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Updated: Jan 13, 2019

📷UNITED KINGDOM


Keynote Speaker

Julie Repper is head of Recovery of Nottinghamshire Healthcare Trust in the U.K., Associate Professor of Recovery at the University of Nottingham and Senior Consultant at the ImROC programme. She is the author of many books, including: Social Inclusion and Recovery: A Model for Mental Health Practice. She was involved in the development of one of the first Recovery Colleges in the U.K. Read more...

📷UNITED KINGDOM


Keynote Speaker

Geof Cox has over 30 years social enterprise development experience.

He specialises in organisational change and restructuring, especially around the transformation of public services and the start or expansion of trading activities by public or voluntary sector bodies.  He is regarded as one of the leading UK experts on organisational structures for social enterprise.

📷CZECH REPUBLIC


Director

Centre for Mental Health Care Development

Developments in the field of deinstitutionalization and community care in Czech Republic

📷CZECH REPUBLIC


Peer Specialist, Centre for Mental Health Care Development

Examples of involvement of experts by experience in the Czech Republic

📷CZECH REPUBLIC


Director of Fokus Praha, civic association providing community services for people with mental health problems in Prague and Central Bohemia

Chairperson of Fokus – Association for Mental Health Care - Czech umbrella organisation of regional community services providers

📷UNITED KINGDOM


Affiliation: Head of Social Inclusion and Recovery projects, 

South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust

Title: Social inclusion and recovery through participation in arts and sport: learning from projects in South London 

📷THE NETHERLANDS


Workshop Peer Support by Kees van Rest and Rob Versteegt

Presenter: Kees van Rest

Title: 'Peer Support: better than professional care?'

📷CZECH REPUBLIC


Klub Mosty, Fokus Praha

Abstract for The CARe Conference workshop: Club Mosty

📷CZECH REPUBLIC


Klub Mosty, Fokus Praha

Abstract for The CARe Conference workshop: Club Mosty

📷KAZAKHSTAN


Organisation: Soros Foundation-Kazakhstan

Social Inclusion Program Coordinator 

From the Paternalistic Policy To Social Integration: Social Inclusion For the Mentally Disabled


📷ITALY


Psychiatrist, Psychotherapist

Mental Health Department of Bolzano - Italy

Recovery: the professional perspective

Workshop - Recovery from severe mental illness: the personal, the family, the professional perspective

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Past President, European Federation of Family Associations of people with mental illness (EUFAMI) – Leuven, Belgium


📷THE NETHERLANDS


Affiliation: University of applied sciences Utrecht - Research centre for social innovation

Title workshop: ‘My dear neighbor…’

📷THE NETHERLANDS


Affiliation: University of applied sciences Utrecht - Research centre for social innovation

Title workshop: ‘My dear neighbor…’

📷THE NETHERLANDS


Utrecht University of Applied Sciences, Utrecht, the Netherlands

Jan Sitvast

📷SLOVENIA


Social Enterprise BOLje


Ctibor Lacina and Jana Pekarkova - Klub Mosty (Fokus Praha)

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13.06.2015📷

Among Consumers With Serious Mental Illness

Since 2008, we have supported the implementation of Family Psychoeducation (FPE) in Kansas. While we continue to support current sites, we have decided not to expand FPE sites at this time. As this article acknowledges, many people with serious mental illnesses want their family members involved in their care. But people also want a range of involvement possibilities. 


In FY2016, The Center for Mental Health Research and Innovation will be working with the Kansas Department for Aging and Disability Services to build family engagement and involvement components into Strengths Model practice. This has the possibility of reaching more families than we were able to through FPE.  Currently, high fidelity Strengths Model case management has been implemented in 14 Community Mental Health Centers in Kansas (30 teams), with outcomes that significantly exceed the state average in psychiatric hospitalisation, competitive employment, post-secondary education, and independent living. This can only be further solidified with more focused efforts to involve family whenever possible.


Rick Goscha

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