Doctor of Behavioral Health
Spring Student On-campus Intensive Seminar Downtown Phoenix campus
Thursday, Jan. 28 – Saturday, Jan. 30, 2010
SCHOOL of
LETTERS & SCIENCES A R I Z O N A
S TAT E
U N I V E R S I T Y
www.dbh.asu.edu
Guest Faculty in alphabetical order
David B. Baker, Ph.D.
Dr. David Baker is interim senior vice president and provost, and chief operating officer of the University of Akron. He is also the Margaret Clark Morgan Director of the Archives of the History of American Psychology and professor of psychology. Prior to joining the University of Akron in 1999, Baker taught in the Department of Psychology at the University of North Texas where he was active in child clinical research, teaching, and practice. He teaches, supervises, advises, and mentors students at the undergraduate and graduate levels. As a researcher and scholar he has authored, co-authored, or edited more than 60 publications, including three books. Dr. Baker is a fellow of the American Psychological Association and the Association for Psychological Science. Dr. Baker earned a B.A. in Psychology at Millersville University in 1978; M.Ed. in School Psychology at Texas State University in 1980; and Ph.D. in Counseling Psychology at Texas A&M University in 1988.
Penny Goodman, LICSW
Ms. Goodman has worked in the behavioral health field since 1989, working with diverse populations in medical settings, schools, homes and in private practice. Over the last ten years Ms. Goodman has participated in the development and operation of programs providing integrated behavioral health care within medial settings. Ms. Goodman is currently the behavioral health coordinator at Mountain Park Health Center, where she supervises the behavioral health team. Her team members are disbursed amongst the organizations’ five primary care clinics. She is actively involved with the Health Disparities Collaborative efforts at Mountain Park Health Center.
Scott Miller, Ph.D.
Co-founder of the Center for Clinical Excellence, an international consortium of clinicians, researchers and educators dedicated to promoting excellence in behavior health. Dr. Miller conducts workshops and training in the United States and abroad, helping hundreds of agencies and organizations, both public and private, to achieve superior results. He is one of a handful of “invited faculty” whose work, thinking and research is featured at the prestigious “Evolution of Psychotherapy Conference.” His humorous and engaging presentation style and command of the research literature consistently inspires practitioners, administrators and policy makers to make effective changes in service delivery. Scott is the author of numerous articles and coauthor of Working with the Problem Drinker: A Solution Focused Approach (with Insoo Berg [Norton, 1992]), The “Miracle” Method: A Radically New Approach to Problem Drinking (with Insoo Kim Berg [Norton, 1995]), Finding the Adult Within: A Solution-Focused Self-Help Guide (with Barbara McFarland [Brief Therapy Center Press, 1995]), Handbook of Solution-Focused Brief Therapy: Foundations, Applications, and Research (with Mark Hubble and Barry Duncan [Jossey-Bass, 1996]), Escape from Babel: Toward a Unifying Language for Psychotherapy Practice (with Barry Duncan and Mark Hubble [Norton, 1997]), Psychotherapy with Impossible Cases: Efficient Treatment of Therapy Veterans (with Barry Duncan and Mark Hubble [Norton, 1997]), The Heart and Soul of Change (with Mark Hubble and Barry Duncan [APA Press, 1999] and Bruce Wampold [2nd Edition, 2009]), The Heroic Client: A Revolutionary Way to Improve Effectiveness through Client-Directed, Outcome-Informed Therapy (with Barry Duncan [Jossey-Bass, 2000], and Jacqueline Sparks [Revised, 2004]), and the forthcoming Achieving Clinical Excellence: Lessons from the Fields Most Effective Practitioners.
notes
Guest Faculty continued
Robert Rhode, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor at the University of Arizona Health Sciences Center. He has been learning and teaching motivational interviewing since 1986. Dr. Rhode was the first (1993) “Training the Trainers for Motivational Interviewing and Brief Interventions� offered by the University of New Mexico and facilitated by Dr. William Miller and Dr. Steve Rollnick. He has published in peer-reviewed journals on the training of motivational interviewing: Shafer, M.S., Rhode, R., & Chong, J. (2004). Using distance education to promote the transfer of motivational interviewing skills among behavioral health professionals. Journal of Substance Abuse Treatment, 26, 141-148. In his own clinical work he uses this style to help clients with a variety of health behaviors including losing weight, increasing exercise and decreasing substance use. He has conducted motivational interviewing training for physicians, counselors, nurses, psychologists, social workers, parole officers and students.
Bill Rosenfeld, MC, LPC
Mr. Rosenfeld has worked in the behavioral health and health care industry for the past 20 years. Within those years he has held a wide array of positions, focusing on direct patient care, intervention, advocacy, and management. Mr. Rosenfeld is currently the vice president of Integrated Behavioral Health Services at Mountain Park Health Center. He started with the organization in 2003. During his tenure with the health center he has successfully navigated the transition of a department of one into the large and successful department of 40. His staff not only provides consultation to medical providers and patients, they serve on a multidisciplinary team of professionals involved in the collaborative treatment of asthma, diabetes, cardiovascular disease and the provision of cancer screenings.
notes
Agenda Thursday, Jan. 28, 2010 Mercado, room C350 Breakfast on your own
7:30 – 8am
Registration
8am – 1pm
“What Works” in Therapy: Translating 40 years of Outcome Research into Strategies for Effective Clinical Practice
Scott Miller, Ph.D.
1 – 2:30pm
Lunch presentation: Assessment and Management of Pain in Primary Care
Colleen Clemency, Ph.D. a candidate for DBH clinical faculty position
2:30 – 3:30pm
Putting it all Together: Overview of the DBH Training and Evaluation Program
Ron O’Donnell, Ph.D., and Michael Shafer, Ph.D.
3:30 – 4:30pm
Mountain Park Health Center Group Treatment Protocols: Diabetes and Childhood Obesity
Bill Rosenfeld, MC, LPC and Penny Goodman, LICSW
4:30 – 6pm
Happy hour on your own at Arizona Center restaurants
Dinner and Presentations Mercado, room C145 6 – 8pm
Dinner and keynote presentations The Archives of the History of American Psychology. Where Have We Been? Where Are We Going?
David Baker, Ph.D.
The DBH Clinician and the Future of Health Care
Nick Cummings, Ph.D.
notes
Agenda continued
Friday, Jan. 29, 2010
Nursing and Health Innovation II, room 110 8 – 11:50am
Motivational Interviewing in Health Care
Robert Rhode, Ph.D.
Noon – 1:30pm
Lunch presentation: Learning Your ABC’s: Another Look at Cognitive Behavioral Therapy
Daniel Christiano, Ph.D. a candidate for a DBH clinical faculty position
1:30 – 3:30pm
Motivational Interviewing in Health Care
Robert Rhode, Ph.D.
3:30 – 4pm
Break
4 – 5pm
Roundtable and student and faculty Q&A and discussion
Nick Cummings, Ph.D., Janet Cummings, Psy.D., Ron O’Donnell, Ph.D., Steve Braun, Ph.D., Pedro Choca, Ph.D., Jack Leggett, Ph.D. David Baker, Ph.D., Michael Shafer, Ph.D.
5 – 8pm
Happy hour, student and faculty small group networking at Arizona Center restaurants
8 – 9:30pm
Student and faculty small group networking and exploring Phoenix nightlife
Saturday, Jan. 30, 2010
Nursing and Health Innovation II, room 110 8 – 9:20am
The Transtheoretical Model of Behavior Change and the ProChange Suite of Web-based Resources
Ron O’Donnell, Ph.D.
9:30 – 10:50am
The DBH Practicum Training Program, review of current status and next steps.
Janet Cummings, Psy.D., Pedro Choca, Ph.D., Jack Leggett, Ph.D., Ron O’Donnell, Ph.D.
11 – 11:50am
The Biodyne Group Treatment Model
Janet Cummings, Psy.D., Jack Leggett, Ph.D.
Noon – 1:30pm
Lunch presentation: Implications of Latino Culture and Ethnicity in Intergrated Health Care
Pedro Choca, Ph.D.
1:30 – 3pm
The Biodyne Outlier Outreach Model and Health-Care Industry Outlier and Outreach Programs.
Nick Cummings, Ph.D., Ron O’Donnell, Ph.D., Steve Braun, Ph.D.
3 – 4pm
Wrap up Program evaluation, student and faculty Q&A
notes
Map continued
notes
Mercado
MERC C 502 E. Monroe St., Phoenix
Nursing and Health Innovation II NHI II 550 N. Thirst St., Phoenix
For a detailed map of the Downtown Phoenix campus, go to www.asu.edu/map/interactive
Mercado Monroe St.
Van Buren St.
Arizona Center
Fourth St.
N
to Light Rail Stations
bldg C
Holiday Inn Express 620 N. 6th St. Phoenix
Holiday Inn Express
Fifth St. Polk St. to Light Rail eastbound
First St. Light Rail westbound
Central Ave.
NHI II
Taylor St. Second St.
Fillmore St.
Third St.
Pierce St.
Seventh St.
www.dbh.asu.edu