Provider Resilience: Assessing Compassion Fatigue and Cultivating Well-Being

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*Registration payment includes Credit Cards and Interfund Transfers ONLY.

Target Audience

This workshop will benefit mental health practitioners, educators, human service professionals, and community advocates interested in this topic.

Description


Resilience is the ability to recover from or adjust easily to misfortune, adversity or change. In this interactive workshop, we will explore the concept of burnout within human service careers and the ethical implications for our professional and personal lives. We will center our discussion around the current COVID-19 crisis and the increased stress felt by human service professionals in managing both personal and professional demands within a changing landscape. We will examine recent research on the topic of resilience for human service professionals, including new strategies and tools for improving our capacity to monitor and address our own symptoms of compassion fatigue. We will “get real” about self-care and wellness by exploring individual and systemic successes and setbacks in balancing demanding professional roles with the stress of life outside of work. To make the session beneficial to participants, we will complete an evidence-based comprehensive assessment to identify indicators of compassion fatigue and burnout, and each participant will create a concrete, personalized plan for incorporating self-care strategies both within and outside of the workday. We will explore how the current public health crisis impacts our ability to support our own well-being and will identify ways to support our wellness in the midst of our current reality. We will also examine how elements of identity may impact our experience of burnout, and we will discuss the value of community and social networks in supporting those facing daily marginalization and oppression. Through discussion, video clips, and mindfulness activities, participants will engage in a dialogue about prioritizing self-care in the real world.

Faculty
Amy Levine, MSW, LCSW
Clinical Instructor
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill School of Social Work

Amy Levine, MSW, LCSW, is a Clinical Assistant Professor at the UNC-Chapel Hill School of Social Work, where she teaches courses in child welfare and mental health and serves as a faculty member in the field education program. Amy has a practice background in both public and private child welfare services as well as mental health and worked for 12 years as a child, adolescent, and family therapist. Amy is also a North Carolina Certified Clinical Supervisor, providing supervision and consultation to LCSW-A’s in North Carolina. Amy’s practice and research interests include trauma-informed models of care, child and adolescent mental health, and the intersection of child welfare and behavioral health services. Amy enjoys providing training on a variety of practice topics and appreciates learning from and further supporting the important work carried out by our human service professionals.

This program is being offered in association with the University of North Carolina, School of Social Work's AHEC Training Partnership.

Creation of the content was made possible through the Atrium Health Essential Needs Fund at Atrium Health Foundation

Live Webinar Information
This Live Webinar will be broadcast with Zoom. Instructions to join the Live Webinar will be emailed prior to the event. You can test your computer by going to the Zoom Test Page

Can't Join the Livestream Webinar? No problem, it will be available as an online module on the Charlotte AHEC website by June 25, 2020.

Charlotte AHEC has been approved by NBCC as an Approved Continuing Education Provider, ACEP No. 5096. Programs that do not qualify for NBCC credit are clearly identified. Charlotte AHEC is solely responsible for all aspects of the program.

Objectives

  • Describe indicators of compassion satisfaction and fatigue and identify the ethical and practice issues that result from compassion fatigue in the workplace
  • Discuss the common barriers to wellness, both on individual and systemic levels, that contribute to compassion fatigue for human service professionals
  • Outline strategies and tools that can be used in individual, group, and organizational levels to reduce burnout and increase provider resilience
  • Complete an in-depth analysis of participants’ own compassion satisfaction and fatigue and define how indicators of compassion fatigue are present in their professional and personal lives
  • Create a personalized self-care plan that identifies strategies to improve physical, psychological, emotional, spiritual, and professional well-being

Contact

Gabriela Staley MEd, 704-512-6523

Sessions

Status
Open
Presenter(s)
Amy Levine MSW LCSW
Date(s)
Jun 11, 2020
Time
9:00 AM - 12:00 PM
Check-In Time
8:45 AM
Credit
0.30 - CEU
3.00 - Contact Hours
3.00 - NBCC Hours
3.00 - Contact Hours (category A) CE for NC Psychologists
Location
South Piedmont AHEC
Room
Live Webinar
Details
Status
Closed
Date(s)
Jun 11, 2020
Time
9:00 AM - 12:00 PM
Location
South Piedmont AHEC
Room
Live Webinar
Fees
$0.00
Registration Fee.
Credits
0.30
CEU
3.00
Contact Hours
3.00
NBCC Hours
3.00
Contact Hours (category A) CE for NC Psychologists