The document outlines a crisis communication plan for Jewish Vocational Services of MetroWest NJ. It identifies potential crises like illness outbreaks, hazardous threats, infrastructure failures, and more. It emphasizes responding quickly to prevent escalation and ensure client and staff safety. The plan details key stakeholders to contact in an emergency and objectives like making safety the top priority, informing all parties regularly and honestly, and implementing changes to prevent future issues. It provides contact information for emergency services, staff, corporate partners, and collaborators to engage in the event of a crisis.
This resume summarizes the qualifications and experience of Lori Ann Pahl-Holub. She has over 10 years of experience working in mental health and substance abuse counseling. She is a Licensed Professional Counselor with a Master's degree in Mental Health Counseling. Her experience includes working as an emergency response therapist, crisis clinician, and residential mental health counselor. She is skilled in areas like crisis intervention, individual and family therapy, and case management.
This document provides information about Robert Patnell, a qualified social worker with 14 years of post-qualification experience in mental health. He has experience working for the Ministry of Defence, low and medium secure hospitals, community mental health teams, and local authorities. His experience includes assessments, risk management, statutory reports, care coordination, and transition support for patients being discharged from services. To arrange an interview with Robert Patnell, please call 0203 096 1500.
Elizabeth Richter is an accredited mental health social worker with over 15 years of experience. She has worked in both hospital and community settings providing assessments, counseling, and referrals to clients with various social and psychological issues. Her experience includes working in emergency departments, medical wards, inpatient psychiatric units, and community mental health services. She is skilled in areas such as crisis intervention, brief psychodynamic therapy, mindfulness, and motivational interviewing.
Wheaton DuPage IL Senior Home Health Care and Medical Staffing Services BrightStar Care Illinois
油
BrightStar of Wheaton provides homecare, including elder care, childcare and qualified caregivers along with medical staffing solutions. Proudly serving all of Central DuPage County, including Wheaton, Glen Ellyn, Winfield, Warrenville, Wayne, Carol Stream, West Chicago, Addison, Itasca, Medinah, Bloomingdale, Lombard, Glendale Heights, Wood Dale and Bartlett in Illinois.
EAP Response to Bank Robberies: A Comprehensive ApproachBernie McCann
油
This document describes a presentation on responding to traumatic workplace incidents. It includes biographies of the two presenters, an agenda for the presentation, statistics on common critical incidents by industry, research on bank robberies' impact on employees, debates around different crisis response models, best practices for initial and ongoing response, and an example case of developing training for bank managers to help employees after robberies. The presentation aims to help organizations effectively support staff dealing with traumatic events.
This document is a resume for Keith Tobias that summarizes his education and work experience in human services and psychology. It lists his bachelor's degree in psychology from Oakwood University as well as certifications in managing challenging behaviors, crisis prevention, and CPR. His work experience ranges from direct care positions to supervisory roles at various facilities in Georgia and Alabama over the past decade, helping individuals with developmental disabilities.
Ade communicates effectively with service users using their preferred methods and respects their views. She diffuses conflicts respectfully and ensures all parties are heard. Ade works closely with other staff to plan recreational activities for service users, conducts reviews, and records activities in care plans. She maintains safety, confidentiality, and handles challenging behaviors calmly according to agreed strategies. Ade communicates well with service users and other staff.
Lt c year of care commissioning early implementer site workshop 5 october 2015NHS Improving Quality
油
Care Coordiation and service change evaluation were key themes at the LtC year of care Commissioning Early Implementer site workshop earlier this week view the full slide set from the day.
Mastering the HCAHPS by providing patients more than customer service, engage them in a customer experience. The audience was doctors and nurses, but the lessons apply to all hospital staff.
The document provides information about USBD Hospitalists & Consultants' mobile care transition team and community house call program. The program aims to safely transition patients from the hospital or nursing facility to home, reduce hospital readmissions, and improve the home care experience. The mobile care team includes physicians, nurses, therapists and other medical professionals who provide in-home medical visits and services.
eLSU Newsletter - Family and Friends Involvement(1)Dr Sarah Markham
油
This document provides an overview of initiatives to involve family and friends in the care provided at low secure forensic mental health services in the UK. It includes articles on various programs and strategies used across different services to engage with families and caregivers. These range from outlining carers' rights and how their input is incorporated into patient care, to specific case studies highlighting how certain services have tailored their approaches to successfully involve families in supporting patient recovery and treatment. The newsletter aims to explore best practices for family involvement and share experiences across the UK's low secure forensic network.
Person Centered Care through Integrating a Palliative Approach: Lessons from ...BCCPA
油
Aging adults are entering residential care facilities with more advanced disease than in the past and their length of stay is shorter. Most health care providers in these facilities do not receive targeted education and training in palliative care, nor are they confident to have crucial conversations about goals of care and end of life challenges with residents and their families. Due to limited capacity to manage predictable symptoms related to end of life and insufficient planning, many residents are transferred to hospital in crisis and die in the Emergency Department or acute care wards.
This presentation will showcase some of the initiatives by identifying common themes, unique features of each and strategies for success. Opportunity will be given for delegates to ask questions and brainstorm how lessons learned from these initiatives could inform the care provided at their own facility.
Presented by:
- Jane Webley, RN LLB Regional lead, End of Life, Vancouver Coastal Health (EPAIRS and the Daisy project)
- Dr Christine Jones, Island Health (SSC project: Improving end of life outcomes in residential care facilities: A palliative approach to care)
- Kathleen Yue, RN, BSN, MN, CHPCN (c) Education Coordinator, BC Center for Palliative Care
Inpatient Rounding: 30 Minutes a Week to Amazing Patient ExperienceMedAmerica Marketer
油
This document discusses the importance of inpatient rounding to improve patient experience. It describes a pilot program where ED physicians and nurses rounded on admitted patients weekly to understand their care experience, identify opportunities for improvement, and provide real-time service recovery. This led to improved patient satisfaction scores. The rounding helped foster a culture of compassion by providing feedback to staff and recognizing both positive and negative experiences.
The document provides an overview of topics for an annual review course, including person-centered thinking, major unusual incidents, incident reporting, and crisis/disaster plans. It discusses the values and process of person-centered thinking, defining what is important to and for individuals. It also outlines what must be reported as major unusual incidents and definitions related to incidents of abuse, neglect, exploitation and other issues.
Leadership at the Bedside Making the Change that Needs to HappenBCCPA
油
The document discusses leadership at the bedside and the need for change in nursing care delivery models. It notes that current models emphasize teamwork and collaboration more than previous models. The presentation defines key terms related to nursing care delivery and leadership. It discusses progressive patient care models and the roles of licensed practical nurses and health care assistants in leading teams. It argues that LPNs and HCAs are well-educated and able to provide critical thinking and leadership at the bedside.
This document outlines a presentation on state initiatives impacting physicians and patients related to controlled substances. It includes disclosures from presenters and planners, as well as learning objectives. The first presentation discusses Maryland's emergency preparedness plan for responding when a physician's license to prescribe controlled substances is suspended. The plan was developed after an incident where over 2,000 patients lost access to prescriptions. It involves coordinating state agencies, conducting surveys, developing response teams, and temporarily providing resources to mitigate public health impacts. Focus groups provided guidance on barriers, triaging patients, documenting for referrals, and estimating costs. The goal is to deploy temporary resources at the local level until normal care processes resume.
1) Professional home healthcare requires a doctor's prescription and is provided by Medicare-certified agencies through periodic visits from nurses and therapists. It is covered by Medicare or health insurance and the services are regulated.
2) Non-medical home care provides assistance from unskilled caregivers for tasks like bathing and housework through longer visits or live-in care determined by the customer. It is paid out-of-pocket and the customer has more control over the services.
3) The key differences are that professional home healthcare requires medical oversight while non-medical home care is more consumer-directed and provides sustained support without medical licensing.
The document outlines the rights and responsibilities of patients receiving care at Agnesian HealthCare, including the right to privacy, informed consent, and participation in treatment decisions, as well as the responsibility to provide accurate medical information and fulfill financial obligations. It also provides information on patient safety, communicating with healthcare providers, and how to voice any concerns about the quality of care received.
This document provides an overview of the Agnesian Cancer Center staff. It lists the physicians, nurses, therapists, and other associates who provide cancer care services at the center, including medical oncology, radiation oncology, chemotherapy, pharmacy, and navigation support. Contact information is provided for the center's multiple locations. The goal of the cancer care team is to provide high quality, compassionate care to all patients.
This document outlines the rights and responsibilities of patients receiving care at Agnesian HealthCare. It details individuals' rights to receive care based on their needs, to be informed of their treatment plan, and to have their privacy and confidentiality protected. It also lists individuals' responsibilities, which include providing accurate medical information and fulfilling financial obligations. The document emphasizes that patient safety is a top priority, and encourages patients to be active members of their care team by asking questions and speaking up about any concerns.
Nancy Fontaine and Tim Keogh on the patient experience revolution at Whipps C...The King's Fund
油
Nancy Fontaine, Deputy Director of Nursing, Patient Safety and Quality Whipps Cross University Hospital NHS Trust and Tim Keogh, Partner, April Strategy on the work that Whipps Cross has done to revolutionise patient experience.
Seniors Quality Leap Initiative: Using Data to Drive Improvements in Resident...BCCPA
油
1) The document discusses using data to drive improvements in resident quality of life at Providence Health Care's residential care homes. It summarizes Providence's current residential care program and facilities.
2) It describes the Seniors Quality Leap Initiative (SQLI), a consortium of long-term care organizations that works to improve clinical quality and safety for seniors through benchmarking, testing improvement ideas, and disseminating best practices. Providence is a member of SQLI.
3) Providence has been working to improve residents' quality of life, as measured by an internationally-used survey, by identifying opportunities through SQLI like enhancing social engagement and testing various changes in its homes.
- Gillian Leary has over 10 years of experience in the Funded Nursing Care (FNC) and Continuing Health Care (CHC) assessment process.
- She is currently a Continuing Health Care Nurse Assessor for Southport and Ormskirk NHS Trust, where she leads multi-disciplinary meetings to assess clients' eligibility for FNC and CHC funding.
- Prior to this, she worked as a CHC Nurse Assessor for Lancashire Commissioning Support Unit, where she reviewed assessments, arranged multi-disciplinary meetings, and made recommendations about clients' eligibility for CHC funding.
Kathleen Stewart and Tony Tan led an integrated crisis home treatment team (IHTT) in Scotland that provided rapid response and assessment for those experiencing acute mental health difficulties as an alternative to hospital admission. The team was multi-disciplinary and provided 24/7 mobile care. Since establishing the IHTT, admissions and readmissions to the hospital were both reduced by 32% and length of stay was shortened by 6 days, helping facilitate a 30% planned reduction in acute beds. Service users and carers reported high satisfaction with the home treatment option.
This document outlines the key components of an effective supported living service for adults with learning disabilities. It discusses the importance of person-centered care that respects individuals' choices and rights. It then describes the fundamental standards - being safe, effective, caring, responsive, and well-led - that such a service should uphold. It provides examples of how the service can deliver high quality support that promotes independence, community inclusion, and empowerment while preventing abuse and neglect. Finally, it emphasizes the importance of supporting staff through training, supervision, and a respectful work environment.
This document outlines Bell Aliant's approach to disability management. It discusses shifting from a medical model to a holistic approach that focuses on the total costs of disability, including indirect costs. Key points include:
- Traditional disability management focused on direct medical costs but indirect costs are much higher.
- Disability is influenced more by non-medical factors like workplace policies and individual motivation than underlying medical conditions.
- The goal shifted to "Accept and Assist" employees rather than focus on medical diagnoses and time off work.
- This involves talking to employees, understanding barriers beyond medical issues, and supporting a long-term view of retaining engaged employees.
This document provides guidelines for crisis management before, during, and after a crisis. It defines what constitutes a crisis and lists common types of organizational crises. It outlines the characteristics of a crisis and key aspects of an effective crisis management plan, including features like effective communication and coordination between departments. The document provides a checklist of ten things to remember during a crisis, such as staying calm and controlling the message. It also gives guidance on procedures for communicating with stakeholders at the onset of a crisis and includes a crisis communication checklist of preparatory steps organizations can take.
This document outlines the crisis management and communications plan for Jewish Vocational Services of MetroWest NJ. The plan aims to maintain equilibrium and positive relationships with clients during a crisis. It provides guidance on managing events appropriately, preparing acknowledgements, and communicating with key publics such as emergency responders, employees, and local media. The plan designates spokespeople and pre-gathers important information. It provides key messages focusing on client and employee safety. The plan also offers guidance on disseminating information, answering questions carefully, conducting vulnerability assessments, and multiplying likelihood and impact ratings to determine crisis vulnerability scores. The overarching goal is to effectively respond to crises and prevent future issues through honest and thorough communication.
Mastering the HCAHPS by providing patients more than customer service, engage them in a customer experience. The audience was doctors and nurses, but the lessons apply to all hospital staff.
The document provides information about USBD Hospitalists & Consultants' mobile care transition team and community house call program. The program aims to safely transition patients from the hospital or nursing facility to home, reduce hospital readmissions, and improve the home care experience. The mobile care team includes physicians, nurses, therapists and other medical professionals who provide in-home medical visits and services.
eLSU Newsletter - Family and Friends Involvement(1)Dr Sarah Markham
油
This document provides an overview of initiatives to involve family and friends in the care provided at low secure forensic mental health services in the UK. It includes articles on various programs and strategies used across different services to engage with families and caregivers. These range from outlining carers' rights and how their input is incorporated into patient care, to specific case studies highlighting how certain services have tailored their approaches to successfully involve families in supporting patient recovery and treatment. The newsletter aims to explore best practices for family involvement and share experiences across the UK's low secure forensic network.
Person Centered Care through Integrating a Palliative Approach: Lessons from ...BCCPA
油
Aging adults are entering residential care facilities with more advanced disease than in the past and their length of stay is shorter. Most health care providers in these facilities do not receive targeted education and training in palliative care, nor are they confident to have crucial conversations about goals of care and end of life challenges with residents and their families. Due to limited capacity to manage predictable symptoms related to end of life and insufficient planning, many residents are transferred to hospital in crisis and die in the Emergency Department or acute care wards.
This presentation will showcase some of the initiatives by identifying common themes, unique features of each and strategies for success. Opportunity will be given for delegates to ask questions and brainstorm how lessons learned from these initiatives could inform the care provided at their own facility.
Presented by:
- Jane Webley, RN LLB Regional lead, End of Life, Vancouver Coastal Health (EPAIRS and the Daisy project)
- Dr Christine Jones, Island Health (SSC project: Improving end of life outcomes in residential care facilities: A palliative approach to care)
- Kathleen Yue, RN, BSN, MN, CHPCN (c) Education Coordinator, BC Center for Palliative Care
Inpatient Rounding: 30 Minutes a Week to Amazing Patient ExperienceMedAmerica Marketer
油
This document discusses the importance of inpatient rounding to improve patient experience. It describes a pilot program where ED physicians and nurses rounded on admitted patients weekly to understand their care experience, identify opportunities for improvement, and provide real-time service recovery. This led to improved patient satisfaction scores. The rounding helped foster a culture of compassion by providing feedback to staff and recognizing both positive and negative experiences.
The document provides an overview of topics for an annual review course, including person-centered thinking, major unusual incidents, incident reporting, and crisis/disaster plans. It discusses the values and process of person-centered thinking, defining what is important to and for individuals. It also outlines what must be reported as major unusual incidents and definitions related to incidents of abuse, neglect, exploitation and other issues.
Leadership at the Bedside Making the Change that Needs to HappenBCCPA
油
The document discusses leadership at the bedside and the need for change in nursing care delivery models. It notes that current models emphasize teamwork and collaboration more than previous models. The presentation defines key terms related to nursing care delivery and leadership. It discusses progressive patient care models and the roles of licensed practical nurses and health care assistants in leading teams. It argues that LPNs and HCAs are well-educated and able to provide critical thinking and leadership at the bedside.
This document outlines a presentation on state initiatives impacting physicians and patients related to controlled substances. It includes disclosures from presenters and planners, as well as learning objectives. The first presentation discusses Maryland's emergency preparedness plan for responding when a physician's license to prescribe controlled substances is suspended. The plan was developed after an incident where over 2,000 patients lost access to prescriptions. It involves coordinating state agencies, conducting surveys, developing response teams, and temporarily providing resources to mitigate public health impacts. Focus groups provided guidance on barriers, triaging patients, documenting for referrals, and estimating costs. The goal is to deploy temporary resources at the local level until normal care processes resume.
1) Professional home healthcare requires a doctor's prescription and is provided by Medicare-certified agencies through periodic visits from nurses and therapists. It is covered by Medicare or health insurance and the services are regulated.
2) Non-medical home care provides assistance from unskilled caregivers for tasks like bathing and housework through longer visits or live-in care determined by the customer. It is paid out-of-pocket and the customer has more control over the services.
3) The key differences are that professional home healthcare requires medical oversight while non-medical home care is more consumer-directed and provides sustained support without medical licensing.
The document outlines the rights and responsibilities of patients receiving care at Agnesian HealthCare, including the right to privacy, informed consent, and participation in treatment decisions, as well as the responsibility to provide accurate medical information and fulfill financial obligations. It also provides information on patient safety, communicating with healthcare providers, and how to voice any concerns about the quality of care received.
This document provides an overview of the Agnesian Cancer Center staff. It lists the physicians, nurses, therapists, and other associates who provide cancer care services at the center, including medical oncology, radiation oncology, chemotherapy, pharmacy, and navigation support. Contact information is provided for the center's multiple locations. The goal of the cancer care team is to provide high quality, compassionate care to all patients.
This document outlines the rights and responsibilities of patients receiving care at Agnesian HealthCare. It details individuals' rights to receive care based on their needs, to be informed of their treatment plan, and to have their privacy and confidentiality protected. It also lists individuals' responsibilities, which include providing accurate medical information and fulfilling financial obligations. The document emphasizes that patient safety is a top priority, and encourages patients to be active members of their care team by asking questions and speaking up about any concerns.
Nancy Fontaine and Tim Keogh on the patient experience revolution at Whipps C...The King's Fund
油
Nancy Fontaine, Deputy Director of Nursing, Patient Safety and Quality Whipps Cross University Hospital NHS Trust and Tim Keogh, Partner, April Strategy on the work that Whipps Cross has done to revolutionise patient experience.
Seniors Quality Leap Initiative: Using Data to Drive Improvements in Resident...BCCPA
油
1) The document discusses using data to drive improvements in resident quality of life at Providence Health Care's residential care homes. It summarizes Providence's current residential care program and facilities.
2) It describes the Seniors Quality Leap Initiative (SQLI), a consortium of long-term care organizations that works to improve clinical quality and safety for seniors through benchmarking, testing improvement ideas, and disseminating best practices. Providence is a member of SQLI.
3) Providence has been working to improve residents' quality of life, as measured by an internationally-used survey, by identifying opportunities through SQLI like enhancing social engagement and testing various changes in its homes.
- Gillian Leary has over 10 years of experience in the Funded Nursing Care (FNC) and Continuing Health Care (CHC) assessment process.
- She is currently a Continuing Health Care Nurse Assessor for Southport and Ormskirk NHS Trust, where she leads multi-disciplinary meetings to assess clients' eligibility for FNC and CHC funding.
- Prior to this, she worked as a CHC Nurse Assessor for Lancashire Commissioning Support Unit, where she reviewed assessments, arranged multi-disciplinary meetings, and made recommendations about clients' eligibility for CHC funding.
Kathleen Stewart and Tony Tan led an integrated crisis home treatment team (IHTT) in Scotland that provided rapid response and assessment for those experiencing acute mental health difficulties as an alternative to hospital admission. The team was multi-disciplinary and provided 24/7 mobile care. Since establishing the IHTT, admissions and readmissions to the hospital were both reduced by 32% and length of stay was shortened by 6 days, helping facilitate a 30% planned reduction in acute beds. Service users and carers reported high satisfaction with the home treatment option.
This document outlines the key components of an effective supported living service for adults with learning disabilities. It discusses the importance of person-centered care that respects individuals' choices and rights. It then describes the fundamental standards - being safe, effective, caring, responsive, and well-led - that such a service should uphold. It provides examples of how the service can deliver high quality support that promotes independence, community inclusion, and empowerment while preventing abuse and neglect. Finally, it emphasizes the importance of supporting staff through training, supervision, and a respectful work environment.
This document outlines Bell Aliant's approach to disability management. It discusses shifting from a medical model to a holistic approach that focuses on the total costs of disability, including indirect costs. Key points include:
- Traditional disability management focused on direct medical costs but indirect costs are much higher.
- Disability is influenced more by non-medical factors like workplace policies and individual motivation than underlying medical conditions.
- The goal shifted to "Accept and Assist" employees rather than focus on medical diagnoses and time off work.
- This involves talking to employees, understanding barriers beyond medical issues, and supporting a long-term view of retaining engaged employees.
This document provides guidelines for crisis management before, during, and after a crisis. It defines what constitutes a crisis and lists common types of organizational crises. It outlines the characteristics of a crisis and key aspects of an effective crisis management plan, including features like effective communication and coordination between departments. The document provides a checklist of ten things to remember during a crisis, such as staying calm and controlling the message. It also gives guidance on procedures for communicating with stakeholders at the onset of a crisis and includes a crisis communication checklist of preparatory steps organizations can take.
This document outlines the crisis management and communications plan for Jewish Vocational Services of MetroWest NJ. The plan aims to maintain equilibrium and positive relationships with clients during a crisis. It provides guidance on managing events appropriately, preparing acknowledgements, and communicating with key publics such as emergency responders, employees, and local media. The plan designates spokespeople and pre-gathers important information. It provides key messages focusing on client and employee safety. The plan also offers guidance on disseminating information, answering questions carefully, conducting vulnerability assessments, and multiplying likelihood and impact ratings to determine crisis vulnerability scores. The overarching goal is to effectively respond to crises and prevent future issues through honest and thorough communication.
This document contains Asya Simpson's resume and cover letter. She is seeking a position in health communications and marketing where she can help society adapt to changes in healthcare technology. She has a diverse educational background including degrees in business administration, health systems management, and radio broadcasting. Her experience includes administrative roles at a medical center and healthcare companies. Her long term career goals are to act as a marketing liaison connecting various stakeholders in healthcare and driving literacy in e-communications.
The document provides details about the author's professional work experience and education. It lists degrees earned including a Bachelor of Arts in English from the University of Florida in 2010 and a certificate in victim witness services from the Florida Crime Prevention Training Institute the same year. It also describes professional work experience providing advocacy support and referral services for victims and witnesses of crimes in Florida. The document indicates the author has knowledge of US healthcare laws and the legal rights of clients.
This document provides information about New Perspectives, Inc. and SSC Consulting, LLC, which offer mental health counseling and consulting services. Their services include individual and group counseling, trauma and crisis response services, disaster response, corporate coaching, and training/consulting. They specialize in treating conditions like PTSD and providing support following events like accidents, deaths, violence or natural disasters. Their goal is to help individuals, families, schools and businesses cope with distress and improve mental health and productivity.
Heads Up is a stress and trauma organization that provides education, prevention, and treatment services for individuals affected by psychological trauma through its National Resilience Programme. The program has two units - an emergency psychological first aid unit that responds to scenes of trauma to provide on-site treatment, and a national chain of stress and trauma treatment centers. Heads Up aims to build resilience in professionals and the general public through training, as well as providing psychological first aid and treatment for trauma victims.
Disasters are inevitable, the outcomes aren't.
Our subconscious does it's best to distract us from taking objective view on future risks. Anyone who gets passed the psychological block can see that it is easy to avoid loss when actions that can reduce disruption are taken in advance. Unfortunately, they often don't recognize that others just can't see that. Motivating a company to prepare won't work by just trying to point out the existence of future risks, you need to build a strong business case.
A Nonprofit's Reputation: Controlling Factors That Can Destroy ItThomas Ciesielka
油
Presentation covers;
How to prepare you and your team to effectively manage a communication crisis
Help staff, board, and volunteers respond in a united and proficient way to a crisis
Tactics to best communicate critical and privileged information to the media, stakeholders, and the public
The importance of creating a crisis communication plan and how to start one if none exists
Starting points for evaluating your current crisis communication plan
The document provides a summary of Jonathan Dunnemann's professional and volunteer experience, education, and contact information. As the founder and director of 'N Good Company, a non-profit organization that provides assistance to urban youth, Jonathan utilizes hip hop culture to teach life skills and facilitate identity formation. He has over 15 years of experience in healthcare administration and emergency preparedness. Jonathan also volunteers his time working with at-risk youth and in hospital settings. He holds a BA in Sociology and has taken graduate courses in substance abuse, managerial communications, and organizational leadership.
This document discusses establishing a peer and crisis support program to provide stabilization and support to individuals experiencing psychological and emotional distress following a critical incident. It recommends that with proper training, anyone can deliver immediate crisis support services. Key benefits include meeting immediate needs, preventing crises, and providing a cost-effective, informal support system. The document addresses liability concerns and argues that comprehensive policies, protocols, and training are needed. It promotes investing in a seven-step program to ensure an effective peer support process.
This report summarizes the activities of the American Medical Response Critical Incident Stress Management Program between March 17, 2015 and December 31, 2015. It provides an overview of the program's mission, goals, and objectives. It acknowledges those who supported the program and provides a general update on activities over the past year, including pre-incident education sessions, increased utilization of mental health services, challenges identifying critical incidents, and semiannual team meetings. The report documents the program's operations over the past year to improve alignment with fiscal year reporting.
Beth Kania is seeking a social work position and has over 15 years of experience working in healthcare and social services. She has a Bachelor's degree in psychology from Ferris State University and a Master's in Social Work from Western Michigan University. Kania has worked in various roles including as a social work intern, rehabilitation technician, and health unit coordinator. She has extensive experience providing direct client services and crisis intervention. Kania is certified in several areas including basic life support and managing aggression.
Workplace violence is a growing concern that affects over 2 million American workers each year. It can range from threats to physical assaults. While all workers are at some risk, those in certain professions like healthcare, retail, and delivery are more vulnerable. To help protect employees, employers should establish a zero-tolerance policy, provide safety training, secure the workplace, and encourage employees to report any safety issues or violent incidents. Both employers and employees can take steps to reduce the risk of workplace violence.
Mental Health _ Monthly Developments MagazineAlicia Tamstorf
油
The passage discusses changes in approaches to humanitarian aid worker mental health. It notes a shift from crisis response models to preventative care and an increased focus on staff well-being. Factors like unpredictable work environments, threats of violence, organizational changes and loss of team structures impact mental health. Recent research highlights the importance of resilience-building and understanding brain health. Going forward, opportunities include increased training, practical resilience strategies, and improved global mental health standards and access to care.
Grazia DiDonato has over 15 years of experience in public relations, marketing, and customer service. She currently works as an Unit Clerk/Administrative Executor at Cape Regional Medical Center, where she registers patients, enters billing codes, and manages daily charge sheets. Previously she worked as a Medical Secretary and Technical Aide at Cape Regional, assisting with patient scheduling, insurance verification, and preparing medical records. She holds a Bachelor's degree in Communications Studies from Montclair University.
Grazia DiDonato has over 15 years of experience in public relations, marketing, and customer service. She currently works as an Unit Clerk/Administrative Executor at Cape Regional Medical Center, where she registers patients, enters billing codes, and manages daily charge sheets. Previously she worked as a Medical Secretary and Technical Aide at Cape Regional, assisting with patient scheduling, insurance verification, and preparing medical records. She holds a Bachelor's degree in Communications Studies from Montclair University.
Janine K. Starks is seeking a position in health and human services utilizing her experience. She has over 15 years of experience in research coordination, patient services, community services, and education. Her skills include Microsoft Office, medical certifications, customer service, and multi-tasking. Her career includes positions as a research coordinator, patient service coordinator, community service specialist, educational assistant, sales associate, and security supervisor.
2. Statement from Jewish Vocational Services of MetroWest to Employees:
There are many potential risk factors surrounding organizations that deliver a wide array of
personalized services to clients with emotional, behavioral, physical, and psychiatric disabilities.
Since JVSs highest priority is to help individuals who need help the most, it is essential that
we ensure that we respond quickly and manage care when unexpected and precipitating events
occur. In the event of a situational crisis or event that threatens the physical, mental, social or
psychological wellbeing, we need to be prepared and respond quickly to prevent crisis and to
utilize our resources, support systems and coping mechanisms to maintain equilibrium within the
organization. If the potential crisis is still in its escalation stage, it is vital that we manage these
events appropriately, since clients react and respond differently due to various disabilities. As
managers, we need to stay calm and handle circumstances with utmost professionalism and
organization, and keep in mind that our clients may experience intense stress, high anxiety,
frustration, acute agitation, lashing out and other behavioral conditions. If apparent enough,
this can lead to serious harm to oneself or others.
We are faced with potential crisis every day and have collectively worked with our emergency
departments, urgent care facilities, and emergency call and health centers to deliver quick, timely
and quality service to our clients. If crisiss or disasters occur and gain the attention of news
outlets, the media and the public, we must communicate effectively and efficiently to protect our
organizations representation and reputation. If we are unable to execute effective plans or
response techniques, we can lose the trust of our clients, potential clients and even the
organization itself so we must engage and respond with smooth, quick, professional and quality
service to our clients. We must assume that if all fails and the crisis is not resolved, our clients
may succumb to disorientation, disorganization, confusion, heightened anxiety, depression, or at
worst, violence against themselves or others. We should assess all needs to our patients
regardless of behavioral, psychological, or emotional disability and communicate all guidelines,
protocols, and treatment following ethical standards.
Potential crisis at Jewish Vocational Services include illness (epidemic), bomb threat, hazardous
threats such as electronics surrounding liquids, which can be life threatening if client (s) are
electrocuted, slippery or wet floors which can cause falls and other body traumas, shooter on site,
infrastructure failures, power outages, leading to severe heat or cold, inadequate supervision, (if
clients are not examined properly, this can lead to many problems such as physical fights, severe
harm or death), intensive behavioral or physical reactions caused by environmental or social
settings, untreated diagnosis that contribute to unprecedented physical or mental responses that
can affect other clients, suicidal or awkward gestures or body language, improper use of
containment (if handled the wrong way, this can result in unintended harm or injury to clients),
drug toxicity, ignored emotional or psychological problems that can lead to severe outcomes
such as inpatient hospitalization, failure to accurately inventory client information or resources
during examination or counseling, health care misdiagnoses, displacement of client (clients who
are lower functioning placed in higher functioning groups can threaten client and groups safety,
failure to log or inventory client medication, logging false information to the wrong client or
logging incorrect information to the wrong client (contributing to even more mental health
3. problems and prolonged treatment and therapy), health care misdiagnosis which could lead to
inpatient hospitalization, causing other clients to become overwhelmed by event and finally, all
other natural, technological, or human caused mishaps that should be followed by urgent
responses.
With any potential crisis, it is important to acknowledge if similar events have happened
previously or if there have been warning signs that we have failed to acknowledge so we can
implement better strategies when developing the crisis plan. In speaking to the public or media,
we must be as honest as possible. If we have been incoherent and incompetent in our responses,
we can lose trust, integrity and confidence from our clients. Our PR or Crisis Manager will
announce problematic events that we have previously experienced at JVS. Though many of you
most likely are not aware of the warning signs that trigger crisis events because we had no prior
severe crisis take place thus far, we need to not overlook or disregard the minor problems that
can result in a crisis and continue to take necessary precaution.
Sample Acknowledgment
By signing this statement, I verify that I have read this plan and prepared to put it into effect.
President and CEO
(Signature and date)
Vice President and CFO
(Signature and date)
Vice President
(Signature and date)
Office Manager
(Signature and date)
Sample RehearsalDates Schedule
Rehearsal Dates August 25, 2016
October 11, 2016
4. Purpose:
In the event of many high-risk factors that can take place in a human service organization where
clients who have physical and psychiatric disabilities seek the utmost care and help in obtaining
independence and rehabilitation, job placement, education training and other specialized
services, we must take precaution and measured approaches to significantly adhere to safety
guidelines by all means, which would ultimately allow clients to feel safe and help resolve and
redeem crisis as quickly and knowledgably as possible. Being honest with the public and media
and updating them on crisis plan measures can reduce uncertainties and will ultimately help
cease any future problems or crisis events.
Objectives:
We will make every effort to:
1. Initiate JVS Crisis Communication Plan within 2 hours.
2. Make safety the highest priority.
3. Express care, concern and sympathy towards victims and their families and given
information about corrective actions and counseling if needed.
4. Inform all internal and external stakeholders, health care facilities and services that can
help with the crisis.
5. Inform all owners and managers within 2 hours of any crisis or outbreak.
6. Inform publics regularly, providing thorough, honest and updated information.
7. Maintain professionalism while communicating with the media and the public about all
situational crisiss.
8. Find the source of the problem as soon as possible.
9. Distribute honest information about crisis and communication plans to all media and
publics.
10. Develop ways to alleviate future problems.
11. Implement necessary changes and resume business as usual as soon as possible.
Key Publics:
Emergency Responders: Phone:
Emergency Management Agency 911
Law Enforcement Agency, NJ State Police 911
Fire Services Agency-468 Main Street, Orange Nj 07018 973-266-5509
Paramedics Agency- 472 Halsted, Orange, NJ 07018 973-673-6911
Mental Health Crisis Teams-60 Evergreen Pl, #402 973-676-1325
Public Health Department-204 Grove Avenue,
Cedar Grove, NJ 07009 973-571-2800
5. Key Staff, Employees:
111 Prospect Street, Orange NJ 07017 Phone:
Andy Bonet, Chief Executive Officer/Executive Director 973-986-7523
Michael Andreas , Chief Operating Officer/Chief Financial Officer 973-874-0834
Hetal Patel, Manager of Rehabilitation Services 973-974-0756
Lisa Simmons, Manager of Rehabilitation Services 973-794-8031
Dr. Meryl Kanner, Supervisor, Career Counseling and Placement 973-751-0094
Lynn Sternstein, Manager Education and Training 973-684-0912
Inna Kramers, Coordinator of Older migr辿 Services 973-761-9461
Kari Mager, Director of Business Development 973-694-9872
Deborah Mitchell, Custom Production Services 973-876-7424
Frances Ramirez, Director of At Home Services 973-703-7818
Corporate Clients:
Jane Kurek, Executive Director, The Provident Bank Foundation- In support of job
readiness and computer training programs, The Provident Bank Foundation financially
contributes to JVS to improve employee training and productivity so clients are able to
enhance and upgrade their skills upon entry in the workforce.
Address: 250 Madison Avenue, Morristown, NJ 07960
Email: Foundation@ProvidentBank.com
Governor Christie, NJ Department of Labor and Workforce Development- Covers costs
for employment training, contributes to the success of New Jerseys workforce by
helping people utilize their skills while gaining high quality service through this work
service organization.
Address: Office of the Governor, PO Box 001, Trenton, NJ 08625
Email: http://www.state.nj.us/cgi-bin/governor/govmail/govmail_1c_new.pl
William Wedemeyer, Corporate Training Programs-(Career Discovery Programs)-
Offered in the state of New Jersey and offers outreach programs to improve JVS by
providing customized training programs and businesses with the expertise to develop and
assist clients in workplace training.
6. Address: 111 Prospect Street, Orange NJ 07017
Email: bill.wedemeyer@sfgov.org
Institutional Collaborators, Teaming Partners: Phone:
Jewish Family Service of MetroWest-256 Columbia Turnpike
Suites 104-105, Florham Park, NJ 07932 973-765-7050
Rachel Coalition, Division of Family Service of MetroWest NJ
256 Columbia Turnpike, Suite 105, Florham Park, NJ 07932 973-740-1233
Jewish Service For The Developmentally Disabled of MetroWest
NJ-270 Pleasant Valley Way, West Orange, NJ 07052 973-325-1494
Contact preferred via email: Ipress@jsddmetrowest.org
Kessler Foundation-300 Executive Drive, Suite 70
West Orange, NJ 07052 973-324-8362
Montclair State University Hillel-1 Normal Avenue, Montclair NJ 07043 973-929-3000
Rutgers Hillel-93 College Avenue, New Brunswick NJ 08901 732-545-2407
Jewish Community Foundation of Greater MetroWest NJ-
901 Route 10, P.O Box 929, Whippany NJ 07981 973-929-3000
Jewish Educational Center-330 Elmora Avenue, Elizabeth NJ 07208 973-355-4850
Local Television News Personnel:
Station/Channel: Address: News Director: Phone:
NJ News 12 450 Raritan Pkway, David Kirschner 732-346-3270
Edison, NJ 08837
WNET, News 13 825 Eighth Avenue, Michael Stolm 212-560-2000
NY, NY 10019
WFUT-DT, News 68 390 W Market St, Eric Booker 973-643-6800
Newark, NJ 07107
Local Radio Personnel:
Station/Channel: Address: News Director: Phone:
Sirius XM Radio 165 Halsey St, Sam Hook 973-824-3659
Newark, NJ 07102
CBS Radio 118 Stockton St, Kelly Walker 973-817-5627
Newark, NJ 07105
WSOU 400 South Orange James Pine 973-761-9592
Avenue, NJ 07079
7. Crisis Inventory:
Crisis Directory:
Media Spokesperson:
The spokesperson must communicate clearly to all publics. He or she should be able to
articulate words concisely and in a pleasant manner.
The spokesperson must establish strong eye contact, present information competently,
professionally and concisely.
0
0.5
1
1.5
2
2.5
3
3.5
4
4.5
5
Injury Fire Violence Illness
JVS Crisis Inventory
Probability Potential Damage
Sally L.
Phone:
Micah J.
Phone:
Larry S.
Phone:
Ursel T.
Phone:
Paula W.
Phone:
Tara H.
Phone:
James H.
Phone:
Natalie
W.
Phone:
Maegan
H. Phone:
Kelly A.
Phone:
Michael
T. Phone:
Tamara
Y. Phone:
Loraine
S. Phone:
Marie L.
Phone:
Egypt W.
Phone:
Ashley J.
Phone:
Kylie O.
Phone:
Lorena K.
Phone:
Earl L.
Phone:
Amanda
U. Phone:
Tia P.
Phone:
Laura T.
Phone:
Sara S.
Phone:
Patrick U.
Phone:
Paul C.
Phone:
Dana W.
Phone:
Bri U.
Phone:
Thomas
H.
Phone:
Kayla P.
Phone:
Kristina
K. Phone:
Pete U.
Phone:
Joy B.
Phone:
Asia W.
Phone:
Keanu H.
Phone:
Diane J.
Phone:
Miguel Y.
Phone:
Tuck J.
Phone:
Cara A.
Phone:
Kelsey T.
Phone:
Dave W.
Phone:
Radha T.
Phone:
Bryan N.
Phone:
Michaela
W. Phone:
Reggie O.
Phone:
Brielle U.
Phone:
Taylor
K.
Phone:
Lauren P.
Phone:
Kaley S.
Phone:
Eric G.
Phone:
KirstenH.
Phone:
TJ W.
Phone:
Jimmy T.
Phone:
Nia W.
Phone:
Samantha
H. Phone:
8. The spokesperson must avoid distracting behaviors such as fidgeting, pacing, and other
inappropriate nonverbal behaviors.
The spokesperson must remain cool, calm, collective and confident.
The spokesperson must appear empathetic during a crisis.
The spokesperson must avoid jargon, technical or professional terms.
The spokesperson must convey key messages to all publics.
The spokesperson must avoid going off the record.
Emergency Personnel:
Primary & Backup: Office Phone: Email:
Kara Taylor 862-260-1264 Karamel925@gmail.com
Samuel Smith 973-901-7323 SamuelS@JVS.com
NewJersey State Police Mental Health Association ofEssex County
250 Minnisink Rd, Totowa, NJ 07512 60 Evergreen Pl # 402, East Orange, NJ 07018
911 Communications: 973-676-1325
Media Relations: 973-785-9412 Fax: 1327
Fax: 9413
Orange Fire Department Public Health Department
419 Central Ave,City of Orange, NJ 07050 204 Grove Avenue, Cedar Grove NJ 07009
911 Management: 973-571-2800
Dept Info: 973-266-4229 Fax: 2801
Fax: 4228
Paramedics Center ofOrange Behavioral Department ofHealth
472 Halsted St, Orange,NJ 07018 224 Sussex Ave, Newark NJ 07103
PR: 973-420-4850 PR: 973-242-6599
Fax: 4920 Fax: 6755
9. Crisis Control Equipment and Supplies:
Pre-Gathered Information:
-Computers -Beverages -CopyingMachine -Gloves
-Chairs -Pens -Maps -Face mask
-Desks -Pencils -Flashlights -Crutches
-Telephones -PsychiatricBeds -Extracable cords -Refrigerator
for meds
-Televisions -Fire Distinguisher -Extralightbulbs
-Cell Phones -CamerasandFilm -Typewriter
-BulletinBoards -Police Radio -Extrafans forheat
-PoweredRadioandTV -Mop,CleaningProducts -Smartphone chargers
-ClientDirectories -CopyingMachine -Computerprinters
-MediaDirectories -A Chalkboard -Wheelchair
-Police Radio -Brail TextTranslatorfor the blind
-EmergencyKits -SignLanguage Interpreterforthe deaf orhard of hearing
-FirstAidKits -ContainmentResourcesduringapsychiatriccrisis
-PressKits -Spare keysincase someone needstolockorunlockdoors during
crisis
-CrisisPlans
-Food
-Mental Health Guidelines
-Containment Strategies
-Safety Precautions
-Maps and location of company and affiliated sites
-Fact Sheets
-All Emergency Contacts
-Phone books
-Internet and social media accounts
-Emergency Response Team numbers
-Photos
-Client logged Inventories and personnels
-Partnership contacts
-Location of offices
-Annual Account Reports
-Follow-Up Reports
10. Key Messages:
At Jewish Vocational Service of MetroWest New Jersey, our highest concern is the
safety of our clients and employees.
We are extremely remorseful and apologetic for the unfortunate events that took place
and take full responsibility for what happened.
We are completely and utterly committed to effectively assess, evaluate and
communicate all pertinent facts in regard to this crisis and pledge to execute our Crisis
Communication Plans to prevent similar issues from happening again.
Approaches to Dissemination:
In order to properly implement a crisis communication plan and achieve the objectives
aforementioned, key messages will be disseminated through different communicative events to
reach different target audiences. The messages will be distributed to internal and external
stakeholders and affiliated partners and can take the following forms:
o A general report
o Local, national or regional meeting, workshops, events or presentations
Dissemination through the media:
o If only limited target audiences are reached, social media, news outlets,
internet and other media platforms can reach a larger population and will
gain widespread attention due to this specific method of profiling-reaching
all publics.
o Social media platforms can be used to address all crisis concerns, prior to
and following dissemination of key message points.
o Clients and employees can discuss their success stories and how the
organization was still able to redeem itself after a crisis and continue to
provide utmost care and quality service to their clients. These can also be
published on social media accounts.
Dissemination through meetings and workshops:
o To ensure that key messages reach other stakeholders, meetings and local
workshops can be arranged with other local, national or regional
collaborators. The Crisis Communication Manager will be responsible for
creating all key messages that will reach target audiences and intended
stakeholders, being proactive in meetings and communicating effectively
to all attendees.
11. Potential Trick Questions:
Question:
If you used the same containment strategies during a psychiatric or situational crisis to a
different client with a mental, behavioral or physically disability, would the same problem
happen again?
Answer:
-That is not an appropriate topic for you to address at this time.
-You are referring to a hypothetical situation and we are working extremely hard to prevent a
crisis like this to happen again.
Question:
Would you rather sacrifice one person facing harm due to improper use of containment or more
people if employees continue to restrain clients improperly?
Answer:
Who would rather one person facing harm? We did not want any of these circumstances to take
place but we are committed to exploring new containment strategies that proves will not severely
harm anyone.
Vulnerability Of Crisis at JVS:
Likelihood of physical fights between disabled clients on JVS ground -6
Impact of physical fights between disabled clients on JVS ground-9
Crisis Score: 54%
Likelihood of product harm due to workplace violence-4
Impact of product harm due to workplace violence-7
Crisis Score: 28%
Likelihood of failed supervision causing disabled clients to miss medication, meals, counseling
appointments, and therapy-4
Impact of failed supervision causing disabled clients to miss medication, meals, counseling
appointments and therapy-10
Crises Score: 40%
12. References:
The Crisis Communication Plan Layout-Professor Schwab
http://www.nj.gov/humanservices/dmhas/home/hotlines/MH_Dir_COMPLETE.pdf
https://www.jfedgmw.org/community-directory/jewish-service-for-the-developmentally-
disabled-of-metrowest
https://www.jfedgmw.org/
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4237187/
http://www.nursingceu.com/courses/468/index_nceu.html