CARE Network Behavioral Health Provider ECHO Series - February 2023
This training will provide CARE Network behavioral health designated providers with evidence-based guidelines for care and improve both access and quality of care for patients. Providers will have the opportunity to learn new referral processes and system-based protocols for working with other family-serving agencies, such as social services, law enforcement and the courts. A major goal of the ECHO sessions will be to promote interdisciplinary practice and collaboration among systems. Sessions will also include case presentations and discussion.
February's session will focus on using the PRIDE Skills from PCIT as an intervention to enhance attachment and communication with Maureen Vivas-O’Keefe, LCSW.
Target Audience
CARE Network Behavioral Health Designated Providers
Learning Objectives
- Explain the PRIDE skills from Parent Child Interaction Therapy (PCIT).
- Demonstrate understanding of the PRIDE skills for clinicians to use in practice with children and families.
- Describe the application of the PRIDE skills between therapist and patient, and parent and patient.
Maureen Vivas-O’Keefe (she/her/hers) is a bilingual psychotherapist in the START department of the CU School of Medicine in the Department of Psychiatry. She has almost two decades of experience as a clinical social worker serving underserved populations and people across the lifespan who have experienced complex trauma and chronic stress. She is trained in numerous evidenced based modalities that she incorporates in her daily practice as a therapist including Trauma Focused Cognitive Behavior Therapy (TF-CBT), Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT), Child Parent Psychotherapy (CPP), Accelerated Resolution Therapy (ART), Mindfulness Based Stress Reduction (MBSR), and Parent Child Interaction Therapy (PCIT).
Available Credit
- 1.00 Attendance