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Welcome, and thanks to our hosts!. Building Knowledge, Skills and Bridges Regional Roundtable...

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Welcome, and thanks to our hosts!
Transcript

Welcome,and thanks to our hosts!

Building Knowledge, Skills and Bridges

Regional Roundtable

Presented byDeborrah Sherman, Executive Director, OPDI

12:00 – 1:00 Lunch1:00 – 1:15 Introductions1:15 – 1:30 Mental Health Peer Support1:30 – 1:45 Diabetes and Mental Health Peer Support Project1:45 – 2:30 Around the Table - Diabetes & MH Initiatives2:30 – 2:45 Pause2:45 – 3:45 Strategies for Diabetes Prevention & Self Management 3:45 – 4:00 Reflections and Intentions

Agenda

Name, Organization & Position

Introductions

A bit about mental health peer support

and Consumer/Survivor Initiatives

Peer support: the operative word is PEER

rooted in civil/human rights movement

1991 MOHLTC funded Consumer/Survivor Initiatives with these intentions – Independent, autonomous– Run by consumers, for consumers– Member driven

Systemic advocacy, reintegration, social/rec drop-ins, resource centres, public & stakeholder education, employment, PEER SUPPORT

CSIs as Gateways to services

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A growing evidence base

A Longitudinal Study of Consumer/Survivor Initiatives– Centre for Community Based Research

– “From Madhouse to Our House” video• www.youtube.com/watch?v=gnTJYtzlVkc

(Part 1)

• www.youtube.com/watch?v=oZQ159HmgM0 (Part 2)

Therapeutic Relationships: From Hospital to Community– Dr Cheryl Forchuk et al, CHSRF

• www.chsrf.ca.Migrated/PDF/ResearchReports/OGC/forchuk_final.pdf

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Consumer Survivor Initiatives in Ontario: Building for an Equitable Future (MOHLTC)

Making the Case for Peer Support (MHCC)

CSI’s: Impacts, Outcomes, Effectiveness (OFCMHAP)

www.opdi.org

Peer Support Definition (OPDI Membership):

Peer Support is a naturally occurring, mutually beneficial support process, where people who share a common experience meet as equals, sharing skills, strengths and hope, learning from each other how to cope, thrive and flourish.

Formalized Peer support begins when persons with lived experience, who have received specialized training, assume unique, designated roles within the mental health system, to support an individual’s expressed wishes.

 Specialized peer support training is peer developed and delivered, endorsed by Consumer/Survivor Initiatives, Peer Support Organizations and Patient Councils, and is rooted in principles of recovery, hope and individual empowerment.

(*Consumer Survivor Initiatives and Peer Support Organizations are community-based, self-help organizations run by and for consumer/survivors.)

OPDI membership includes patient councils and the Ontario Association of Patient Councils which are hospital-based self help/ mutual aid programs usually funded from hospital global funds.

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About the project

Partners / Project Team

Canadian Mental Health Association, Ontario

Ontario Peer Development Initiative

Provincial Consumer/Survivor LHIN Leads Network

Christine Grace and Community

Lawson Health Research Institute

$ The Lawson Foundation

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Project Rationale

Rates of diabetes in people with mental illness are two to four times greater than the general population.

Diabetes is under-diagnosed and under-treated.

Self-management support is key to Diabetes Mellitus management.

Peer support is an evidence-based method of supporting self-management for chronic diseases.

Mental health peer support is a long-established best practice.

Mental health peer support workers are in an ideal position to support their peers to understand their risk of, to learn and practice prevention strategies against, and to self-manage diabetes.

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Project Goals

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Anticipated Results

People with SMI will have access to informed, educated peer support workers who will support them around prevention, early identification and self-management strategies.

Diabetes policy and health care delivery system across Ontario will

have more awareness of the value and role of mental health peer supporters and of Consumer/Survivor Initiatives (CSIs) across Ontario and their potential to contribute to the reduction of the impact of diabetes on high-risk populations.

A change in attitude towards, and understanding of, people with lived experience of mental illness in those in the diabetes policy and practice sector.

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Anticipated Results (continued)

Local diabetes prevention and management resources in communities with CSIs that have trained diabetes/mental health peer support workers will have the opportunity to increase their capacity to serve people with mental illnesses through developing partnerships with the CSI.

A diabetes training manual will be available for members of both the diabetes and mental health care delivery systems to train mental health peer support workers to support self-management and prevention of diabetes with people living with mental illnesses.

The project will strengthen participating Consumer/Survivor Initiatives, giving them more to offer their communities, their participants and their partners.

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Involving Diabetes & Primary Care Sectors

Diabetes expert worked with project team to develop training module

Trainers linked to local diabetes experts or project expert to deliver regional trainings

Advisory Committee: 15 members represent range of stakeholders interested in diabetes and mental health:

– Ministry of Health & Long Term Care, Local Health Integration Networks, Family Health Teams, Community Health Centres, Community Health Agencies, Hospital Diabetes Clinics, Researchers (CAMH, York Univ), Canadian Diabetes Association

– Advise on development of knowledge transfer strategy to their sectors– Build connections between project and wider diabetes/primary care sector,

locally & provincially– Educate colleagues about potential role of mental health peer support in

diabetes prevention & management, and suggest tools project can develop for them to use in educating their colleagues

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OPDI Peer Support Core Essentials™ Program

Diabetes training builds on a pre-existing peer support training program, operated by Ontario Peer Development Initiative (OPDI).

– Provides training to people with lived experience of the mental health system who are currently or wish to become peer supporters.

– 178 across Ontario were trained in the core skills required for providing peer support.

• 50 hours training = Level 1 or 1R (Recommended for Internship)

• 50 hour internship = Level 2 (“OPDI Certified Peer Supporter”)

– 10 trainers trained to become OPDI Licensed Trainers• 25 hours face to face training

• Internship = successful delivery of 1 Core Essentials course

• Licenses renewable, revocable & curriculum copyrighted, trademarked

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Curriculum Overview

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• Introduction to OPDI and CSI’s • Module 01 Peer Support• Module 02 Role of the Peer Supporter• Module 03 Exemplifying Peer Support• Module 04 Recovery Inspired Peer Support• Module 05 Becoming Informed Peer

Supporters (Trauma, Suicide, Substance)• Module 06 Community Minded Peer Support• Module 07 Core Connecting Skills• Module 08 Peer/Peer Supporter Relationship• Internship 50 hours

OPDI Peer Support Core Essentials™ Training Program

Diabetes & Mental Health Module

Diabetes training module developed and delivered by same people who do core skills training using a similar model.

– One day training

• 6* hours face to face

• Certificate of completion

• (*being revised to probably 1.5 days, 8 or 9 hours)

– Important pre-requisite: basic recognized peer support training

• OPDI Core Essentials, Intentional Peer Support, PREFER, WRAP etc.

– 7/10 OPDI Core EssentialsTM Trainers trained to deliver module

– Total 80 peer supporters from across the province have been trained in Diabetes module.

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Diabetes module training

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Project Steering Committee

Trainer module

7 trainers

Peer support workers

Diabetes expert

Participant module

Becoming Diabetes Informed The Lived Experience

– Grieving Diabetes– The Burden of Self Management

Living with Diabetes– Self Care

• Sharing Information• Encouraging Healthy Eating• Encouraging Physical Activity• Supporting Stress Management• Sharing Experiences

– Support– Self Advocacy

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Curriculum Overview (Diabetes Module)

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Peer Support Trainers

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Building Bridges

Linking Trainers to Diabetes Experts Encouraging Training Participants to link with

their local Diabetes Experts and Providers Project Presentations at Diabetes Provider

Forums Linking with LHIN Self Management Groups,

Family Health Teams, Community Care Access Centres…

Regional Round Tables

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Contact for Project

For more information:

Scott Mitchell, Director, Knowledge Transfer

Canadian Mental Health Association, Ontario

416-977-5580 ext. 4136

[email protected]

Deborrah Sherman, Executive Director

Ontario Peer Development Initiative

416-484-8785 ext. 1

[email protected]

www.diabetesandmentalhealth.ca

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Around the table…

Local diabetes & Mental Health Initiatives

What are needs of the local community?

What is happening currently?

Are there any collaborations, projects?

Where are gaps, opportunities, challenges?What are your org’s current wellness and/or

peer support activities? (eg Minding Our Bodies)

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Boldly go…

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…take a bio break and a brief respite from information overload.

We’ll reconvene in fifteen minutes.

Strategies…

for diabetes prevention and self management

How can your current wellness activities be leveraged into a formalized education module with diabetes peer support?

Are there funding / project opportunities?

Are there potential partners in the room?

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&Did you learn anything or meet anyone new?

What are you going to do next?

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We hope you’ll keep the conversation going…


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