Weekly Wrap-Up
March 26, 2021
Special Announcement
Statement in Response to the Boulder Shooting

Mental Health America of California in Affiliation
with Mental Health America

A statement from Paul Gionfriddo,
President and CEO of Mental Health America: 

“For the second time in a week, we’re reading and watching news coverage of a mass shooting. One witness to yesterday’s incident at the King Soopers grocery store said it seemed like everyone there imagined they’d be in a situation like this one day. This is unsettling, to say the least. We cannot accept this as the new normal. We cannot live in fear of our everyday errands. When we do, it is damaging to our collective mental health.

Exposure to acts of violence and the resulting trauma lead to long-term mental health impacts. Those who witness violence and those whose loved ones are taken by violent acts need mental health supports. Providing these - long-term and at no additional cost to those affected - should be the norm. Not because we want to normalize violence, but because we value life and see it as our duty to support those who are affected by it.

The families of the 10 people who died will forever be changed. So will the lives of the shoppers who were forced to flee to the sound of gunshots. So, too, are all those in Boulder and throughout the nation who - as journalists, public safety officers, food service workers, health care workers, and so many others - are reliving their own past traumas in the reports of this horrible tragedy. Our thoughts and prayers are with them all today. 

The suspect’s brother has reportedly said he believes the suspect suffered from a mental illness. He described the suspect as “very anti-social” and paranoid. We cannot conflate mental illness with violence. It’s stigmatizing. And it sets us back decades. There are millions of people in America living with serious mental illnesses who have never had a violent thought in their lives. 

Instead, we need to look at the predictors of violence and address them by intervening early. It’s the only way to stop this from happening every six days.”

If you are experiencing anxiety or depression, go to MHAscreening.org to get screened and access tools and resources. If you or someone you know is in crisis, please call 911, go to the nearest emergency room, call 1-800-273-TALK (8255) to reach a 24-hour crisis center, or text MHA to 741741 at the Crisis Text Line. To talk with a peer about your emotions before you are in crisis, call the California Warmline 855-845-7415 or chat/text through the webpage. Additional resources can be accessed here.

Announcements
Cruel, Immoral Behavior Is Not Mental Illness

In the wake of the horrific mass public shootings in El Paso and Dayton, the public dialogue has turned to focus more squarely on mental illness. Many are unable to fathom how a human being could commit such acts without being under the influence of some powerful “alien” force.

An example of a recent question posed to us by the media was: “Psychiatrists say that violence and mass killing are not closely linked to mental illness. But can we agree that shooting 20 strangers more or less at random is not normal, rational behavior? So, if it's not ‘mental illness,’ what is it?” Although we typically do not entertain media queries in the wake of these tragedies, this particular question suggested to us an opportunity to begin a more reasonable and open public dialogue.


Speaking of Psychology: Dispelling the Myth of
Violence and Mental Illness

Recent mass shootings have inevitably led to news reports of the suspected shooters' mental health, but psychological research shows there is no clear link between mental illness and violence. In this episode, clinical and forensic psychologist Joel Dvoskin, PhD, talks about the misconceptions surrounding mental illness and violent behavior and how basic prevention efforts could help stop future violent events.


Events

Registration Now Open

Saturday, April 24, 2021
9:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m. Mountain Time

2021 OT in Mental Health Symposium - Earn 3 PDUs


Wednesday, April 14, 2021
11:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m. Pacific Time

Are You Talking Like Businesses Think? How to Get More Consumers Hired Doing Remote Job Development

Larry Robbin, CEO, Robbin and Associates

Get businesses to hire from you, using supported work and customized employment. Learn how to speak business language that appeals to the private sector mind set and business people will say yes to your services. Remote job development is possible - learn new techniques for success. Go from basic job development to using private sector sales tactics and get better outcomes with employers.

 
  
Wednesday, April 21, 2021
11:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m. Pacific Time

Fostering Harm Reduction in Residential Treatment for People who have Co-Occurring Struggles: A Practical Approach

James Roberts, MA, Director of Residential Treatment and Supported Housing Programs, Progress Foundation

The book on Harm Reduction in Residential Treatment has yet to be written. However, harm reduction as a model uniquely fits the framework of Social Rehabilitation. Elements of motivational interviewing, the stages of change model and the context of trauma-informed treatment is the key to developing these interventions. If we focus on transparency instead of judgement, agreements as opposed to rules and flexibility instead of rigidity, supporting client choice as the basis of our practice in our treatment model, a harm reduction philosophy will thrive in the milieu.  


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