[humanser] SPMI
Susan Tabor
souljourner at sbcglobal.net
Mon Nov 16 03:32:51 UTC 2009
A great post, J.D.!--Susan
-----Original Message-----
From: humanser-bounces at nfbnet.org [mailto:humanser-bounces at nfbnet.org] On
Behalf Of JD TOWNSEND
Sent: Sunday, November 15, 2009 8:09 PM
To: Human Services Mailing List
Subject: Re: [humanser] SPMI
Thank you! Severe & Persistent Mental Illness. What a mouth-full.
I have worked with this population for years both in hospital and outside in
the community. Safety is a matter of good observation skills, verbal
desculation skills and using good clinical judgment. I have put many
patients in the psychiatric hospital under involuntary status, visited the
violent wards in some of New York City's larger hospitals, and never been in
physical danger - but I did get called a, "Blind Bitch!" and as a male I
found that a little offensive.
The problem is not in if we can do the job safely, but in how we present
ourselves as able to deal with these complex, disordered people. I believe
that by telling stories of how we have handled certain situations, perhaps
averting challenges, we can best show these supervisors that we have the
skills to deal with situations. I recall one big teenager who was acting
angry and frightened in a program who ran away. He was cornered by staff
and it looked as if we were going to have to "take him down" when I asked
him if he would be my sighted guide and help me to the "quiet room" and he
did. In another incident another teen threw a chair through a window,
breaking it. I got the other patients out of the room and escorted the
young man to a safer place by not making a big deal over his actions. On
the other hand I've seen a 6 foot young police officer taken down by a
psychotic 90 pound 60 year old and have to call for back-up. That was a
case where the police officer didn't believe that the involuntary
hospitalization paperwork was needed for that "Nice old lady."
JD Townsend, LCSW
Daytona Beach, Florida, Earth, Sol System
Helping the light dependent to see.
----- Original Message -----
From: "leslie penko" <leslie_penko at yahoo.com>
To: <humanser at nfbnet.org>
Sent: Sunday, November 15, 2009 3:47 PM
Subject: Re: [humanser] SPMI
Hello Mary,
I too had some issues applying for my internship and had the supervisor at
the VA convinced that I would not stay safe with patients with SPMI which
stands for Severe (or serious) and persistant mental illness. I ended up
taking an internship on an inpatient psychiatric unit with a supervisor that
really didn't seem to be very concerned that I wouldn't be able to see the
patients' actions as I often took them out into open areas to interview them
anyways. Just make sure to remain confident and stay safe by common-sense
personal safety measures. I always checked in with nurses before
interviewing a patient to make sure that they were not agitated or volatol
and it was safe at that time for me to speak with them.
Good luck,
Leslie
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