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Tuesday
Jan172012

Formerly Homeless Individuals Help Their Peers in Newly Launched Homeless Hub

DateTuesday, January 17, 2012 at 2:06PM

PHILADELPHIA (1/17/12) –Individuals who have been homeless are staffing a “homeless hub” launched by two nonprofit agencies (along with other health care and social service providers) with the support of the Philadelphia Department of Behavioral Health and Intellectual disAbility Services (DBHIDS).  The Hub of Hope, in a Suburban Station concourse storefront, serves homeless individuals who have been reluctant to make use of services.

The Mental Health Association of Southeastern Pennsylvania (MHASP) http://www.mhasp.org worked with Project H.O.M.E. to create and staff the storefront office, which was launched on January 3 and will be open until April.

“We were approached by DBH to come up with creative ways to do better on behalf of the people who had been living in the concourse,” said Michael Brody, MHASP’s director of Service Operations. MHASP interviewed some 20 formerly homeless individuals and “one of the things that came out in these focus groups was people who were formerly homeless talking about how helpful it was to receive help from people who had had similar experiences,” Brody said.

The majority of MHASP staff members are in recovery from serious mental health conditions, including some staffers who have been homeless.  “What we’re bringing to this project is employing three recovery coaches who are Certified Peer Specialists” – individuals in recovery who have been trained to help others work toward recovery – “to do outreach to and follow up with people who make use of the Hub of Hope,” Brody said. The recovery coaches are working with the Student-Run Emergency Housing Unit of Philadelphia (SREHUP) and with the Project H.O.M.E. housing coordinator, and play a major role in ensuring that people who come to the Hub are welcomed, Brody said.

"Peer support staff are working to build trust and relationships with people entering the Hub, and ensuring they are getting connected," said MHASP outreach advocate Johnathan Evans, himself formerly homeless, who supervises the recovery coaches. "They are helping to walk people through the process of having their medical and psychiatric needs met." 

"People are coming in on a daily basis and really making use of this added service," Evans noted. At this writing, 95 individuals have already been served. “The certified peer specialist team has been welcoming people into the Hub and reaching out to them in the concourse. They are introducing them to representatives of the Behavioral Health Special Initiative [which provides assessments, referrals and funding support for persons who are uninsured or underinsured with substance abuse problems] and walking them over to Mary Howard Health Center." 

The Hub is open from 7 a.m. to 9 a.m. and from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. M-F. “People we encounter in the evening will be given an appointment to come in the morning to link with a recovery coach,” Brody continued. “The recovery coach will be doing outreach to find those folks to bring them back to get them linked with services.” MHASP will also offer psychiatric services one evening a week.

“It has been a wonderful collaboration with Project H.O.M.E. and a number of other homeless service providers,” Brody said, “and we appreciate the support of the Department of Behavioral Health.”

Marcella Maguire, Ph.D., director of DBH Homeless Services, said that DBH welcomes what MHASP brings to the table. “DBH is excited to have MHASP bring its peer outreach services to persons who have severe mental illnesses and are experiencing homelessness. The City has been successful in helping hundreds leave homelessness, but we know that a small group remains on the street despite our best efforts. MHASP has always been committed to trying new models to assist those most in need, and we hope that this novel use of Certified Peer Specialists will assist many more in leaving homelessness and engaging more fully in their recovery.”

The Mental Health Association of Southeastern Pennsylvania (MHASP) http://www.mhasp.org is a nonprofit corporation that creates opportunities for individuals and family members to effectively respond to the challenges of mental health conditions through its work in five domains:  advocacy, direct support to individuals, training and education, information and referral, and technical assistance.

Contact: Debbie Plotnick, 267-507-3895; cell: 267-978-0639; dplotnick@mhasp.org

 

 

 

AuthorSusan Rogers | CommentPost a Comment | Share ArticleShare Article
Tuesday
Aug302011

Life With Mental Illness Recovery programs support consumers on their journeys.

DateTuesday, August 30, 2011 at 10:06AM

This article is from our Board member: Kay Bensing, RN, MA, MJ 
Educational Consultant & Healthcare Writer

Life With Mental Illness

Recovery programs support consumers on their journeys.

To view the Course Outline and take the test online, click here. 

For a printer-friendly version of the exam you can print out, complete and mail in to ADVANCE, click 
here.

Learning Scope #366 
1 contact hour 
Expires Aug. 29, 2013

You can earn 1 contact hour of continuing education credit in three ways: 1) For immediate results and certificate; take the test online; grade and certificate are available immediately after taking the test. 2) Mail your completed exam (or a photocopy) along with the $8 fee (check or credit card) to ADVANCE for Nurses, Learning Scope, 2900 Horizon Dr., King of Prussia, PA 19406. 3) Fax the completed exam to 610-278-1426. If faxing or mailing, allow 30 days to receive certificate or notice of failure. A certificate of credit will be awarded to participants who achieve a passing grade of 70 percent or better.

Merion Matters, Inc. is an approved provider of continuing nursing education by the Pennsylvania State Nurses Association (No. 008-0-07), an accredited approver by the American Nurses Credentialing Center's Commission on Accreditation. Merion Matters Inc. is also approved as a provider by the California Board of Registered Nursing (No. 13230) and by the Florida Board of Nursing (No. 3298). 

The goal of this CE is to provide nurses with information and resources about the recovery model of mental illness they can share with mental health consumers, families/friends, healthcare professionals and the public. After reading this article, you will be able to:

1. Define and discuss the recovery model in the management of mental illness.
2. Describe how stigma remains a barrier to the public's understanding and support of recovery in mental illness.
3. Identify three resources nurses can share with consumers, families and healthcare professionals that support the recovery model of mental illness.

To read the rest of the story click here.

AuthorCorey Rogers | CommentPost a Comment | Reference1 Reference | Share ArticleShare Article
Friday
Mar112011

Philadelphia is a leader in addiction recovery

DateFriday, March 11, 2011 at 10:45AM
September 24, 2010|By Don Sapatkin, Inquirer Staff Writer
Nine months and nine days after she pushed beyond the alcohol and crack cocaine that consumed a decade of her life, April Steele is doing homework online for a college she never expected to attend.
Steele does not own a computer. Her world is still far from stable. So she spends six hours a day at the Philadelphia Recovery Community Center, where people a few years ahead on the same journey teach her the software, invite her to Friday game nights (with cola, not coke) and Thursday movies (Clean and Sober), and ask how she's feeling, every day.
"When you are starting over, it really helps. You have no idea," said Steele, 44.
To read the rest of the story click here: http://articles.philly.com/2010-09-24/news/24977125_1_addiction-treatment-funding-steele
AuthorCorey Rogers | CommentPost a Comment | Share ArticleShare Article
in Category2010 Archive
Friday
Mar112011

School cops learn new techniques for 'climate change'

DateFriday, March 11, 2011 at 10:42AM
September 08, 2010|By DAFNEY TALES, talesd@phillynews.com 215-854-5084
SCHOOL POLICE officers play an important role in maintaining a proper climate and student safety, which a pilot program under way in the district hopes to modify and expand.
The concept is simple, but the reward could be great, said Debbie Plotnick, director of advocacy for the Mental Health Association of Southeastern Pennsylvania, sponsor of the program at Martin Luther King High, in West Oak Lane.
The program instructs school police officers not only how to identify social, emotional and mental needs of students, but also teaches them to direct youth to the appropriate services they need instead of cracking down on them.

To read the rest of the story click here:http://articles.philly.com/2010-09-08/news/24974400_1_school-police-school-cops-persistently-dangerous-schools

AuthorCorey Rogers | CommentPost a Comment | Share ArticleShare Article
in Category2010 Archive
Friday
Mar112011

For Philadelphia cops, it's a course in gaining patience in dealing with mental crises

DateFriday, March 11, 2011 at 9:51AM
THE PHILADELPHIA DAILY NEWS
CITY & LOCAL
Posted: Friday, October  29, 2010
For Philadelphia cops, it's a course in gaining patience in dealing with mental crises
By DAVID GAMBACORTA
Philadelphia Daily News
gambacd@phillynews.com 215-854-5994
THE CLASSROOM - an old cinderblock number with heavy drapes and long wooden tables - was filled with cops who wanted to learn how to become better cops.
It was a little past noon on Oct. 20, and the 35 officers who squeezed inside this musty, stuffy room at the Police Academy were there voluntarily to receive crisis-intervention team (CIT) training.
The training itself is old news; the Police Department began offering cops courses on how to handle mentally unstable individuals back in 2007, after getting reamed for years by mental-health experts who believed that excluding such training was literally a matter of life and death.

Click here for the rest of the story: http://articles.philly.com/2010-10-29/news/24955151_1_cops-crisis-intervention-training-mental-crises

AuthorCorey Rogers | Comment1 Comment | Share ArticleShare Article
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