GVPA Conference 2020- Examining pain through a modern lens: Understanding and treating patients across the Lifespan
Examining pain through a modern lens: Understanding and treating patients across the Lifespan
About this Event
GENESEE VALLEY PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION (GVPA) 2020 ANNUAL CONVENTION
Examining Pain through a Modern Lens: Understanding and Treating Patients across the Lifespan
Date: Friday, November 13, 2020
Time: 9:00 am - 3:30 pm
Where: GVPA’s first virtual convention - https://sjfc.zoom.us/j/97288957847
Prepared to Care
An ethnographic documentary by Dr Tanisha Jowsey
How are health care professional students – pharmacy, medicine and nursing – learning to manage the tough aspects of patient care? This ethnographic film documents their experiences in one powerful training initiative: Urgent and Immediate Patient Care Week.
Producers: Dr Tanisha Jowsey and Richard Smith
Director: Dr Tanisha Jowsey
Interprofessional Team Roles and Responsibilities in Providing Person-Centered Dementia Care
This webinar (52:23 minutes) given by Laurie Mantz, Founder and CEO of Dementia Training for Life, LLC, focuses on the interprofessional team roles in providing person-centered and collaborative care approaches to dementia care. She describes the benefits of having a person centered interprofessional dementia care team as well as the responsibilities of all members of the interprofessional dementia care team and how these responsibilities may evolve as the disease progresses.
Griffith Health Framework for Interprofessional Learning
The Griffith Health Framework for Interprofessional Learning sets out the institution’s agreed and endorsed approach to ensuring that its health professional graduates have the capabilities required for effective interprofessional collaborative practice. The Framework includes 12 threshold learning outcomes, a threephase programmatic pedagogical model and accreditation standards for health programs in relation to their interprofessional content.
Getting Started with Interprofessional Practice and Education in Community-Based Settings
In this Journal of Nursing Education editorial, Barbara Brandt and Amy Barton describe the impact of the National Center's "Accelerating Interprofessional Community-Based Education and Practice" Initiative and the implementation across 16 schools of nursing in the Unites States, each partnering with a community-based organization to further interprofessional initiatives designed around the needs of the patient, family, and community.
FREE CEs: Understanding and Managing the Effects of COVID-19 on Mental Health
The outbreak of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) has thrown us into a period of massive upheaval. A national survey from the American Psychiatric Association (APA) shows COVID-19 is seriously affecting Americans' mental health, with half of U.S. adults reporting high levels of anxiety. With so many circumstances out of our control, fear and anxiety can be overwhelming, leading to stress, emotional exhaustion and difficulty coping. The pandemic has also led to a collective sense of grief from our loss of normalcy, social connections and the world as we knew it.
Kapow! Changing on a dime! Successes and challenges with virtual home visits in the Jefferson Health Mentor Program
This webinar is part of the Connecting at the Nexus: COVID-19 Edition Webinar series.
Taking it Statewide: Online IPE and Assessment in a Pandemic
This webinar is part of the Connecting at the Nexus: COVID-19 Edition Webinar series.
CLE Innovation Challenge Summary- Nexus Summit 2019
A partnership between the National Center for Interprofessional Practice and Education, the National Collaborative on Improving the Clinical Learning Environment (NCICLE), and SmithGroup, the 2019 Clincial Learning Environment Innovation Challenge was a dynamic, team-based, design thinking experience at the Nexus Summit 2019.
Interdisciplinary Curriculum for Oncology Palliative Education (iCOPE)
The Interdisciplinary Curriculum for Oncology Palliative Education (iCOPE) is the result of a grant to the University of Louisville to design, implement and evaluate an innovative, integrated, and interprofessional oncology palliative care curriculum for medical, nursing, social work and chaplaincy students. The project was funded by the National Cancer Institute R-25 mechanism in 2010 for 5 years and is ongoing mandatory curriculum for all medical students, nursing students, social work students in health care and chaplaincy residents at the University.
The curriculum