Idaho ACT Train the Trainer

Northwest MHTTC Core Faculty member Maria Monroe-DeVita, PhD, is leading an in-person ACT train the trainer session in Idaho. Offered in collaboration with the Idaho Division of Behavioral Health.


Idaho Division of Behavioral Health logo


ABOUT THIS EVENT

This six-hour in-person training session focuses on training team members who will lead ACT training and consultation for the Idaho Division of Behavioral Health Center of Excellence in the future.

 

Core topics include:

What is ACT?

ACT team roles & how they align with services

How ACT Works:

  • Recruitment & Screening
  • Engagement
  • Comprehensive Assessment
  • Individual Treatment Teams/Person Centered Treatment Planning
  • ACT Scheduling
  • Daily Team Meeting
  • Transition to Less intensive Services

 

FACILITATOR

Maria Monroe-DeVita, PhD

Maria Monroe-DevitaDr. Monroe-DeVita’s expertise is in implementation and services research related to evidence-based practices for adults with serious mental illness, particularly the Assertive Community Treatment (ACT) model. She has served as the Principal Investigator on several projects with the Washington State Division of Behavioral Health and Recovery, including the development, implementation, and fidelity assessment of 10 new ACT teams, and several Illness Management and Recovery (IMR) and Integrated Dual Disorder Treatment (IDDT) pilots across the state. She is also in the process of developing and testing novel approaches to better serving people with serious mental illness. She received a collaborative R34 grant from the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) to develop and pilot-test the integration of IMR within ACT teams and is working to better define and implement integrated primary care services within ACT. She is also the lead author of the new ACT fidelity tool – the Tool for Measurement of Assertive Community Treatment (TMACT) – which has been disseminated and pilot-tested in several U.S. states and countries. Dr. Monroe-DeVita is a core faculty member of the Northwest MHTTC and SPIRIT Lab at the University of Washington, which provides training, consultation, technical assistance, and fidelity assessment to agencies across the state to support sustainable implementation of EBPs that can substantially enhance the functional recovery of individuals living with serious mental illness.

 

 


SPIRIT Lab logo

 

Starts: Aug 1, 2023 9:00 am
Ends: Aug 1, 2023 4:00 pm
Timezone:
US/Pacific
Registration Deadline
August 1, 2023
Register
Event Type
Face-to-Face Training
Hosted by
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