BEGIN:VCALENDAR
VERSION:2.0
CALSCALE:GREGORIAN
METHOD:PUBLISH
PRODID://MOTA//211168
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260411T174450
VTIMEZONE:America/New_York
DTSTART:20260408T223000Z
DTEND:20260408T233000Z
UID:211168
SUMMARY:Mental Health SIS Meeting
LOCATION:
DESCRIPTION:Mental Health SIS Meeting\n\n04/08/26 06:30 PM EST\n - 04/08/26 07:30 PM EST\Description:\n\n\nWhen: April 8th\n\nTime: 6:30-7:30pm EDT\n\nWhere: Virtual (Join from anywhere!)\n \n\nHosted by Shelby Nelson, MSOT, OTRL\n \n\nLongitudinal studies of individuals diagnosed with Severe and Persistent Mental Illness (SPMI) demonstrate that this population accesses mental / behavioral health services, including occupation-based treatment modalities, in a variety of settings over the continuums of their lives. This may include (but is not limited to) interactions with the criminal justice system, inpatient hospitalization, and engagement in community-based services. \n \n\nPolicy trends over the preceding decades, including the deinstitutionalization movement in the absence of sufficient and proactive reappropriation of funding, have contributed to increased frequency of justice involvement with the SPMI population. Developments in improving access and cohesiveness between these systems is known to positively impact decompensation risk as well as relapse / recidivism prevention. \n \n\nThis presentation seeks to explore complexities of navigating and accessing mental health treatment, trends within these practice settings, and occupational therapy’s role (both current and emerging) in mental and behavioral health, including in forensic psychiatric settings and with justice-involved SPMI populations.\n
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:Mental Health SIS Meeting<br /><br />04/08/26 06:30 PM EST - 04/08/26 07:30 PM EST<br />Description:<br /><br />
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<p dir="ltr"><strong id="docs-internal-guid-c5baf7cb-7fff-9f3a-250e-fc6cf37e9eab">When: April 8th</strong></p>

<p dir="ltr"><strong id="docs-internal-guid-c5baf7cb-7fff-9f3a-250e-fc6cf37e9eab">Time: 6:30-7:30pm EDT</strong></p>

<p dir="ltr"><strong id="docs-internal-guid-c5baf7cb-7fff-9f3a-250e-fc6cf37e9eab">Where: Virtual (Join from anywhere!)</strong></p>
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<p dir="ltr"><strong id="docs-internal-guid-c5baf7cb-7fff-9f3a-250e-fc6cf37e9eab">Hosted by Shelby Nelson, MSOT, OTRL</strong></p>
&nbsp;

<p dir="ltr"><strong id="docs-internal-guid-c5baf7cb-7fff-9f3a-250e-fc6cf37e9eab">Longitudinal studies of individuals diagnosed with Severe and Persistent Mental Illness (SPMI) demonstrate that this population accesses mental / behavioral health services, including occupation-based treatment modalities, in a variety of settings over the continuums of their lives. This may include (but is not limited to) interactions with the criminal justice system, inpatient hospitalization, and engagement in community-based services.&nbsp;</strong></p>
&nbsp;

<p dir="ltr"><strong id="docs-internal-guid-c5baf7cb-7fff-9f3a-250e-fc6cf37e9eab">Policy trends over the preceding decades, including the deinstitutionalization movement in the absence of sufficient and proactive reappropriation of funding, have contributed to increased frequency of justice involvement with the SPMI population. Developments in improving access and cohesiveness between these systems is known to positively impact decompensation risk as well as relapse / recidivism prevention.&nbsp;</strong></p>
&nbsp;

<p dir="ltr"><strong id="docs-internal-guid-c5baf7cb-7fff-9f3a-250e-fc6cf37e9eab">This presentation seeks to explore complexities of navigating and accessing mental health treatment, trends within these practice settings, and occupational therapy&rsquo;s role (both current and emerging) in mental and behavioral health, including in forensic psychiatric settings and with justice-involved SPMI populations.</strong></p>

PRIORITY:3
TRANSP:TRANSPARENT
BEGIN:VALARM
TRIGGER:-PT5M
ACTION:DISPLAY
DESCRIPTION:Reminder
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END:VEVENT
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