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In this Winter Practice Period talk, Roshi Joan Halifax explores the rich intersections of everyday life and deep practice, using the evolution of Buddhist monastic traditions as a lens to […]
Season 10 debut episode.Marthea Pitts, MSW is a social worker and a Macro social Work Career Coach. She helps social workers who want to transition from case management, direct practice to macro roles.Marthea has a cohort group career coaching program called the micro to macro career accelerator. She will be starting cohort 17 on January 12, 2025. In the accelerator, she teaches social workers how to identify, apply, write their macro job resume and find their dream macro jobs in three months or less.She also shares her story on how she started her business.To apply for cohort 17, go to https://www.macroandpaid.com Marthea can be found on instagram at https://www.instagram.com/the_mswcoach and on YouTube at @themswcoachThe podcast is sponsored by Bas Moreno Consulting providing financial education and counseling for people of color in the sandwich generation who struggle with their finances while caregiving for their loved ones simultaneously. Sign up for your 25 minute complementary consultation at https://calendly.com/basmoreno/consultationFollow the podcast on social media:IG: https://www.instagram.com/thesocialworkrantspodcastTwitter/X: https://www.twitter.com/socialworkrantsFacebook: The Social Work Rants Podcast
(London Insight) Practice with bringing up notions of future, past, other people and myself and the relationships between them. Receive what is activated in the body and mind without adopting them. Open to the feelings and movements that arise.
(London Insight) Open up the currents to other people – mistakes, grudges, hurt feelings – and listen. You can’t forgive if you’re still wounded. Use the brahmavihāra to open the heart towards others. Then you have not just cleared the floods, but have been enriched by the relational experience.
Mental Health is an ongoing concern for all people during the pandemic. People are suffering, and it is important that we remember to talk about it. As Youth Workers, it is important to remember we serve young people that are being starved of meaningful connections during this time, and we have an opportunity to provide resources and techniques that might help.In this episode, the team has a conversation with Dena and Jason Hobbs on mental health with young people, warning signs, ending the stigma, techniques for self-care, and information from their new book When Anxiety Strikes. Listen in for the full conversation.Dena Douglas Hobbs, M.Div. served as a minister in the United Methodist Church for six years before leaving parish ministry to raise her two young children. She continues to preach, teach groups, and lead retreats and workshops in local congregations. Dena holds a Master of Divinity from Union Presbyterian Seminary in Richmond, and a Bachelor of Science in Biology from the University of Georgia. She blogs at denadouglashobbs.com.Jason B. Hobbs, LCSW, MDiv, is a licensed clinical social worker in an outpatient mental health clinic. He has been in private practice for fifteen years in addition to having worked in hospice and homeless services. Jason also pastored a small United Methodist congregation near Savannah for three years.Jason has led mindfulness training groups in his practice using Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy. He has been trained in Mindfulness and Cognitive Therapy in addition to other therapeutic modalities. He has also presented continuing education courses for the Georgia Chapter of the National Association of Social Workers Annual Meeting in Atlanta. These workshops were entitled Spiritually Sensitive Clinical Practice: Understanding and Honoring Diverse Religious and Spiritual Traditions and Mindfulness, Psychotherapy, and the Therapist: Knowledge and Practice for Clients and Clinicians and Integrating Spiritual Disciplines into Direct Practice. Jason holds a Master of Social Work degree from Virginia Commonwealth University and a Master of Divinity degree from Baptist Theological Seminary at Richmond.Their new book When Anxiety Strikes is now available from all major and most local retailers.
In this episode, we speak with Dr. Jonathan Singer, LCSW, an associate professor of social work at Loyola University Chicago, President of the American Association of Suicidology and coauthor of the 2015 Routledge text, Suicide in Schools: A Practitioner's Guide to Multi-level Prevention, Assessment, Intervention, and Postvention. Dr. Singer is the founder and host of the award-winning Social Work Podcast (www.socialworkpodcast.com), the first podcast by and for social workers. We share the ups and downs of technology and podcasting in the social work field, and we talk about the ethics of policy and politics in direct practice spaces.
What does a direct practice advocate do when they work with victims and survivors on a daily basis? Nora Riggs, a master level social worker explains her daily work in helping clients one-on-one including how she helps clients identify their goals based on their needs and the very real risk that she, like others, will suffer vicarious trauma and compassion fatigue. Nora discussess how she recognizes when client trauma is affecting her life. She talks about how both hard work and "hope" for client recovery is most important and the advice she would give to others that do this work or want to do this work.
At the third annual health 2.0 WinterTech conference running during JP Morgan Healthcare conference week in San Francisco, Gregg Masters catches up with Direct Practice pioneer Erika Bliss, MD, CEO and co-founder of market leader Qliance, follow on twitter via @Qliance. From the Qliance website: 'Qliance membership gives you health security with unlimited access to doctors, nurse practitioners and healthcare team experts for all of your primary care medical needs.' For a brief video introduction to Qliance vis Dr. Bliss, click here. Interviewed and produced by Gregg A. Masters, MPH for Health Innovation Media.
inSocialWork - The Podcast Series of the University at Buffalo School of Social Work
In this episode, Dr. Annemarie Gockel describes her work, research, and experience as a social work educator who integrates mindfulness training with students into her social work courses. She discusses what mindfulness can look like in a classroom setting and how to introduce this method in this context.
On the Wednesday July 8th 2015 broadcast of PopHealth Week at 9AM Pacific/12Noon Eastern, in our continuing focus on primary care and population health we are pleased to welcome Rushika Fernandopulle, MD, the Co-Founder and CEO of iora health a growing and disruptive force in the direct practice (including membership and retainer practice medicine) market. Dr. Fernandopulle has spent more than ten years involved in efforts to improve the quality of healthcare delivered to patients. He was the first Executive Director of the Harvard Interfaculty Program for Health Systems Improvement, and served as Managing Director of the Advisory Board Company. He serves on the faculty and earned his AB, MD, and MPP from Harvard University and completed his clinical training at the Massachusetts General Hospital.iora health value prop iora health believes that better health care starts with primary care. The practice is built upon three principles: Payment Focused on OutcomesPatient at the Center; andTechnologies that Enable Care One of iora Health‘s goals is to empower the individual and they utilize care teams and health coaches as the connection. Iora health also places a focus on integrating behavioral health. Join Dr. Rushika Fernandopulle as our guest on PopHealth Week and learn more about this growing and innovative primary care model. For complete blog post, click here.
At the 15th Annual Population Health Colloquium 2015, my colleague Douglas Goldstein @efuturist and I caught up with the amazing Rushika Fernandopulle MD who's twitter profile @rushika1 notes he's 'a physician trying to radically redesign how we deliver health care' and the Founder and CEO of @IoraHealth an innovative network of direct practices. This is the audio portion of the interview only, the complete video interview will be available c/o Health Innovation Media and uploaded here. Enjoy!
[PROGRAM NOTE: The audio portion of the host was unfortunately compromised and will be edited and reposted shortly. My apolgies to our guest John Shiver]. On the Wednesday July 2nd broadcast at 10AM Pacific/1PM Eastern our guest is John 'Jay' Shiver, Assistant Professor at George Mason University. We'll discuss the concurrent emergence of accountable care initiatives as driven by the Affordable Care Act and the explosive growth of 'retail medicine' while considering the question of: are they on a collision course? Or can they co-exist with each other? 'Jay has more than 35 years of experience in healthcare as a hospital and health system executive, physician practice management executive, academic and as a consultant. He has extensive experience working with Boards and senior management in developing strategic vision, creating integrated delivery systems, reengineering business process, hospital operations and physician practice management. He is widely published, speaks at national meetings and teaches graduate healthcare management. On the broadcast we'll discuss both opportunities and examples presented by retail and consumer-directed healthcare market, learn how healthcare is moving rapidly toward a consumer-driven model including what consumers demand today and the building blocks for a business model that attracts consumers.' Join us for an informative chat.
On the Wednesday June 30th broadcast I'll chat with two industry veterans from the the Health IT and alternative practice market, i.e., IPA world, Nate Di Niro aka #openaffairs & @unclenate and Tony McCormick aka @tonyMI2, respectively. With the passage of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act there are multiple provisons which advance the innovation agenda. One little know provision opens the door to the 'direct practice', membership, or retainer medicine world as 'medical homes' to demonstrate eligibility to be listed on health insurance exchanges as qualified health plans. Much is happening in this non traditional world. Examples include: Qliance, CarePractice, OneMedical and MedLion, and now we at the 'Patient/Physician Cooperative' (PPC) to the managed healthcare acronym soup. On this braodcast we'll get insight into both the IT issues and opportunities for indpendent physicians whether tethered to an IPA or not, as well as what's happening of interest to Indepdent Practice Associations. Join us!
If you experience any technical difficulties with this video or would like to make an accessibility-related request, please send a message to digicomm@uchicago.edu. The prevalence of managed care and short-term therapies has created new needs and challenges for social work practitioners in the 21st century. Long at the forefront of shaping social work education and practice, the Faculty and Field Staff of the School of Social Service Administration recently have implemented an innovative field model where practitioners and faculty partner to address some of the related issues arising in contemporary social work education.Highlighting SSA's heritage as leader in social work education, this half-day session will honor long established as well as innovative approaches to teaching practice competencies in the classroom and in the field. In addition, special emphasis will be placed on computer-based technologies which provide unique opportunities for field instructors to partner with faculty to engage in research-informed practice and practice-informed research.This program is sponsored in part by the Ikuo Yamaguchi Memorial Lecture Fund. The annual Ikuo Yamaguchi Lecture supports a clinical seminar at SSA honoring Ikuo Yamaguchi, AM'60. Mr. Yamaguchi demonstrated his commitment to professionalism in clinical practice throughout a distinguished 30-year tenure with the Salvation Army, where he rose to the position of Executive Director of the Family Service Division.
If you experience any technical difficulties with this video or would like to make an accessibility-related request, please send a message to digicomm@uchicago.edu. The prevalence of managed care and short-term therapies has created new needs and challenges for social work practitioners in the 21st century. Long at the forefront of shaping social work education and practice, the Faculty and Field Staff of the School of Social Service Administration recently have implemented an innovative field model where practitioners and faculty partner to address some of the related issues arising in contemporary social work education.Highlighting SSA's heritage as leader in social work education, this half-day session will honor long established as well as innovative approaches to teaching practice competencies in the classroom and in the field. In addition, special emphasis will be placed on computer-based technologies which provide unique opportunities for field instructors to partner with faculty to engage in research-informed practice and practice-informed research.This program is sponsored in part by the Ikuo Yamaguchi Memorial Lecture Fund. The annual Ikuo Yamaguchi Lecture supports a clinical seminar at SSA honoring Ikuo Yamaguchi, AM'60. Mr. Yamaguchi demonstrated his commitment to professionalism in clinical practice throughout a distinguished 30-year tenure with the Salvation Army, where he rose to the position of Executive Director of the Family Service Division.
inSocialWork - The Podcast Series of the University at Buffalo School of Social Work
What is supervision? Peter Sobota, Clinical Assistant Professor at the UB School of Social Work, speaks with Dr. Lawrence Shulman, Professor and Dean Emeritus of the UB School Of Social Work, about the nature of supervision in direct practice and administration. During their conversation they touch upon issues of power, authority, trust, and role clarity, to name a few.