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Social
Health Care (SHC)
Training
and Treatment Program

A
comprehensive, integrated,
interdisciplinary,
and sustainable
humanitarian assistance service
aimed at healing the trauma of war and violence,
and equipping the members of
traumatized and displaced communities in
regions of conflict
with the skills, resources, and hope needed
for restoring mental health, balance, dignity, and self-determination.

Common
Bond Institute
(CBI)
in cooperation with
International
Humanistic Psychology Association
(IHPA)
and an international consortium of professional organizations

~
Donate to Support This Humanitarian Effort ~
Make a Tax
Deductible Donation (for
U.S. taxes) in support of providing these critical services to refugees
through our partner organization: International
Humanistic Psychology Association (IHPA)

Features of the Social
Health Care Training and
Treatment
Program:
1)
A comprehensive, integrated, interdisciplinary, and permanent health
care service providing immediate, critically needed crisis
intervention, coping skills, and trauma recovery treatment to thousands
of refugees currently within the borders of Jordan, Lebanon, and Turkey
that is locally based, culturally appropriate, expandable, and sustainable.
2)
An on-going professional and interdisciplinary trauma treatment training
program providing practical skills to hundreds of local university
students, professionals, and NGO staff equipping a steadily growing
expert pool of service providers with increasing local capacity and
empowerment for healing and recovery within their society. The program
is based on a "training of trainers" model to also create
a growing local pool of experts who progressively take on the role of
conducting the training into the future.
3)
A strategic and long term investment in advancing and developing the
future local human service system.
4)
A major
investment in the local academic system through providing
universities with previously absent locally-based official internships
and practicums for their mental health related academic programs that
allow students to remain in their home country for their certified professional
practical training, rather than being required to seek these on their
own and outside the country; and in doing so ensure that future generations
of young human service professionals remain to serve their home society.
5)
A substantial and growing vocational benefit to trainees
and the local economy and generating secure jobs, through creating skilled
professional positions, secure jobs in the social health care field,
and an expanding job market for those vital services within the society
as an increasing number of recipients are introduced to and benefit
from the available services.
6)
An assessment, evaluation, and monitoring system that is
comprehensive, valid, and culturally sensitive.
7)
An innovative, adaptable, and continually developing treatment and training
model that can be replicated in other regions of conflict
where there is immediate, massive need, limited resources,
and where the human service infrastructure is overwhelmed due to being
either underdeveloped or profoundly undermined as a result of war and
violence.
8)
Research and Analysis of the dynamics of unresolved communal
trauma and it's transfer into future generations, implications for relationships
within and between communities past, present, and future, as well as
the development of new culturally appropriate, practical models and
methods for healing trauma on the large group, societal level.
The
SHC training and treatment service is directly based on Common
Bond Institute's long established comprehensive Catastrophic
Trauma Recovery (CTR) training and treatment model. The
CTR model is an intensive integrated and interdisciplinary system intended
to quickly build local capacity and empowerment within service communities
themselves through instilling local professionals and relief workers
assisting refugees and victims of violence in regions of conflict with
the effective skills needed for social healing and recovery, and investing
in the development of the local human service infrastructure.
Services
1)
Direct Social/Mental Health Services:
Providing a comprehensive, progressive range of critically needed
crisis intervention, coping skills training, trauma recovery, and rehabilitation
services to the massive and increasing number of individuals and families
suffering from psychological and emotional trauma in the region due
to war and violence, and who currently go untreated. The program is
designed to address immediate and long term treatment needs, build close
working relationships to support local practitioners and aid organizations,
conduct public education regarding psychosocial services, and provide
training in self-help skills to victim populations and their community
to instill self-empowerment and promote mutual support. An added benefit
is the invaluable investment in the future health service system for
the region through building a permanent and growing local pool of skilled
mental health workers and the capacity for providing extensive professional
health care services to victims of trauma where huge portions of the
population have been impacted.
2)
Professional Training:
A comprehensive and intensive curriculum providing multiple areas and
levels of expert training and proficiency in practical mental health
and crisis intervention skills to hundreds of students, current professionals,
paraprofessionals, and volunteer relief workers that immediately enable
them to function as a broad and expanding pool of skilled service providers
in refugees camps and their society in general.
By intent, members of refugee communities are sought out to include
within the pool of trainees - to model self-empowerment and to provide
them with the effective skills needed to assist in both healing their
societies and training others to do so when they eventually return to
their countries.
Training is also offered to local humanitarian NGO's who's staff are
in need of specialized experience in practical treatment and assessment
skills.
Interdisciplinary
Team: Training includes and integrates several mental health
related disciplines, and is fundamentally committed to a strong interdisciplinary
team model that includes psychology, psychiatry,
social work, occupational therapy, physiotherapy, special education,
and psychiatric nursing. The interdisciplinary team forms the
center of all treatment planning, implementation, and supervision. On-going
training, direct clinical case consultation, guidance, and mentoring
is provided on a permanent basis by Common Bond Institute's international
expert pool of practitioners.
Training of
Trainers: Creating a core group of selected local trainees
and professionals with advanced abilities who form a highly skilled,
interdisciplinary mentor pool for eventually joining the expert training
team to conduct on-going locally-based training groups.
A description of the Professional Training model and levels of professional
and paraprofessional training available can be viewed at:
Professional
Training
3)
Formal
Internship, Vocational Experience,
and Job Creation:
Working closely with academic departments within local universities
and colleges, supporting and augmenting their terminal degree programs
by providing the formal practical training, field experience, and internship
components for graduate students in mental health related disciplines
that is currently missing within their formal curriculums. Current department
degrees include: psychology, psychiatry, social work, occupational therapy,
physiotherapy, special education, and psychiatric nursing.
Training provides professional certification of training, experience,
and proficiency that allows a significantly increased number of graduate
students to meet national standards and requirements for licensing to
practice. The intent is to produce a growing number of deeply needed
local practitioners in these services, and to grow and develop an effective
human service infrastructure that is increasingly better capable of
meeting the needs of their society in the future. At the same time,
it promotes the creation of skilled professional positions in the social
health care field and a growing job market for those vital services
within the society that can help provide stable vocational employment
and a benefit to the economy in general.
Internships and practicums are supervised by expert professionals and
certified with endorsements by accredited US universities and professional
training institutes. The end goal is to create a local mentor pool of
qualified practitioners who will eventually become the official field
instructors and supervisors into the future, and to establish formal
membership relationships with our international network of professional
associations in each discipline for on-going support and cooperation.
4)
Assessment, Evaluation, and Monitoring:
- Needs
Assessment for Recipient Communities
Utilizing effective, standardized, and culturally adapted
assessment and evaluation tools, identifying the type and amount of
needs within communities.
- On-going
Service Monitoring and Reporting
Ensuring accountability, quality control, uniformity, responsiveness,
and internal integrity through regular monitoring.
- Program
and Service Delivery Evaluation
Regular evaluations conducted by assessment teams to determine
overall effectiveness and success toward meeting program goals and mission,
need for further improvement and development, and opportunities for
creative innovation and expanding on the overall mission.
- Program
Development
Continual focus on program visioning and practical development for further
applications and scaling in support of the overall human service infrastructure,
as well as replicating in other societies exhibiting similar critical
needs and systemic challenges.
5)
Research and Analysis:
Collaborating with two major research and development initiatives
organized by Common Bond Institute that study communal trauma and
it's transfer into future generations, as well as the development
of new models and methodologies for healing trauma on the large group,
societal level:
1) The Global
Network for the Study of Transgenerational Trauma - a professional
network of permanent working study groups researching the dynamics
of unresolved communal trauma, it's inheritance into future generations,
and implications for violent relationships within and between communities
2) Annual International
Conference on Transgenerational Trauma: Communal Wounds and Victim
Identities - an annual meeting place for Network members to
share knowledge, explore critical issues and applications, and explore
the development of new models and methodologies for treating communal
trauma.
Need
Service
Recipients:
Individuals and families in refugees camps within Jordan, Lebanon,
and Turkey, as well as residents of these countries who are in need
of assistance, but who have limited or no access at all to the very
limited existing services.
Immediate
Need:
On the ground needs assessments reveal a critical level of serious,
debilitating post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms pervasive
throughout the entire refugee population in the region. Due to continuing
and growing level of violence, traumatic experiences, and extreme deprivation
in daily life, including violence done to them and viewing the violence
and death of others - many of who are family members and neighbors,
victims are re-traumatized on a regular basis. This is particularly
devastating for children who have less ability and psychological resources
to cope with this heightened level of danger, stress, and loss.
Long
Term Need:
Profound psychological and emotional injuries may be the most enduring
effects of war and violence, yet historically, they are the least addressed
in terms of rebuilding a community or society, and preventing future
violence within and between communities. Large-scale recovery efforts
commonly focus on more visible needs such as food, shelter, clothing,
physical health, security, and economic aid. However, the effects of
deep psychological trauma on individuals, their families, and ultimately
their communities is typically overlooked or minimized, and seldom truly
resolved. This invariably leads to it becoming imbedded as part of the
psyche of
a society that extends the wounds into future generations where
it is too often played out in further violence and the creation of new
victims. In this way the cycle of violence and the cycle of trauma directly
contribute to each other. The pervasive presence of such a large segment
of traumatized members in all areas of these societies poses perhaps
the most formidable barrier to recovery and peace. Without these urgently
needed services it is expected the trauma of violent physical and emotional
abuse, loss of loved ones and neighbors, loss of homes and community,
and dramatic decline in basic daily life, will continue. It is imperative
to not only the present but to the future that victims on all sides
are assisted in healing and recovering from their tragic experiences.
True healing and recovery can then better lead to lasting peace.
Whether in the Middle East, Europe, Caucuses, Balkans, Africa, or elsewhere,
in modern times or the past, regardless of the original motivation of
conflict, unresolved communal
psychological wounds, often inherited from one generation to the
other, are one of the most powerful fuels of war and violence. The chronicle
of hostilities and conflict throughout our human story is heavily woven
with narratives of revenge, retribution, and righting past wrongs, with
often competing narratives on both sides of the same conflicts. No society
or age is immune to these toxic dynamics, as is painfully evidenced
by just the wars and bloodshed over the last century. Efforts at maintaining
peace and avoiding war are seriously handicapped if they do not directly
address such current and historical wounds to create the means for preventing
future traumas by preventing unresolved communal wounds from bleeding
into subsequent generations.
Treating large civilian populations, experiencing catastrophic psychological
trauma pervasive at all levels of a society due to war and violence,
poses unique challenges not typically focused on in the therapeutic
literature or conventional clinical practice, where the historical application
is with individuals or small groups. When the society is one where human
services are seriously underdeveloped or absent, and where the integrity
of the existing social support system itself is critically compromised
by a catastrophic situation, this challenge can be overwhelming. Although
needs assessments conducted in the region over the years by various
international aid organizations have consistently identified this critical,
pervasive, and relatively unmet need, and although NGO coordinating
agencies and relief organizations confirm this as a present and growing
condition, there has been far too little provided in the way of adequate
direct treatment services or local training in trauma treatment.
This lack of action has been primarily due to the lack of workable
models and methodologies in the field of mental health for undertaking
such an immense, long-term task of treating at the large and societal
level, and particularly where the local human service infrastructure
is significantly lacking. What is required are concerted efforts at
developing
new models oriented toward treating large populations in societies
where trauma has become systemic and available resources are extremely
limited, to both heal the current trauma and prevent it's transfer into
future generations where it can erupt at any given flashpoint within
and between communities.
Local capacity
building: These approaches must incorporate an integrated
and multi-level flow of services and supports designed to respond to
both immediate and long-term effects of trauma. A key feature is that
the capacity to provide and quickly expand these services on an ongoing
basis is designed to be instilled within the local community itself
by tapping into the available skills and human resources within it.
The deep symbolism of a community healing itself is vital to regaining
the sense of empowerment, value, dignity, and balance with the world
that is threatened and undermined by the trauma experience. It is noteworthy
that these qualities within a community also support compassion and
tolerance toward others that can help defuse impulses toward revenge
and retribution. It is imperative that any model also be sensitive and
appropriate to the cultural context of both the trauma experience and
treatment. Thus, in addition to adaptations of highly effective mental
health treatment methods, it is important to enlist traditional healing
aspects of the society, including its cultural and spiritual resources.
Current
State Of Existing
Services
In general, there is a seriously limited amount of mental health
service, expertise, or resources in the region. What little does
exist in neighboring countries hosting refugees and in Syria is completely
overwhelmed, with only a small percent of the population capable of
paying significant fees to access them, while the critical need for
such services is continually and rapidly growing by the tens of thousands
as a massive stream of new refugees enters these countries each day
to swell the millions languishing in camps spread across the region.
Mental health services of any kind from aid organizations is extremely
limited and stretched, or in most cases nonexistent, with the emphasis
and efforts of national and international relief organizations to date
primarily directed toward addressing the basics of food, shelter, clothing,
and security, or simply assessing the need for services.
The fields of practical clinical psychology, psychiatry, psychotherapy,
and related services are also profoundly limited.
At universities, departments of Psychology, Psychiatry, Clinical Social
Work, Rehabilitation Therapy, Special Education, and
Psychiatric Nursing lack practical training and experience in
treatment and assessment skills, or such departments are nonexistent,
requiring graduate students to seek access to training programs outside
the country - that are only limitedly available and unaffordable to
most - to acquire necessary skills before being able to function as
practitioners within their society. To compound things further, due
to the very poor local job market, those who acquire specialty training
outside of Jordan, Lebanon, and Turkey too often do not return so that
their skills can benefit their society, resulting in a continual talent
drain that further diminishes local capacity.
As a result entire communities made up of millions are in a state of
profound need, deprivation, and crisis, with a serious deficiency or
complete lack of effective services to meet their needs.
The Social
Health Care
program
offers an innovative response
to
this need through creating a comprehensive, integrated, collaborative,
and fundamentally sustainable humanitarian assistance program that
taps
into the talent resources within the service community itself - building
local
capacity and leadership for healing, recovery, and empowerment,
while advancing the human service and educational system for the
entire
society in general. It offers a creative and effective model that can
be replicated
for addressing massive social hardship and immediate demand for assistance
when the human service infrastructure of a society is overwhelmed due
to
being
ether underdeveloped or profoundly undermined due to war and violence.
* Please address all Program Questions and Inquiries
to
Common Bond Institute
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