medical School/Cambridge Health Alliance. Her clinical and research interests center on therapeutic... Read More →
avatar for Eric Friedland-Kays, MA

Eric Friedland-Kays, MA

Windhorse IMH, Rhythm of Regulation, ARTA
Eric Friedland-Kays is a Senior Psychotherapist at Windhorse Integrative Mental Health, where he has worked since 2000. He earned a Master’s Degree from the School for International Training and has been a psychotherapist for many years trained in Intensive Psychotherapy, Polyvagal... Read More →
avatar for Victoria Yoshen

Victoria Yoshen

Executive Director, Windhorse Integrative Mental Health
Victoria started life and learning in an urban neighborhood in Chicago.  Then she followed her interest in art to 2 years at Pratt and walking all over NYC.  Then in Massachusetts she discovered dance and spiritual communities while being a bookkeeper. She was part of a group of... Read More →
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Chris Perry, MS, MA, LMFT

UCSF
Chris Perry currently works as a therapist in the Path early psychosis program at UCSF.  She has been a provider and advocate in the mental health system of Northern California since 1990 with a focus on improving the lives of people experiencing psychosis.  
Saturday November 2, 2024 9:45am - 11:15am EDT
Union Room 613

11:30am EDT

Incorporating the Voices of Lived Experience of Psychosis into Medical Education (In-Person only)
Saturday November 2, 2024 11:30am - 12:30pm EDT
Incorporating the voices of individuals with lived experience of psychosis into medical education, particularly in psychiatry, has the potential to profoundly enrich the training of future mental health professionals. Individuals with lived experience have important perspectives to share about the nature of psychosis, its treatment, and the mental health system itself. By doing so, trainees and seasoned physicians alike gain invaluable insights into the personal and social dimensions of mental illness, which are often underrepresented in traditional medical training.

Evidence suggests that incorporating lived experiences into education fosters empathy, reduces stigma, and enhances the communication skills of psychiatric trainees. Students report a deeper understanding of the complexities of mental health conditions and a greater appreciation for patient-centered care. Furthermore, this approach encourages future psychiatrists to view patients as partners in the therapeutic process, promoting a more holistic and collaborative approach to mental health care.

This panel, comprised of two clinicians and two people with lived experience of psychosis, will share ways in which those voices have been incorporated into medical education within the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at Emory University. This has occurred in multiple formats including guest lectures, small group discussions, and a Grand Rounds presentation. We will share relevant institutional background leading to the development of these programs, firsthand accounts of the experience of presenting in these settings, and a discussion of ways to expand this work throughout our department.

The presentation also addresses the challenges of integrating these voices into medical education, including potential ethical concerns, the need for appropriate support for participants with lived experience, and institutional resistance to curriculum changes. We discuss strategies to mitigate these challenges, such as providing training for individuals sharing their experiences, ensuring a supportive environment, and demonstrating the value of these programs through research and feedback.

In conclusion, incorporating voices of lived experience in psychiatric education enriches the learning experience, better prepares future psychiatrists for practice, and ultimately contributes to more compassionate and effective mental health care. This presentation calls for a concerted effort to make these programs an integral part of medical education, highlighting their transformative impact on both students and the broader mental health system.
Speakers
avatar for Justin Palanci

Justin Palanci

Emory University
Justin Palanci, MD, is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at the Emory University School of Medicine. He serves as Medical Director for the Assertive Community Treatment program at Grady Memorial Hospital. His interests include recovery-oriented... Read More →
avatar for David Goldsmith, MD MSc

David Goldsmith, MD MSc

Associate Professor, Emory University
Dr. David R. Goldsmith is an Associate Professor in the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at Emory University School of Medicine and is the Associate Program Director for the Psychiatry Residency Research Track. He is also on Faculty in the Emory Behavioral Immunology... Read More →
Saturday November 2, 2024 11:30am - 12:30pm EDT
Union Room 613

1:30pm EDT

From Crack to Psychedelics: Frontiers in Psychosis Work (In-Person Only)
Saturday November 2, 2024 1:30pm - 3:00pm EDT
From Crack to Psychedelics: Frontiers in Psychosis Work  - 2 x 45 minute sessions
  •  Swimming to the Horizon: Crack, Psychosis, and Street-Corner Social Work: Zak Mucha, LCSW
  •  The Psychedelic Therapy Train Wreck: Ethical Responses To A Corrupt Industry - Will Hall, MA, DIplPW, Phd Candidate

Swimming to the Horizon: Crack, Psychosis, and Street-Corner Social Work: Zak Mucha, LCSW
Working with a population suffering severe psychotic symptoms, homelessness, and addictions, a non-traditional clinical frame can allow for psychodynamic work. The patient’s relationship to a clinician is more than meds and case management and can be created in a clinical frame not limited to the corners of a physical office. This presentation will consider Bionian and Lacanian structures to examine the possibilities of joining with a patient in their worlds, both internal and external, to understand how psychotic symptoms can hold a narrative of past trauma and possess the hope for an emerging self.

The Psychedelic Therapy Train Wreck: Ethical Responses To A Corrupt Industry - Will Hall, MA, DIplPW, Phd Candidate
Drugs are winning the war on drugs, and it's time to end criminalization of underground psychoactive substances, including psychedelics, less socially accepted than alcohol and nicotine (or psychiatric medications). Harm reduction policies are essential. But proposed medicalization schemes betray the informed consent vital to harm reduction: the new "psychedelic revival" peddles psychedelic exceptionalism hype based in shoddy research, driven by a corrupt decades-old network of new age zealots with a glaring track record of abusing patients under the cover of a code of silence.

"Psychedelic therapy" would put powerful suggestibility, disinhibiting, and vulnerability drugs in the hands of status and money hungry professionals already proven to systematically misuse their power. As the psychiatric system struggles with the decline of the SSRI brand and a lack of products for the PTSD market, are new drugs to play with the solution, or just a repeat of everything wrong with psychiatry? And if commercialization, as tried with cannabis, risks disastrous Brave New World implications in a dystopian capitalist society already desperate to escape and tranquilize, what is the way forward?

Fortunately, new voices are breaking the psychedelic hype bubble: an emerging "critical psychedelic studies" provides a crucial new perspective with wide implications for everyone engaged with the social response to psychosis. In this context, two central myths about psychosis need to be overcome - that anyone with a psychosis diagnosis or history cannot use psychedelics meaningfully in their lives, and that psychosis is just another diagnostic market to benefit from the magic powers of these new wonder drugs. Join us for a sober check-in on how survivors, clinicians, researchers, and policymakers can respond to the new psychedelic revival, and what visions we need for decriminalization of psychedelics from the perspective of innovating our systems and responses to psychosis, not just reinforcing them.
Speakers
avatar for Will Hall, MA, DIplPW, Phd Candidate

Will Hall, MA, DIplPW, Phd Candidate

Maastricht University School for Mental Health and Neuroscience
Will Hall, MA, DiplPW, PhD Candidate Maastricht University, is a therapist and community development worker changing the social response to madness. A schizophrenia diagnosis survivor and longtime organizer with the psychiatric survivor movement, will is trained in Jungian psychology... Read More →
avatar for Zak Mucha, LCSW

Zak Mucha, LCSW

Chicago Center for Psychoanalysis
Zak Mucha, LCSW, is a psychoanalyst in private practice and president of the Chicago Center for Psychoanalysis. He spent seven years working as the supervisor of an Assertive Community Treatment (ACT) program, providing 24/7 services to persons suffering from severe psychosis, substance... Read More →
Saturday November 2, 2024 1:30pm - 3:00pm EDT
Union Room 613

3:30pm EDT

Identifying and Addressing Stigma in Mental Health Care (In-Person Only)
Saturday November 2, 2024 3:30pm - 5:00pm EDT
Identifying and Addressing Stigma in Mental Health Care - 2 x 45 minute sessions
  • Stigma in professional psychology advice-giving - Philip T. Yanos, PhD, Dan Bernstein MHS, Soo Min Kim, MA
  • Destigmatizing Psychiatric Care: Listening to Lived Experience - Dorothy Clare Tessman, MSN, APRN, DNP Pending

Stigma in professional psychology advice-giving - Philip T. Yanos, PhD, Dan Bernstein MHS, Soo Min Kim, MA
Although research generally supports that mental health professionals endorse less stigma toward people diagnosed with mental health conditions than the general public, there is evidence that stigma persists in this group (O'Connor & Yanos, 2024). Further, when expressed by mental health professionals, stigma may be more impactful. Recently, with the growth of online advice-giving platforms (which allow professionals to take on the role of "influencer" [see White and Hanley, 2022]), expressions of stigma by mental health professionals may also be impactful if they are read by members of the general public, who may then feel emboldened to enact stigma (such as social rejection or the expression of demeaning comments) toward people diagnosed with mental illnesses that they encounter in their daily lives. Psychology Today (psychologytoday.com) is a major platform of professional "advice-giving" which at times publishes articles expressing problematic statements which could impact behavior toward people diagnosed with mental health conditions. The purpose of this study is to survey persons who contribute to Psychology Today on their views regarding a number of problematic statements that have been made on the platform. 500 contributors listed on the Psychology Today website will be randomly selected and emailed an invitation with a survey link using publicly available information. The survey includes demographic questions, questions about a series of problematic statements made by Psychology Today contributors, and the Opening Minds stigma scale for health care providers (Modgil et al. 2014). We anticipate that a significant proportion of advice-givers will agree with problematic statements about people with mental health conditions, and that agreement with these statements will be associated with stigma as measured by the Opening Minds scale. Data collection for the project is currently ongoing and we anticipate that it will be complete by July 2024.

Destigmatizing Psychiatric Care: Listening to Lived Experience - Dorothy Clare Tessman, MSN, APRN, DNP Pending
Stigma is a barrier to care for people who hear voices and have disrupted salience regulation, leaving healthcare needs unmet, and healthcare workers reporting helplessness, a factor in burnout. Psychiatric evaluations focus on risk, prompting fearful thoughts for vulnerable patients, instigating stigma, and exacerbating symptoms, a concern for causing more harm than they prevent. Rapport with clinicians reduces repeat admissions and unnecessary emergency visits for mental health. Rapport development with the Maastricht Approach (MAp) is a therapeutic intervention, aiming to improve the quality of healthcare experiences for service users and care teams.

Healthcare workers in psychiatric settings seek less stigmatizing, supportive methods to build therapeutic rapport while also meeting the systemic needs of ensuring safe, effective care. Healthcare reform, widely recognized as a desperate mandate, includes the Quality Improvement aims of reducing burnout by improving care teams’ experiences as well as reducing disparities, and improving the quality and value of care, all of which are factors addressed by this project.

This Quality Improvement project is empowering healthcare workers to use MAp, offering prompts for rapport-building evaluation. Participants completed Continuing Education questionnaires and Adapting Practice forms indicating intent to use MAp in encounters with service users. Aims are to improve healthcare workers’ confidence using open curiosity and compassion to build rapport and therapeutic alliance, reducing stigmatization and harm to service users from assessment processes.



Speakers
avatar for Philip T. Yanos, PhD

Philip T. Yanos, PhD

John Jay College of Criminal Justice, CUNY
Philip Yanos is a stigma researcher and mental health service provider in New York City.
avatar for Dan Berstein, MHS

Dan Berstein, MHS

Dan Berstein is a mediator living with bipolar disorder who uses conflict resolution best practices to promote empowering mental health communication and prevent mental illness discrimination.
avatar for Soo Min Kim, MA

Soo Min Kim, MA

John Jay College of Criminal Justice, CUNY
Soo Min Kim is a graduate of the Master’s program in Forensic Psychology at John Jay College of Criminal Justice and is interested in mental health and stigma of Korean Americans.
avatar for Dorothy Clare Tessman, DNP, APRN

Dorothy Clare Tessman, DNP, APRN

adjunct faculty, UIC College of Nursing
Clare Tessman is a Nurse Practitioner, in practice as a mental health provider for over 10 years. Clare's interests in healing for individuals, families, and communities make addressing and diminishing the power of stigma a clear calling.
Saturday November 2, 2024 3:30pm - 5:00pm EDT
Union Room 613

5:30pm EDT

Clinicians with Lived Experience - and the Limits of the "Lived Experience" Paradigm (In-Person Only)
Saturday November 2, 2024 5:30pm - 6:30pm EDT
How do we use our lived experience as therapists in the clinical setting? How much mutuality is “too much”? Are there limits to the use of self-disclosure in the therapeutic dyad?

We are all therapists with various kinds of lived experience who have found our way to professional work as clinicians. To some extent, of course, all therapists have some kind of “lived experience” – which is another way of saying that all therapists use their own life experience in their work, regardless of whether they use explicit forms of self-disclosure in their treatments or not. With this in mind, this panel will ask the question: might explicit forms of self-disclosure regarding a therapist’s lived experience actually benefit the treatment? If so, how?

In this panel discussion, we will discuss our own journeys with respect to becoming clinicians who think deeply about mutuality and self-disclosure in our work – with our patients, clients, as well as our peers. We will explore the limits of self-disclosure and mutuality, depending on the clinical setting and the patient we are working with.
Speakers
avatar for Marie Brown, PhD

Marie Brown, PhD

ISPS-US Vice-President, NYU Grossman School of Medicine
Marie Brown, PhD,  is a clinical psychologist in New York City. She is the President of the US Chapter of the International Society for the Psychological and Social Approaches to Psychosis (ISPS-US) and a co-founder of Hearing Voices Network NYC. She is co-editor of Women & Psychosis... Read More →
avatar for Sascha DuBrul, MSW

Sascha DuBrul, MSW

Institute for the Development of Human Arts
Sascha Altman DuBrul, MSW  is the co-founder of The Icarus Project, a network of peer based mental health support groups and media project dedicated to redefining the language and culture of mental health and illness. He has a Masters from Silberman School of Social Work and worked... Read More →
avatar for Elan Y Cohen, PhD

Elan Y Cohen, PhD

Adelphi University
Elan Y. Cohen is a clinical psychologist interested in social and psychoanalytic approaches to trauma and psychosis. Prior to graduate training, he worked as a recovery specialist in a crisis respite center and the Parachute NYC Open Dialogue mobile program. He is currently a postdoctoral... Read More →
avatar for Ben Goldstein, MSS, LCSW

Ben Goldstein, MSS, LCSW

Private Practice
Ben Goldstein is a clinical social worker, therapist and writer based in Philadelphia.
avatar for Mike Wimberley, MSW

Mike Wimberley, MSW

Northern Rivers OntrackNY
Mike decided to work in mental health due to his journey through the mental health system after being diagnosed with schizophrenia when he was 22 years old.  Mike received a BA in psychology from the University of Washington in 2013 and worked as a peer specialist in Washington State... Read More →
Saturday November 2, 2024 5:30pm - 6:30pm EDT
Union Room 613
 
Sunday, November 3
 

9:45am EST

Psychoanalytic Legacies and Innovations (In-Person Only)
Sunday November 3, 2024 9:45am - 11:15am EST
Psychoanalytic Legacies (In-Person Only)
  • Lessons From the Lodge, Riggs, Sheppard Pratt, McLean, and Menninger - James E. Gorney, PhD
  • After 40+ Years of Analysis: New Beginnings in Treatment Leading to a Successful Outcome - Martin Cosgro, PhD

Lessons From the Lodge, Riggs, Sheppard Pratt, McLean, and Menninger - James E. Gorney, PhD
Dr. Ann-Louise Silver, psychiatrist, psychoanalyst, a founder of ISPS, and the esteemed and revered past-President of ISPS-US ,long proposed writing a book to be entitled - "Lessons From the Lodge". This would have been a monument to her years of work at Chestnut Lodge treatment center in Rockville, Maryland. Her untimely death a few years ago thwarted the completion of this project. This presentation will memorialize Dr. Silver's intent through an account of long-term psycho-dynamic and psychoanalytic hospital based treatment settings for psychosis, which flourished during the last half of the Twentieth Century.These institutions provided a unique setting for clinical research, milieu treatment, and intensive psychotherapy in regard to extreme states. The unique therapeutic philosophy of patient care developed within these extended stay hospitals will be examined in detail. Numerous clinical examples will be provided to demonstrate the innovative and courageous approaches which arose here in regard to the therapeutic understanding and care of psychosis.

Within the context of currently prevalent managed-care, short-term hospitalization, and over utilization of anti-psychotic medication, it is now particularly important to commemorate lessons learned by the daring clinicians who worked within those noble past institutional settings. Consequently, key insights of Frieda Fromm-Reichmann, Harold Searles, Otto Will, and Ann-Louise Silver in regard to the treatment of psychosis will be explicated here via their own clinical accounts.

This model of humanistic, psycho-dynamic treatment for psychosis, trauma, and other extreme states developed within long-term milieus, provides an alternative, and antidote, to the current, broken mental health system now pervasive within the United States. Treatment wisdom, so painfully gained over so many years, has almost been forgotten. Ann-Louise Silver always encouraged us at ISPS to keep this humane, concerned, benevolent flame alive.

After 40+ Years of Analysis: New Beginnings in Treatment Leading to a Successful Outcome - Martin Cosgro, PhD
Effective psychodynamic/ psychoanalytic psychotherapy for psychosis has been around for a century and is still considered the treatment of choice by some, as the late Bertram Karon suggested. However, at times, this approach has led to limited progress and no resolution of underlying issues. This case presentation will demonstrate how 40+ years of “traditional” psychoanalysis was ineffective, and the modifications in a subsequent 3 year psychoanalytic therapy led to integration and significant improvements in all areas of life. Dealing with underlying trauma, the subsequent emotions and on-going object relations interpretations will be presented as the treatment components that appeared to be missing in the prior treatment and which led to a successful outcome.
Speakers
avatar for James E. Gorney, PhD

James E. Gorney, PhD

James E. Gorney, Ph.D. received his Doctorate from the University of Chicago. He completed a  post-doctoral fellowship and served on the supervisory staff at the Austen Riggs Center. He is a graduate of the William Alanson White Psychoanalytic Institute and has taught at New York... Read More →
avatar for Martin Cosgro, PhD

Martin Cosgro, PhD

Dr. Cosgro has worked with people struggling with psychotic experiences in out-patient, in-patient, prison, and residential settings for 31 years and has shared his work at national and international conferences.
Sunday November 3, 2024 9:45am - 11:15am EST
Union Room 613

11:30am EST

Breaking the Taboo on Group Corruption and Misconduct: Empowerment Or Burnout? (In-Person Only)
Sunday November 3, 2024 11:30am - 12:30pm EST
The shadow of groups and organizations - corruption, ethical misconduct, mistreatment, cooptation - is like a family taboo, growing worse with avoidance and silence. Workplace and community injustice create toxic stress that crushes idealism and inflicts crazymaking dilemmas on staff and activists, leading to group dysfunction, burnout, and failure. Early career activists and staff conform or leave, and innovations implode, while normalized misconduct incentivizes conformity and enables a corrupt status quo. The most vulnerable - BIPOC and LGBTQIA, trauma survivors, economically disadvantaged - are impacted most. What's the way forward?

Standing Together To Respond with Empowerment Against Misconduct (STREAM) is a simple model that breaks the silence in a trauma informed, empowered, and sustainable way. STREAM provides a simple community leadership roadmap for engaging group and organization ethics violations with sustainability and compassion. (This trauma-informed workshop will not name specific instances, but offer follow-up resources.)
Speakers
avatar for Will Hall, MA, DIplPW, Phd Candidate

Will Hall, MA, DIplPW, Phd Candidate

Maastricht University School for Mental Health and Neuroscience
Will Hall, MA, DiplPW, PhD Candidate Maastricht University, is a therapist and community development worker changing the social response to madness. A schizophrenia diagnosis survivor and longtime organizer with the psychiatric survivor movement, will is trained in Jungian psychology... Read More →
Sunday November 3, 2024 11:30am - 12:30pm EST
Union Room 613

1:30pm EST

Family Narratives and Systemic Insights (In-Person Only)
Sunday November 3, 2024 1:30pm - 3:00pm EST
Family Narratives and Systemic Insights - 3 x 30 minute sessions
  • Remembering Rachel a sisters perspective - Deborah Kasdan
  •  Family Fragments: Pressure and Proximity in First-Episode Psychosis - Cassandra B. Seltman, LCSW, PhD
  •  Straight From The Cuckoo's Nest: A Patient's & A Caregiver's Perspective - Perri Bach, BS, Ethan Back, AS

Remembering Rachel a sisters perspective - Deborah Kasdan
A personal account of the impact of the impact of failed psychiatric treatment on my sister Rachel, myself and our entire family of six, as recounted in my book, "Roll Back the World: a sister's memoir."

Rachel was healthy and vibrant during her gap year working on a kibbutz in Israel but when she returned to the U.S. her behavior was erratic and disorganized. She was unable to care for herself and our parents were unable to care for her. In 1965 at 23 years of age, Rachel was institutionalized with a diagnosis of schizophrenia; I was just starting college and was unable to process what was happening to her. My brother started college the next year. We had no family meetings or therapy to help and support us. Our parents wanted to keep Rachel safe, but we wanted her to be free. Our parents filed a Federal law suit to keep her in the hospital because she was assaulted and raped in boarding houses where she was discharged. Her siblings' attempt to free her from the hospital backfired and Rachel ended up on her own two thousand miles from home. She lived on the streets and in three state hospitals for years until a social worker was stunned by the quality of her poetry and got her into an outpatient program. Eventually, the staff found an ideal home for her and she found acceptance and respect in a synagogue. I explore my own feelings of shame and guilt, my inability to help her as I wished to, or share these feelings --until finally, in publishing the memoir about us, I brought them to light. This personal history suggests the need to include adult siblings in decision-making and help families deal with the host of conflicts that arise around hospitalization and treatment of a loved one.

Family Fragments: Pressure and Proximity in First-Episode Psychosis - Cassandra B. Seltman, LCSW, PhD
This presentation will explore the value of assuming a conceptual position that decenters the identified patient in families with a member with schizophrenia. Instead, a systemic view of the family is taken, as subject to pressures from without and within, and utilizing observable processes for the management and discharge of tension. It attempts the difficult balance of thinking dynamically without sacrificing scientific rigor, considering the social without discounting the biological, and exploring the functionality of the family without collapsing into blame, reductive cause-and-effect thinking, and the search to prioritize one true origin. When treating family members as discrete units around an identified patient, information about the dynamic processes at work in the family system is lost. Core concepts of Murray Bowen’s Family Systems Theory (developed primarily from the 1950s through the late 1980s) will be utilized to study the interaction between family dynamics and the prodrome and first-episode of psychosis. Under these considerations, the goal of treatment is not to suppress or destroy a single pathogenic element, but to make adjustments to the distribution and discharge of tension in the context of the emotional family system, requiring and inciting modifications in all relations. Ultimately, the complexity of family systems research beckons us to move beyond the current pessimistic paradigm of family treatments as opportunities for families to assist the individual at the center of concern with coping skills and medication compliance. In addition, it requires further engagement with the intricate correspondence of individual, familial, and societal entanglements which most often occur below the level of conscious awareness. In its wake lies the imperative for an integrated approach and echoes the clarion call for interventions that consider the many fractal dimensions of the experience of being part of a family.

Straight From The Cuckoo's Nest: A Patient's & A Caregiver's Perspective - Perri Bach, BS, Ethan Back, AS
Ethan has written a memoir of his experiences suffering 5 psychotic breaks after a brain tumor at 17 years old and will read an excerpt from his memoir. The excerpt will be from the introduction and a little of a chapter. Before showing a video, he will end with how he got better, by trusting his Drs, taking his medications, and becoming sober. He will show a video on YouTube with Ian Gold in it, who wrote the forward to Ethan’s book, and who also coined the term “The Truman Show Delusion” in his own book he co-authored with his brother called “Suspicious Minds: How Culture Shapes Madness”. The TSD is a staple of Ethan’s illness. Last, Perri will offer a caretaker’s perspective, offering what one should do if this happened to your family member or friend: the message will be to not give up on them. She will offer her own educated opinion on what the US could do to better the fates of those suffering from like illnesses on the streets. This presentation will offer hope to those suffering out there, as Ethan is Sober off alcohol and smoking weed and hasn’t had a break since spring 2020, 4 years ago. Then the floor will open for questions/comments.
Speakers
avatar for Deborah Kasdan

Deborah Kasdan

I grew up primarily in the Midwest before moving to the East Coast, where my husband and I brought up our two daughters. After retiring from a thirty-five-year career writing about business and technology, the last 14 of them with IBM, I took creative writing workshops to help me... Read More →
avatar for Cassandra B. Seltman, LCSW, PhD

Cassandra B. Seltman, LCSW, PhD

Graduate Center
Cassandra B. Seltman is a writer and psychoanalyst in private practice in NYC. She teaches diagnostics, supervises, and conducts research on first-episode psychosis. Selected publications can be found in The LA Review of Books, DIVISION/Review, Public Seminar, and Modern Psychoan... Read More →
PB

Perri Bach, BS

Perri Bach is a retired mother of 3. She is a California girl and grew up medically minded. She now spends her retired years with family surrounding her in Bend, Oregon.
EB

Ethan Bach, AS

Ethan Bach has had five psychotic breaks in his life where The Truman Show Delusion was at the forefront. He managed to get his degree in creative writing and now can tell his tale. He also lives in Bend Oregon surrounded by family.
Sunday November 3, 2024 1:30pm - 3:00pm EST
Union Room 613
 
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New Beginnings: Reimagining Psychosis Services & Systems in the US
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