黑龙江省心理卫生协会
关于召开“整合式短程心理咨询实操培训”学术会议的通知:
各位委员、各位会员及各会员单位:
黑龙江心理卫生协会长期致力于为广大会员从事心理卫生工作提供专业教育,为了提高广会员心理咨询实战能力,突破传统心理学技术或流派的制约,黑龙江省心理卫生协会定于2016年8月邀请毕业于美国芝加哥大学(The University of Chicago)精神医学系专家张道龙教授进行主题为“整合式短程心理咨询“的实操培训。现代社会的复杂性、心理困扰的多样性以及对咨询效率与效果平衡的要求,决定了广大心理咨询师及心理学工作者必须学习和实践整合式短程心理咨询,以提升大家快速解决心理问题的能力。
根据黑龙江省心理卫生协会《章程》,经省卫计委、省民政厅批准,黑龙江省心理卫生协会2016年学术年会定于8月26日在哈尔滨召开,具体通知如下:
一、会议内容
1、整合式短程心理咨询理论指导
2、整合式短程心理咨询实操培训(工作坊)
二、主讲嘉宾简介
张道龙教授是在美国获得精神学类特殊贡献奖的知名华人精神科医生,张道龙医生和团队著有《整合式短程心理咨询》(获得中国教育报评选的2014年十大畅销书之一),张教授是美国极少数获得ABPN(美国精神、神经病学院文凭,American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology, ABPN)并从事EAP(员工帮助计划)工作和心理咨询的华人精神科医生,现就职于美国芝加哥退伍军人医院精神医学系行为健康部(Jess Brown VA Medical Center) 与伊利诺伊大学芝加哥分校医学院精神医学系(The University of Illinois at Chicago),亲自诊治了超过20000多个中美咨客,曾参与创建了国内第一家中美合资的EAP咨询公司并任医务总监,兼任过多个世界100强企业的咨询顾问。
三、会议时间、地点
时间:2016年8月26日下午14:00-17:00时
地点:哈尔滨医科大学 主楼 三楼演讲厅
四、报到时间、地点
时间:2016年8月26日上午10时—12:30分
地点:哈尔滨医科大学 公共卫生学院 阳光大厅
五、参加人员
1、黑龙江心理卫生协会会员;
2、心理科医生、精神科医生、心理咨询师;
3、从事心理相关研究或教学工作的高校教师及学生;
4、有志于加入黑龙江卫生协会的专业人员。
六、会议费用
500元/人,全日制本科生凭学生证享受优惠价200元/人。
七、具体说明
1、要求会员届时全部参加(如特殊原因不能参加需要指派人员参加)。
2、会议旅差费自理;会议不统一安排住宿。
3、乘车路线:地铁1号线医大二院站下车;公交114、104、11、343路公交车医大二院站下车;67、217、218公交车铁路工程学校下车。
联系人:王琳 联系电话:13836186410
联系人:周佳玮 联系电话:18504511119
黑龙江省心理卫生协会
2016年7月22日
In this election, for the first time, we heard calls from a mainstream party to place mental health provision on a par with physical health. I think that’s a sign a taboo is shifting and it’s becoming a little easier to speak openly about problems that have long been stigmatized. So perhaps it’s fitting that Monday sees the start of Mental Health Awareness Week.
The theme this year is mindfulness, and it’s been surprising for people like me, who have practised meditation and mindfulness in Buddhist settings for many years, that they’ve proved so relevant in mainstream settings like mental health. Mindfulness is widely used in the NHS to avoid relapse into depression. Yet the practices were originally intended for Buddhist monks and nuns, and others intent on following the Buddha’s spiritual path.
The connection is that both settings require people to engage with their minds. I sometimes think we treat our minds rather like our cars: most of us only consider how the engine works when it goes wrong. But when stress, anxiety or depression take hold we can no longer take our minds for granted. We learn that our mental state is fundamental to everything we experience. Depression, for example, creates a veil that affects how we see the world, bleaching out colour and pointing our thoughts in unhelpful directions.
So how can we access more helpful states and encourage more helpful thoughts? The organisers of Mental Health Awareness week value mindfulness because it helps people look after themselves and their own mental wellbeing in just that way.
But facing difficulties is a universal challenge. The election has raised some people up in a wave of euphoria, and cast others down, stripping away their positions and status, and dashing their plans for political change. All of us face times of great excitement and times of loss and suffering.
Buddhism suggests that these experiences challenge us to know our minds better. That's an ethical as well as a psychological task – perhaps a spiritual one as well; and it can open up a different way to live. For Buddhists, the awareness mindfulness brings is the core of the Eightfold path that touches every aspect of our experience.It’s encouraging to learn that our minds, which can lead us into such distress, also contain the resources we need to manage our difficulties. The seeds of resilience, kindness and wisdom are all there if only we can find them, nourish them and let them grow.
地 址:黑龙江省哈尔滨市南岗区保健路157号哈尔滨医科大学公共卫生学院三楼B区
咨询电话:0451-87502859 87502642
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