Mental Health
Torture survivors engage in psychological services to pursue a wide range of goals, from single symptom reduction to addressing the complex effects of torture on their families and communities. Psychological effects of torture vary considerably. Likewise, there is wide variation in the types of assistance sought to address such effects, depending on a host of factors ranging from service accessibility to beliefs about health and healing.
Topics
- Working with Interpreters
- Self-care for Providers
- Advanced Clinicians
- Training Mental Health Evaluators
- Treatment Model
- Specific Populations
- Asylum Process
- US Asylum Law
- One-Year Filing Deadline
- Asylum seekers in detention
- Evaluation Practice Manuals
- Working with Torture Survivors
- Role of the Mental Health Professional
- Psychological Consequences of Torture
- Components of the Evaluation
- Screening Tools and Standardized Measures
- Client meetings & communication
- Supporting client during asylum process
- Writing effective affidavits
- Expert witness testimony
- The Adjudicator’s Perspective
- Special Topics
- Survivors from specific groups
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Supporting ORR’s UC Program
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CVT Literature Selection Q1 2021
Webinar
Narrative Exposure Therapy for Torture Survivors in Exile: Overview and Adaptations
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Webinar
Therapy for Refugees and Torture Survivors: New H.E.A.R.T. Model Part 1
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Working with Unaccompanied Minors in the U.S.
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Secondary Traumatic Stress: A Fact Sheet for Child-Serving Professionals
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Test of Nonverbal Intelligence
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Projective tools
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Woodcock-Johnson and Woodcock-Muñoz Cognitive Tests
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Trauma Symptom Checklist for Children