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The Challenges Facing the Unhoused Mentally Ill: Clinical Perspectives

May 13, 2023
Live Webinar

Presented by the Sanville Institute & AAPCSW-Northern & Southern California.
[ 3 CEs ]

Date: Saturday, May 13, 2023
Time: 10:00 am - 1:15 pm Pacific Time (1:00 - 4:15pm ET)
Fee: $45. Check or online PayPal money transfer (due by May 13, 2023).
Location: Live webinar.

Register by email

To register, please email your name and license number to admin@sanville.edu.

Payment Options

Option 1 - Pay $45 via PayPal account using "Send money" option.
Pay to email address: busop@sanville.edu
Option 2 - Mail $45 check payable to The Sanville Institute to:
P.O. Box 7862, Berkeley, CA 94707

Questions

Please contact Lynn Rosenfield, LynnRosenfield@yahoo.com.

Course Description

Homelessness is a problem with many causes and few solutions and many of the unhoused suffer from serious mental illnesses (SMI). The enormity of the problem, its multiple facets, and the obstacles faced by clients and workers is devastating and overwhelming. Our three-part program is an introduction to these issues. The first part will be an overview of a large, well-organized program designed to house and serve this population. The next part will cover two case studies where workers found themselves going beyond the customary boundaries with SMI clients and the last part of the program will be a discussion of how we might participate in working with the SMI population.

Presenters/Discussants

Gregory Bellow, PhD, MSW, Presenter
Brian Greenberg, Vice President of Programs & Services, Life Moves, PhD, PSY, Presenter
Corey Datz-Greenberg, LCSW, Presenter
Samoan Barish, PhD, LCSW, Discussant
Brian Ngo-Smith, MSW, LCSW, Presenter
Lynn Rosenfield, PhD, LCSW, Discussant

Course Level

This program is designed for psychologists, LMFTs, LCSWs, and LPCCs; instructional level is intermediate.

Learning Objectives

  1. List five obstacles encountered in working with the SMI populations.
  2. Identify three areas of support and/or training that might be expanded and developed.
  3. Demonstrate how therapeutic interventions with SMI clients living on the margins can be harmful at times and beneficial at others.

Bios

Brian Ngo-Smith, MSW, LCSW, BCD-P, FABP is a psychoanalyst and clinical social worker in Denver, CO. He received his MSW from the University of Iowa and has worked in the mental health field for 20 years, first in residential and hospital settings and later in community mental health before moving into private practice in 2018. Brian completed post-grad training at the Denver Institute for Psychoanalysis, where he is now on faculty, and he also teaches at the Sue Fairbanks Academy through the Steve Hicks School of Social Work at the University of Texas at Austin. Brian is the current President of the American Association for Psychoanalysis in Clinical Social Work.

Brian Greenberg, Ph.D. manages the LifeMoves programs. He is a licensed psychologist with over 25 years of experience developing and managing behavioral health and housing programs. Prior to his current position, Dr. Greenberg oversaw research and evaluation, adolescent services, and development for 18 years at Walden House. Brian also serves as a clinical consultant for drug treatment programming and has published articles in peer-reviewed journals concerning his work with substance abuse treatment research and housing. He received his undergraduate degree from Ohio State University and his master's degree and Ph.D. from the California School of Professional Psychology in Berkeley, CA.

Corey Datz-Greenberg, LCSW, is a graduate of the Smith College School of Social Work and the Access Institute for Psychological Services post graduate analytic therapy fellowship. In a previous career as an organizer, he worked in the Peace Corps in Nicaragua and as a union organizer with UNITE HERE. Corey is currently a clinical case manager with UCSF Citywide doing intensive case management helping people with severe mental illness stabilize in the community. He also has a part time private practice in Hayes Valley working with adolescents, adults, and couples. Corey is on the steering committee for the Coalition for Clinical Social Work, the social work wing of SFCP.

Gregory Bellow, PhD, MSW, is a University of Chicago graduate in psychology (1966) and social work (1968). After advanced training in child psychotherapy at Mt. Zion Hospital, he worked in various agencies and mental -health clinics at Kaiser Hospital and The County of San Mateo as well as a private psychotherapy practice until 2007. He completed his Ph.D. at The Sanville Institute for Clinical Social Work in 1981. He has served as a member of its Core Faculty from l983 until the school's closure at the end of 2018.

Lynn Rosenfield, PhD, LCSW, has a private psychotherapy, supervision and mediation practice in Los Angeles, CA. She is a clinical instructor in several certificate programs that train beginning and advanced clinical supervisors, through Smith College School for Social Work. For 18 years, she served as a faculty/field liaison for Smith College School for Social Work, overseeing the relationship of social work interns with their supervisors. She is former faculty at the Sanville Institute and is the author of articles on cultural countertransference and web-based supervisor training.

Samoan Barish, PhD, LCSW, is currently in private practice in Santa Monica, California, on the board of the International Forum for Psychoanalytic Education (IFPE) and a member of the Sanville Institute's Continuing Education Committee. She has taught courses on Boundary Dilemmas for many years.

Credit

3 Hours of Continuing Education Credit.

The Sanville Institute, formerly a PhD-granting institution, now sponsors programs for continuing professional education. The Sanville Institute is approved by the California Psychological Association to provide continuing professional education for Psychologists, LCSWs, LMFTs, and LPCCs. The Sanville Institute maintains responsibility for this program and its contents.