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1 + DARE - PARTICIPATE – TRANSFORM, TAKE OWNERSHIP OF CHANGE TO INFLUENCE IT 19 th AQRP CONGRESS and 11 th INTERVOICE CONGRESS COMPLETE PROGRAM NOVEMBER 11, 12 AND 13, 2019 HOTEL BONAVENTURE, MONTREAL

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Page 1: 19 AQRP CONGRESS€¦ · X 19th AQRP Congress and 11th Intervoice Congress, Tuesday 12 and Wednesday 13, 2019 Hotel Bonaventure Montreal 900, rue de la Gauchetière Montreal (Quebec)

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DARE - PARTICIPATE – TRANSFORM, TAKE OWNERSHIP OF CHANGE TO INFLUENCE IT

19th AQRP CONGRESS

and 11th INTERVOICE

CONGRESS

COMPLETE PROGRAM

NOVEMBER 11, 12 AND 13, 2019HOTEL BONAVENTURE, MONTREAL

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GENERAL INFORMATION 19TH AQRP CONGRESS11TH INTERVOICE CONGRESS

SCHEDULE

Monday, November 11 (AQRP/Intervoice/First Nations Congress)

5 pm - 6:30 pm Pre-registration

Tuesday, November 12 (AQRP/Intervoice/First Nations Congress)

7 am - 9 am Registration

9 am - 10:30 am Opening conference

10:30 am Coffee break

11 am - 12:30 pm Workshops and training sessions Block A

12:30 pm - 2 pm Banquet-lunch

2 pm - 3:30 pm Workshops and training sessions Block B

3:30 pm - 4 pm Coffee break

4 pm - 5:30 pm Workshops and training sessions Block C

5:30 pm - 7:30 pm Happy hour Networking

Wednesday, November 13 (AQRP/Intervoice/First Nations Congress)

7 am - 8:30 am Registration

8:30 am - 10 am Workshops and training sessions Block D

10 am - 10:30 am Coffee break

10:30 am -12 pm Workshops and training sessions Block E

12 pm - 1:30 pm Banquet-lunch

1:30 pm - 3 pm Workshops and training sessions Block E

3 pm Coffee break closing/Conference by Will Hall

INDEXSchedule and general information ..................................... 2 Welcome ...............................................................................3 Introducing thematic components .................................3 Presentation schedule and days........................................3Opening lecture ....................................................................8Round table: Community organisation ............................9 Thematic day dedicated to hiring people in recovery....11Symposium: The British experience ................................11 Round table: Hiring peer support in Quebec.................12 Happy hour networking ..................................................13 Closing conference ...........................................................14 Arts, culture and recovery area ....................................15 Cine-mental .......................................................................16 Distribution of the workshops and training sessions ....20Reserve your exhibit space (booth) ...............................42Funding for Quebecers living or having lived with a mental health problem ......................................................44Become a member of the AQRP! ....................................46 Registration fees to the Congress ................................47 Accommodation at Hotel Bonaventure ..........................48 List of presenters ...............................................................50 Important reminders/thanks to collaborators ...............55

X Intervoice Day, 11th Intervoice Congress, Monday November 11, 2019 McGill Residences McGill University- Conferences and Accommodations New Residence Hall 3625, Parc Avenue Montreal (Quebec) H2X 3P8 Canada

X 19th AQRP Congress and 11th Intervoice Congress, Tuesday 12 and Wednesday 13, 2019 Hotel Bonaventure Montreal 900, rue de la Gauchetière Montreal (Quebec) H5A 1E4 Canada Reservations (rooms) CODE: CAQRPI 1-800-267-2575 www.hotelbonaventure.com more details on page 48

Monday, November 11 (Intervoice day)

9 am Welcome Word

9:15 am Opening ConferencesMarius Romme, Sandra Escher and Juliette Soucy

10:45 am What’s up?

12:30 pm Networking lunch

2 pm International panel: What are the future pathways?

5 pm - 7 pm “Food truck”, awards ceremony by Intervoice board and Networking

7 pm General public projection of the documentary “Histoires de voix; paroles d’entendeurs » (Voice histories; hearers)

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Three strong action verbs commit us individually and collectively to influence changes to mark this 19th Congress.

A way to DARE is certainly to face the challenge of offering two exceptional events mobilizing knowledge transfer and the exchange of experience!

X The 19th AQRP Congress: « INNOVATIONS AND EMERGENT PRACTICES », including a thematic segment on First Nations and Inuits « Honor our knowledge! »;

X The 11th Intervoice Congress under the theme “Uniting our voices, to dare the path of the future!”, including an international Voice Hearers’ Day.

Innovators in mental health, we invite you to participate in the 19th AQRP Congress. Welcoming the 11th Intervoice Congress and the International Hearing Voice Network, the activities within illustrate an acheivement in risk taking and enterprise.

X Discover an array of workshops and training sessions that illustrate the capacity to venture off the beaten track. Multiple artists and organizations, from all over joined us to transform their practices, These ideas will help us to aspire together to innovate and redefine a truly inclusive society!

Thus, the intention of this 19th Congress is a bold challenge of togetherness that will highlight our different accomplishments in contributing to a greater social participation of all toward a true social transformation.

Welcome to all,Diane Harvey, Executive Director, AQRP

19th AQRP CONGRESS: INNOVATIONS AND EMERGENT PRACTICES Why rely on INNOVATIONS AND EMERGENT PRACTICES in mental health? From this perspective, how will we address the highly topical following issues?

X Unveiling and stigmatization: Can unveiling be a lever to improve social participation? Is it an inescapable issue for a true social transformation?

X Integration of knowledge: Can the development of knowledge integration act as a lever for innovation in our practices to promote a change in an organizational culture? Can it aim towards a true social transformation? How can we incorporate and combine the knowledge of people living with a mental health problem, of peer caregivers, of patient advisors or else people close to them?

X Citizen participation: Can we talk about recovery without citizen participation or any integration perspective? How can we get off the beaten track to build bridges and create the necessary alliances to really work within the community?

To address these various questions, we are providing you more than 30 workshops and training sessions adjoining this theme.

DARE – PARTICIPATE – TRANSFORM - TAKE OWNERSHIP OF CHANGE TO INFLUENCE IT

ALL OPTIONS ARE POSSIBLE! You will find the necessary information on each theme offered in the following pages. You can register to a single theme or choose among all of the different proposed activities.

The basic registration is two days and provides access to all the activities offered on Tuesday and Wednesday, November 12 and 13. You can add to it the fixed-rate package for the International voice hearers’ day on Monday, November 11 or else, only participate to the latter. All options are possible! If you combine both registrations (total of three days), you benefit from a discount of 10%. You want to save a bit more? Become a member of the AQRP and benefit from a special fare! (see pages 46 and 47).

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As part of its 19th Congress, in collaboration with the Quebec Hearing Voices Network (REV), the AQRP will host the 11th Intervoice Congress, the World Hearing Voices Network, a First in Quebec!

The 11th Congress spreads its activities over 3 days. The International ’Voice Hearers’ day starts the Congress at McGill Residences. This invitation is for all participants: people who hear voices or live with other types of sensorial experiences, those that support them and those interested in familiarizing with this reality along with meeting for mutual enrichment.

It is an outstanding opportunity to share with artists from here and all over the world. Bringing together representatives from more than six different countries, this day covers a broad overview of initiatives at the international level: It is at the heart of this large gathering! In the evening, a general public projection of the documentary Histoires de voix; paroles d’entendeurs (Voice histories; hearers speech; subtitled in English) will take place portraying the Quebec network.

The first day will take place at McGill Residences in a friendly and open environment. The two following days of activities on voice hearing will take place at Hotel Bonaventure.

In a climate of openness, listening and respect, this conference is a unique occasion for each person to express and share their own lived experiences and their unique knowledge, whether experiential or theoretical. You will find more than 30 workshops or training sessions presenting approaches, projects, individual or group experiences, and preoccupation in line with the themes identified to the right:

Inspiring approaches: How can we change the relationship with voices? How to recover and better live with voices without necessarily making them disappear? What are the inspiring, non-oppressive approaches that can lead us forward in terms of recovery and social inclusion?

Diversity, rights and alternatives: Hearing voices is by itself a human phenomenon as diversified as human nature can be. How can we adapt practices in consideration of the rights, the diversity and needs of everyone? Do alternative approaches have a space or place? How do we sustain their development and their accessibility?

Spirituality: How do we convey or address spirituality? How can we give it the right place in daily life and within Voice Hearers’ Groups? What about cultural diversity, including first nations’ perspectives?

Empowerment of voice hearers and the network: How to fight prejudices related to the voice hearing phenomenon? How to become free, fulfill one’s place and fully benefit from one’s citizenship? How can we support the full growth of the International Hearing Voice Network and link with other social networks?

Carlisle Boivin Altogether for the wavesAn artwork picturing the world population unifying to talk about a topic still taboo but full of sense for those concerned by it. The strength to talk about the voices phenomenon and the importance of trying to understand it without judgment or stigmatization. It is a wish of understanding and solidarity toward a misunderstood but fully present worldwide phenomenon.

11TH INTERVOICE CONGRESS: UNITING OUR VOICES, TO DARE THE PATH OF THE FUTURE!

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The First Nations and the Inuits have developed a knowledge specific to their culture and history. An important knowledge that must be perpetuated among their nation and deserves more consideration and care. Furthermore, there are some particularly difficult realities that are very close to us and are often ignored. Indeed, some historical and intergenerational issues can be included such as cultural safeguards, community governance and development. There are all influencing the social context where prejudices and discrimination are still present.

How can we better know and support the aspirations of members of the First Nations and Inuits? What are the culturally adapted approaches that promote mental well-being? What about the whole being supported by the consideration of culture, identity, territory, language, elders’ wisdom, and the importance of family and community?

This First Nations and Inuits section, under the theme HONOR OUR KNOWLEDGE! is an invitation to discover, get inspired and share practices and/or innovative projects from individuals, communities and organizations of the First Nations and Inuits. These were developed in close collaboration with the public health and social services network. For each time window, you will thus find a proposal of workshop related to the First Nations and Inuits.

Joyce Panadis, Jo Cooper Joyce Panadis, Abenaki artist from Odanak; Jo Cooper, artist, writer, Métis from Frontenac: Lignes du Coeur, Visions of Home This artwork, published on the cover page of the collection entitled “Lignes du Cœur, Visions of Home” gathering 35 artists, it is intended to be an opening toward a flourishing communication with our neighbors, because, for these two artists, we are all roommates on these lands known under the name of Quebec.

Discover now our headliners for the opening and the closure of the 19th AQRP Congress and the 11th Intervoice Congress in the following pages. Watch for our peripheral activities and register online.

Take note of the package to support the participation of unemployed mental health services’ users of Quebec on page 44 and benefit from the support offered

to participate to one or both of the events.

Welcome to all!

Diane Harvey Director, AQRP

FIRST NATIONS AND INUITS: HONOR OUR KNOWLEDGE!

Renée Bernard Medium: charcoal, soft pastel Collection Les Impatients

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CONSECUTIVE INTERPRETATION

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2019 : International voice hearers’ day – Intervoice SectionMCGILL RESIDENCES, MONTREAL

Uniting our voices, to dare the path of the future! This day begins with an opening conference by Marius Romme and Sandra Escher from the Netherlands, pioneers and founders of the International Voice Hearing Network.

The day continues with a testimonial by Juliette Soucy, a 16-year-old woman, who will share about her experiences with the voices she has heard since she was 11 years old.

Then discover what is going on at the international level with a large panel bringing together the representatives of networks from France, United States, Australia, England, Ontario and Quebec.

End this first day with a happy hour during which there will be an awards ceremony by the Intervoice Board and finally, the projection of the documentary Histoires de voix; paroles d’entendeurs (Voice histories; hearers ; subtitled in English) a Quebec-made production, followed by a discussion panel.

8 am – Registration

9 am – Opening conferences A conference by Marius Romme and Sandra Escher Is it still possible to win a Nobel Price with the concept of schizophrenia?

At the time of diagnosis, the psychiatrist interprets the symptoms as generated by the illness and not as leading to the illness. The voice hearers, consider their voices as persons involved in their problems, and are viewed delusional by psychiatry. Also, isolation is often due to the discomfort related to hearing voices in public, thus the voice hearers prefer avoidance. But psychiatry is reversing this reality.

Me, Juliette, I hear voices;

I am Juliette Soucy, I am 16 years old and I have heard voices for 7 years now. The semicolon represents a difficult chapter of my life that now gives way to a beautiful story. I will talk to you about the way I

succeeded in staying in control of my life. I understand that we must persevere and keep hope. Today, I speak about it openly to help teenagers and adults that hear voices like me.

10:45 am – What’s up? Travel around the world with news from the different voice hearing networks!

12:30 pm - 2 pm – Lunch 2 pm- International Panel: What are the future pathways?

This panel will be the opportunity to bring together some active members from different voice hearing networks around the world to share about the themes retained for this congress: inspiring approaches, diversity, rights and alternatives, spirituality, empowerment of voice hearers and the networks.

Chaired by Julie Ohanessian Panelists: Will Hall (United States)Lisa Forestell (United States)Kevin Healey (Canada)Sandrine Rousseau (Quebec)Paul Baker (England) And more to come!

5 pm to 7 pm (happy hour) – Networking and Quebec cuisine “Food truck” meal, awards ceremony and networking

7 pm - General public projection of the documentary: “Histoires de voix; paroles d’entendeurs” (Voices’ histories; hearers’ speech; subtitled in English)

Discussion with the participants of this beautiful adventure. Documentary produced by the Quebec REV and the AQRP. Free entrance. Québécois et l’AQRP. Entrée libre

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CONSECUTIVE INTERPRETATION

TUESDAY NOVEMBER 12, 2019 All Themes Combined – HOTEL BONAVENTURE, MONTREAL

We present the opening of the 19th AQRP Congress and the 11th Intervoice Congress, a magical moment, that, we hope, will surprise and delight you!

Start your Congress with an opening conference entitled “Living Together”, custom-made by Serge Bouchard, an internationally recognised anthropologist.

Continue your journey through multiple possibilities of workshops and training sessions under the general theme of the 19th Congress – Innovations and emergent practices, under the Intervoice theme or the First Nations and Inuits (see pages 20-41).

At the international level, the AQRP also offers you a round table on community organization held by the Alliance des groupes d’intervention sur le rétablissement en santé mentale (AGIR en santé mentale; a coalition of recovery intervention groups in mental health) and bringing together a panoply of guests from here and all over the world!

Complete your day by joyfully participating in a happy hour where you will discover the skills of people living with a mental health problem and acting as partner patients for the CIUSSS of the East Island of Montreal. They will present some extracts of the Monde de Clémence, a musical and theater creation imagined and directed by Lorraine Pintal, the artistic director of the Théatre du Nouveau Monde, based on texts selected from the prolific repertoire of the unique Clémence Desrochers.

7 am - 9 am – Registration

9 am – Opening conference from Serge Bouchard

Serge Bouchard provides us with a unique perspective, elaborated in line with our theme “Dare-Influence-Transform; take ownership of change to influence it”

10 am – Coffee break

11:00 am – Round Table “Community organization in mental health: A powerful lever for social transformation!”

“Grassroots” or “Astro Turf”? A reflection on the mobilization and development of communities and the emergence of a citizen movement. How is community organisation involved in the emergence of a vivifying citizen movement in mental health? With Charles Rice, Will Hall, Paul Baker, Audrey Bernard, Marité Lord and Mélanie Courtois

11 am - 12:30 pm – Workshops / Training A

12:30 pm - 2 pm – Banquet lunch

2 pm - 3:30 pm Workshops / Training B

3:30 pm Coffee break

4 pm - 5:30 pm Workshops / Training B

5:30pm Happy hour Networking

A unusual happy hour: a theatrical full-music flavoured introduction! “Le Monde de Clémence”, seen by the eyes of Lorraine Pintal and brilliantly played by the partner patients of the IUSMM (Montreal Mental Health University Institute)

FR

FR

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Serge Bouchard travelled as an anthropologist through different communities for many years. His vision results from a rich crossing of knowledge and lived experiences of “Living together”. He relays to us the desire to recognize oneself in relationship with our environment. This experience within ourselves cannot be separated from our environment. Our encounter with innovation create a path that reaches towards the others. It brings growth and change.. Our often convergent and sometimes divergent trajectories shape the choice we make. The “Living together” is thus an adventure whose boundaries and processes are alive and moving. It is there to notice, expand, transform, inventing and reinventing new means to transmit!

“Dare” and “Participate” go hand in hand with every true encounter. Isn’t it?

“Living together” a way to share essential meaning and to take the risk to transmit a bit of our memories and ourselves. By coming together and sharing living memories with each other, we will learn refinement by daring to participate in something larger.

The eroded identity of the suffering or stigmatized groups more and more unmask and confirm our shared differences and wisdom. How can we dare to begin sharing in a same life environment, in a common space, where everyone can accept with his/her, color, resonance, contact and difference? We all need to get out of fear, fear of the other or apprehension of change.

“Living together”, is to take part in all these dimensions; it is an invitation to walk our own path toward a diversity of pathways, while finding discoveries in ourselves and in others!

For this collective travel toward a more inclusive community and society: What are the essential tools to put in our luggage? Facing diversity, what are the elements that create this amazing passport to grow, evolve and enrich mutually?

How can we take a significant part in an effort to make our society more open, human and inclusive in a social context; especially where discrimination and exclusion are still present? Let’s take a chance together so that we can evolve despite of conflicts and challenges, as we dare to grow and invent ourselves. By taking the risk to influence our siblings, neighbors and living environment, we can realize our hopes of participation, transformation and inclusion!

We asked Mr. Bouchard to share his reflections on “Living together!” An opening conference custom-made for you!Serge Bouchard provides us with an original pathway elaborated in line with our theme: “Dare – Influence – Transform”.

Conférence d’ouverture de Serge Bouchard X Tuesday November 12 – 9 am

Serge Bouchard has accepted the challenge of the Opening of the 19th AQRP Congress! He is an anthropologist and a writer, an original, audacious and inspiring Quebecker speaker and radio presenter who is always browsing the frontiers of collective life experiences often left in the shadow, yet to be discovered! www.sergebouchard.ca

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Marité Lord, Project Manager, ReprésentACTION for the Association des groupes d'intervention en défense des droits en santé mentale du Québec,

a Quebec association of advocacy intervention groups in mental health. She has worked for seven years in citizen participation for mental health and five as regional project manager in Montérégie (Quebec).

Audrey Bernard, Community organizer at the CIUSSS (the mental health and social services university integrated center) of the Capitale Nationale since 2017. As a sponsor in mental

health, Audrey has taken part in many research projects, in particular the Research Group on Social Inclusion, and Organization of Mental Health Services and Mental Health Evaluation (Groupe de recherche sur l’inclusion sociale, l’organisation des services et l’évaluation en santé mentale; GRIOSE-SM).

Paul Baker, social actor in community development in England. He is the co-founder of the England Voice Hearers

Network and of Intervoice, the international network. During the last 30 years, he has developed “by and for” services, and different innovative services in mental health, among which advocacy and housing support services, social initiatives as well as forums.

Will Hall, teacher and American leader of the recovery process. He invites us to go beyond the limits of a world determined to create labels.

He co-founded the Freedom Center and coordinated the Icarus Project. He is the author of a guide to withdraw from psychotropic medication while reducing side effects, that has been translated in 15 languages. His last book entitled “Outside Mental Health: Voices and Visions of Madness”, published in 2016, offers the perpectives of 60 activists and intellectuals critical of the actual psychiatric system.

“Community organization in mental health: A powerful lever for social transformation!”“Grassroots” or “Astro Turf”? refers to an authentic citizen-led movement because its origins and dynamics come from the base. They take root in the needs established within the community. The emergence of “false movements” artificially created par advertising agencies are called “Astro Turf”, by reference to the synthetic grass because they usurp the identity of a citizen movement. These stratagems imitate the truth and divert the energy of an authentic movement coming from the basis. Yet, are the implementation and development of programs and services, through social factors so far from basic needs? Is the process of diluting and dissolving the collective a true dimension of community organization? This round table brings together panelists from different horizons, places (in America and Europe) and practices to question issues that are specific to community organization. It aims to generate reflection on the mobilization and development of communities along with the emergence of a citizen movement in the mental health community. How is the community organization involved in the emergence of a citizen movement in mental health? How does it contribute to developing the empowerment of individuals living with a mental health problem and to the emancipation of their communities?

Here are our 5 panelists:

X Tuesday November 12 - 11 am

Chaired by: Charles Rice, director of AGIR in mental health, a regional grouping of community organizations. He is involved in the field of community action in mental health since 35 years, for community development, social action and the development of real alternatives in mental health.

ROUND TABLE:

Mélanie Courtois, coordinator in social development, Uauitishitutau Mobilisation, Mahteuiatsh community located on the riversides of Lac St-Jean in Quebec.

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WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2019 All Themes Combined – HOTEL BONAVENTURE, MONTREAL

Until the Closing Coffee Break, another large variety of workshops and training sessions are offered in each of the topics this morning.

Among these, a 3-hour symposium is dedicated to the issues related to hiring people in recovery as mental health service providers and based on the experience of peer support workers in England in the last decade.

This will be followed by a round table on the vision and the challenges related to hiring peer-support workers in Quebec. Discover the challenges that await us and the prospects of three major Health and Social Services University Integrated Centers! Complete this adventure with an exceptional Closing Coffee Break by Will Hall, internationally recognized activist in the social management of psychosis and the development of peer-support networks.

And all along the conference, see again, in support and animation, our dynamic duo much appreciated during the past editions, Michel Perreault and Jean-Nicolas Ouellet, They will know how to create a stimulant and playful atmosphere that may even continue to accompany you on your way home!

7 am - 8:30 am – Registration 8:30 am - 10 am – Workshops/ Training D

10 am – Coffee Break

10:30 am - 12 pm - Workshops/ Training E

12 pm - 1:30 pm – Banquet lunch

1:30 pm - 3 pm Workshops/ Training F

3 pm - 4:30 pm Closing coffee break

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Thematic day dedicated to hiring people in recovery as mental health services providers 8:30 am to 12 pm – Symposium dedicated to the experience of peer-support workers in England over the last decade (workshops D01 – E01) Opening address by Sandrine Rousseau, followed by a short presentation by Daniel Gélinas to welcome Emma Watson, Sharon Gilfoyle and Suzan Preston-Eyles.

1:30 pm – For Making recovery a reality in

Quebec…

Round table on lessons learned from the experience of England that could improve our practices in Quebec by 2022 Facilitated by Pierre Craig with Daniel Corbeil, Patrick Duchesne, Isabelle Legault, Alexandre St-Germain, Daniel Gélinas, Martin Lepage and the final word by Diane Harvey

3 pm – Closing coffee break conference by Will Hall

“Dare incarnate social transformation!”

Through his diverse commitments, Will Hall is an outstanding activist in mental health recovery. Drawing from his own experiences in psychiatry, he chooses to act upon, innovate and shake the institutions’ practices to engage himself in this “revolution”. This change of paradigm is related to the power to act and to actively process thoughts within everyone! He has been the defender of mental health and rights of patients in psychiatry for more than 15 years in the United States and at the international level, he is thus a leader of the recovery process in mental health.

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Symposium on the experience of peer support workers in England over the last decade 8h30 à 12h – Symposium consacré à l’expérience des intervenants pairs aidants de l’Angleterre au cours de la dernière décennie (ateliers D01-E01) Opening speech from Sandrine Rousseau followed by a short presentation by Daniel Gélinas to welcome Emma Watson, Sharon Gilfoyle and Suzan Preson-Eyles.

In the 2010’s, public institutions offering mental health services were designated by the UK Ministry of Health as demonstration sites to make the necessary changes to “make recovery a reality”. Among these were the Nottinghamshire Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust in Nottingham and the Cambridge and Peterborough NHS Foundation Trust in Peterborough. This has resulted in the adoption of strategic planning by these institutions to transform their organisational culture. This allowed for the massive hiring of peer-support workers in all psychiatric care and rehabilitation services without exception and the establishment of recovery colleges based on an educational approach.

X Emma Watson, Peer Support Development Lead at the Nottinghamshire Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust in Nottingham

THEMATIC DAY DEDICATED TO HIRING PEOPLE IN RECOVERY AS MENTAL HEALTH SERVICES PROVIDERS

Come meet the three members of the ImROC (Implementing Recovery through Organisational Change) to learn from their experiencewww.imroc.org

X Suzan Preston-Eyles, Counselor and Registered Psychotherapist currently providing cognitive behavioral therapy services at the Cambridge and Peterborough NHS Foundation Trust in Peterborough

X Sharon Gilfoyle, Manager Responsible for Recovery and Resilience at the Cambridge and Peterborough NHS Foundation Trust in Peterborough

X Wednesday November 13 – 8:30 am

X Sandrine Rousseau, Opening speech from Mrs. Sandrine Rousseau, Program Manager of the Peer-Support Network, Quebec Association for Psychosocial Rehabilitation

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For Making recovery a reality in Quebec… What steps will have to be taken to increase the number of peer support workers and improve the guidelines of the next mental health action plan?

Can the establishment of recovery colleges contribute to the growth of new peer-support workers having a specific trainer function?

Can the lived experience of illness and recovery become an asset for delivering mental health services rather than a shameful blemish that must be concealed in order to get a position in the health and social services network?

What steps will be needed to ensure that institutions of the health and social services network become exemplary employers?

ROUND TABLE ON LESSONS LEARNED FROM THE EXPERIENCE OF ENGLAND THAT COULD IMPROVE OUR PRACTICES IN QUEBEC BY 2022

X Facilitated by Pierre Craig journalist, user of mental health services and spokesman of the association Revivre (www.revivre.org)

X Daniel Gélinas, psychoeducator, and retired social worker from the Mental Health University Institute of Montreal

X Martin Lepage, social worker and peer-support worker in the Assertive Community Treatment Team of the Integrated Health and Social Services Center South Lanaudière

X Patrick Duchesne, Director of Mental Health, Addiction and Homelessness Programs at the University Institute of Mental Health in Quebec City of the Capitale-Nationale, University Integrated Center for Health and Social Services

X Isabelle Legault, Assistant to the Director of the Mental Health, Addiction and Homelessness Programs of the Montreal Mental Health University Institute of the Integrated University Health and Social Services Center of the East Island of Montreal

X Alexandre St-Germain, Director of the Mental Health, Addiction and Homelessness Programs of the Douglas Mental Health University Institute of the Integrated University Health and Social Services Center of the West Island of Montreal

X Daniel Corbeil, Acting Deputy Director General of Mental Health and Forensic Services, Quebec Ministry of Health and Social Services

X And the final word for the challenge of the 2020s to make recovery become a reality in Quebec: Diane Harvey, Director Executive of the Quebec Association for Psychosocial Rehabilitation

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HAPPY HOUR NETWORKING TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 12An unusual « happy hour »: a delightful musical amd theatrical introduction! “Le Monde de Clémence” seen through the eyes of Lorraine Pintal and played with brilliance by the partner patients of the IUSMM (Institut universitaire en santé mentale de Montréal; Montreal Mental Health University Institute)!

We invite you to enjoy and to enter as all the senses are brought together, into an unforgettable extract, played and sung, of the extraordinary Monde de Clémence! It is a theatrical and musical creation that combines the talents of the partner patients of the Montreal Mental Health University Institute (Eastern Montreal CIUSSS).

Lorraine Pintal, creator of the project, stage director of the performance and artistic director of the Théâtre du Nouveau Monde (TNM), has set her sights, to our great delight, on the rich inner world of Clémence Desrochers. This multidisciplinary artist has uplifted the pantheon of our local culture! The whole performance was previously performed, to much acclaim this past May 27 at the TNM of Montreal.

By her selection of texts taken from the profound repertoire of the author, Lorraine Pintal has shaped a unique and flamboyant universe for the occasion. She has brought together women bowling champions bingo players, cabaret stars and the depressed club in a touching tango of words and music.

Photos : Hélène Sirois

Trained at the Conservatoire d’art dramatique de Montréal, Lorraine Pinal begins her career as an actress in 1972 at the stage of the TNM. She has been the Executive and Artistic Director of this theater for 24 years now and has presented over thirty productions. During her mandate, she has given prosperity to the classics of the repertoire, while also giving a loud and clear platform to the voices of the Quebec dramaturgy; scheduling and directing productions from such important authors as Michel Tremblay, Marcel Dubé, Réjean Ducharme, Carole Fréchette or Claude Gauvreau. In this multi-faceted journey, Brecht has been given a central place.Stage director

Lorraine Pintal

5:30 pm - Arrival 5:45 - Extract of the performance “Monde de Clémence” 6 pm - Networking

X Tuesday November 12 – 5:30 pm

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“DARE INCARNATE SOCIAL TRANSFORMATION!”A much-anticipated closing conference by Will Hall! Through his diverse commitments, Will Hall is an outstanding activist in mental health recovery. Drawing from his own experiences in psychiatry, he chooses to act upon, innovate and shake the institutions’ practices to engage himself in this “revolution”. This change of paradigm is related to the power to act and to actively process thoughts within everyone! He has been a defender of the mental health and rights of patients in psychiatry for more than 15 years in the United States and at the international level, he is thus a leader of the recovery process in mental health.

With disarming ease, his simple, soothing, and wise words get straight to the point and directly to the heart, Will Hall invites us, to look through new glasses, to see a new way of looking at things and acting upon them! He carries us through his own experience and redirects toward the external world afterward. Thus, he guides us to see our own life events differently. It is with a fresh look into everyday life and things that are familiar to us, that we dare to share our experience. We learn to follow our intuition to get into action and become an agent of change and transformation, grounded in our internal world to act upon the world around us!

Will Hall, MA, DiplPW Defender of the rights of patients in psychiatry, writer, counsellor and teacher. Diagnosed with schizophrenia, he is a promoter of the peer support networks. Official site: www.willhall.net

A CLOSING CONFERENCE BY WILL HALL!

X Wednesday, November 13 – 3 pm

Following several difficult experiences and treatments, isolation and restraint measures in a San Francisco Hospital, he chose to orient himself, for his well-being, toward a holistic and spiritual approach. His recovery also encompasses the social support aspect. He is an internationally recognized innovator in the treatment and social management of psychosis. He initiated the peer-support networks. In 2001, he co-founded the Freedom Center, has coordinated the Icarus Project. He has been a consultant for the Mental Disability Rights International organization. In 2012, he met the the Psychiatric Services Institute of the American Psychiatric Association (APA). Leader of the American psychiatric survivors' movement, he nowadays works as a counselor, coach and therapist. He has a master degree in arts (MAPW) from the Process Work Institute of Portland, Oregon. He is currently a PhD candidate at the Mental Health and Neurosciences School of the University of Maastricht, Netherlands. He taught at the Sigmund Freud University in Vienna, Austria and has given workshops and conferences in more than 35 countries. He is a member of the teaching staff of the International Institute for Psychiatric Drug Withdrawal.

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ARTS, CULTURE AND RECOVERY AREA X Shows, screenings and encounters X Films and videos on practices related to recovery in mental health X One projection per workshop time slot. Some non-stop shows.

The AQRP is proud to present an ARTS, CULTURE AND RECOVERY programming related to mental health. Unusual and contemporary productions combining the cultures from Quebec, Ontario, New Brunswich, England as well as United States. After each projection, a time for sharing with one or many members of the production team is planned. Free popcorn on the spot!

ARTS, CULTURE AND RECOVERY PROGRAMMINGCINE-MENTAL AREA

Monday, November 11, 2019 7 pm “Histoires de voix; paroles d’entendeurs », AQRP(Voices’ histories; hearers’ speech; English subtitles)

Tuesday, November 12, 2019 11 am – 12:30 am

« Tenir tête », Mathieu Arsenault, Workshop A-14

2pm – 3:30 pm

« Podcast sur la santé mentale », Pierre Craig and Roger Archambault, Workshop B-14

4 pm – 5:30 pm

« La paire-aidance au sein de notre programme FAIRE », L’Apogée, Workshop C-14

Wednesday, November 13, 2019

8:30 am – 10:00 am

"Real Hope: An introduction to the Hearing Voices Approach", The power of hearing voices peer-support groups. Gail. A. Hornstein, United States, Workshop D-14

10:30 am - 12 pm

« Our voice / Notre voix », Lorsque le peuple parle: l’histoire de la santé mentale au Nouveau-Brunswick, Eugène Leblanc, Workshop E-14

1:30 pm – 3pm

« Histoire de voix; parole d’entendeurs », (Voices’ histories; hearers’ speech; English subtitles), Workshop F-14

THEATER

Tuesday, November 12, 2019 4 pm - 5:30 pm

« On parle! Écoutez-vous? » ou « Comment reprendre son droit de parole par le théâtre? », Le Rebond, Workshop B-13

6 pm - happy hour

Extracts of the « Monde de Clémence », Lorraine Pintal and the partner patients of the IUSMM (starting 5:45 p

EXHIBITIONS

Non-stop on November 12 and 13, 2019

“Hearing Voices Exhibition”, Angela Woods and Victoria Patton, England

Ruche d’arts – The hearing voices groups of Montreal and the Montreal Fine Arts Museum

PERFORMANCES

Non-stop on November 12 and 13, 2019

“Carnival des Voix” with Kevin Healey

Improvised! Folie/Culture

BOOK FAIR

Coffee breaks Mini-book fair, authors present on site!

X Wednesday, November 13 – 3 pm

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CINE-MENTAL PROGRAMMING

C14 CINÉ-MENTAL : LE CHEMIN D’U, LA PAIRE-AIDANCE AU SEIN DE NOTRE PROGRAMME FAIRE

Mots clés : Rétablissement, accompagnateur, espoir

Réalisation : Mathieu Durocher, L’Apogée Production : L’Apogée, 2018

Synopsis : Dans une brève entrevue, Ulrique Collin, pair aidant à L’Apogée, nous présente les différents services offerts par l’organisme, une association pour les parents et amis de la personne vivant avec un trouble de santé mentale. Il relate également son parcours de rétablissement avec un trouble de santé mentale, la schizophrénie ainsi que la façon dont son entourage l’a accompagné sur le chemin de son rétablissement.

Présentateurs : Ulrique Collin, pair-aidant bénévole, Mathieu Durocher, intervenant psychosocial et Hélène Tessier, directrice générale, tous de L’Apogée

Suivant la projection, un échange aura lieu entre l’équipe de production/réalisation et les participants.

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A14 CINÉ-MENTAL : TENIR TÊTE

Mots clés : Rétablissement, accompagnateur, espoir

Réalisation : Mathieu Arsenault Production : Nathalie Barton (InformAction Film), 2019

Synopsis : Louis a été batteur du groupe les Sinners, détective privé et toxicomane. Frédérique est une photographe talentueuse et pas toujours sage comme une image. Mathieu Arsenault est cinéaste et père de famille, mi-ange, mi-démon. Ce qui les unit, c’est leur trouble affectif bipolaire. Ils ont connu les extases de la psychose et les méandres de la dépression. Ils ont trébuché et sont tombés très bas, puis ils se sont relevés. Aujourd’hui, en pleine possession de leurs moyens, ils se racontent pour combattre les préjugés et donner de l’espoir à tous ceux et celles qui sont aux prises avec la maladie mentale. Suivant la projection, un échange aura lieu entre l’équipe de production/réalisation et les participants.

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B14 PODCAST SUR LA SANTÉ MENTALE

Une réalisation de Pierre Craig, journaliste et animateur d’affaires publiques et Roger Archambault, les deux cofondateurs de la série « Les frères humains ».

Pierre Craig et Roger Archambault présenteront leur tout nouveau podcast sur la santé mentale.

« Il y a un peu plus de 15 ans, quand j’ai fait ma première attaque de panique à la télé, en direct, tout mon courage, toute ma force, ne m’ont servi à rien. Je m’en suis sorti tant bien que mal, mais abîmé dans ma confiance en moi. J’ai fait d’autres attaques de panique, à la radio en direct. Une autre peur est alors apparue, terrifiante celle-là : que ça arrive encore, que je m’effondre devant tout le monde. Et je ne pouvais absolument rien y faire. » (Pierre Craig)

Suivant la projection, un échange aura lieu entre l’équipe de production/réalisation et les participants.

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D14 BEYOND POSSIBLE: HOW THE HEARING VOICES APPROACH TRANSFORMS LIVES: SCREENING AND PANEL DISCUSSION OF A NEW FILM

Key words: Peer support, hearing voices groups, expanding HVN across US

Presenters: Gail A. Hornstein, scientific, Mount Holyoke College; Caroline Mazel-Carlton, experiential, Wildflower Alliance of the Western Massachusetts Recovery Learning Community; Cindy Marty Hadge, experiential, Wildflower Alliance of the Western Massachusetts Recovery Learning Community

Synopsis: In this new film – made by a collaborative team of voice hearers, peer advocates, and allies – voice hearers from diverse cultural, spiritual, and socio-economic backgrounds across the United States talk about how hearing voices peer-support groups are transforming their lives. The film highlights the distinctive contributions of the Hearing Voices approach and seeks to deepen the dialogue between practitioners and those with lived experience and to introduce this powerful approach to a broad general audience.

Following screening, discussions will take place between the production team and the participants.

EN

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CINE-MENTAL PROGRAMMING

E15 CINÉ-MENTAL : OUR VOICES/NOS VOIX. LORSQUE LE PEUPLE PARLE : L’HISTOIRE DE LA SANTÉ MENTALE AU NOUVEAU-BRUNSWICK

Mots clés : Influencer, résilience, connaissance alternative

Présentateurs : Eugène LeBlanc, éditeur, Our Voice / Notre Voix ; Sylvette Rousselle, présidente, Réseau des bénéficiaires en santé mentale du Nouveau-Brunswick; Nérée St-Amand, professeur émérite, Université d’Ottawa.

Synopsis : Ce documentaire trace un historique de plus de 200 années qui met l’accent sur comment les personnes utilisatrices de services en santé mentale définissent les services psychiatriques et les stratégies de résilience que ceux-ci ont mises en place pour surmonter leurs « psychiatrisation ». Un bijou d’information sur la reprise du pouvoir jamais vu ou entendu ailleurs. À ne pas manquer!

Suivant la projection, un échange aura lieu entre l’équipe de production/réalisation et les participants.

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F14 CINÉ-MENTAL : « HISTOIRE DE VOIX; PAROLE D’ENTENDEURS »

Mots clés : Rétablissement, accompagnateur, espoir

Réalisation : Nathalie Godfrind ; Édouard Nadeau-Besse ; Marc St-Martin, Association québécoise pour la réadaptation psychosociale

Synopsis : « Histoires de voix; paroles d’entendeurs » raconte la souffrance et le processus de rétablissement vécus par 8 entendeurs de voix. Les protagonistes nous partagent, avec beaucoup de générosité, leur expérience au sein des groupes d’entendeurs de voix du Québec, la quête de sens qui les ont animés au cœur de la maladie et les victoires personnelles qui leurs ont permis de se réinventer, voire de se rétablir. Grâce à l’entraide que l’on retrouve dans les groupes, au partage de stratégies pour mieux composer avec les voix, aux échanges sur l’expérience vécue et au désir d’introspection qui en découle, les personnes qui ont participé au documentaire nous démontrent qu’il est possible de briser l’isolement, d’échapper aux tabous liés à l’entente de voix, de reprendre du pouvoir sur sa vie et sur ses voix, de surmonter des traumatismes et de retrouver l’estime de soi. Le documentaire Histoire de voix ; paroles d’entendeurs est né du besoin de présenter la réalité des entendeurs de voix et des groupes d’entendeurs de voix d’ici et de mettre de l’avant les pratiques innovantes mises en application au Québec.

Suivant la projection, un échange aura lieu entre l’équipe de production/réalisation et les participants.

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MINI-BOOK FAIR The AQRP, with the collaboration of the author and speaker Richard Langlois, invites to you a mini-book fair.

Books written by people with a significant experience will be available on the spot (sell or review)

Some of the authors will even be present to dedicate your book!

FOLIE/CULTUREIn concentrating its field of action in an area where the cultural and the social meet, Folie/Culture, benefits in its intervention strategies, and innovative cultural expressions. This non-profit organization pursues information, sensitization and promotion in mental health. As an events organizer, it follows unusual direction in research while also motivating reflection on questions relating to profound social issues. It works with resource groups in the mental health and sociology and is supported by numerous partners in the cultural network. Folie/Culture: an atypical sensitization approach!

THE “CARNIVAL” DES VOIXAn original concept by Kevin Healey, founder of the Toronto Voice Hearers Network.

Organized by: Kevin Healey and Dave Umbongo, Toronto Puppets are used around the world. They allow all forms of languages, dialects and expressions to be heard. They provide a space that is safe and rich in meaning. They can help to overcome taboos and barriers. It is from this perspective that the “Carnival” des Voix invites you to this fun activity of expression and solidarity with voice hearers.

Come participate in the creation of a puppet! Make one by giving to it a voice you hear, its own profile, history and share what you have learned. If you do not hear voices, you are also welcome to let your little inner voice express itself… Over the course of the congress, the puppets will be displayed, and the parade may surprise you: a celebration of diversity and dialogue, a polyphony, a carnival of voices!

The “Carnival” des voix is a gathering in support of expression and solidarity.

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“HEARING VOICES EXHIBITION” Hearing Voices is the first major and wonderful exhibition based on a large interdisciplinary study that explores the voice hearing phenomenon and the reality of being a voice hearer! Some voices cause distress, others become a social, cultural, or political inspiration in strength! In 2016, Victoria Patton and Angela Woods of the “Hearing the Voice” project at Durham University in England have put together these captivating perspectives being personal, scientific, literary, historical or theological. A brief version of this exhibition has been created to make it accessible to different regions around the world. Victoria Patton joins to us to present it!

This exhibition explores the development of the Hearing Voices Movement. There are interactive presentations of stories from voice hearers around the world. There also podcasts, media to simulate the phenomenon of voices and an installation of postcards that reflect the public’s responses to their understanding of the Hearing Voices Movement.

Dr Victoria Patton, Communications, Engagement and Impact Lead, Hearing the Voice in the Department of English Studies, Durham University, UK

THE “RUCHE D’ART” (ARTS HIVE) AND THE VOICE HEARERS GROUPS OF MONTREAL

Stephen Legari, responsible for the “Ruche d’art” of the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts

Collectif créatif des GEV de Montréal (creative collective of the voice hearers' groups of Montreal): Bertrand, Catherine, Steven, Sylvain, Suzie, Myriam-Anouk, Marie

In collaboration with the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts, creation meetings, bringing together the participants of some voice hearers' groups from Montreal, organized during Spring 2019.

By first creating a free sculpture from wood and soil, boats came to life. The medium itself already had its small story to tell. Within hours, the participants navigated them. Thereafter, the celebration of this universal symbol is taken from the creation experience. These participants express the unique beings they are. They pronounce these words: “Everybody is in the same ship, but everybody thinks they have their own row boat.”And what did they extract from the boat? They learned to swim! They were thrown in the water and got out of it more alive than ever!

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TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 12 11 AM TO 12:30 PM

A01 Round table: “Community organization in mental health: A powerful lever for social transformation!”

Key Words : Mobilization, risk taking, citizen movement in mental health, community milieu

Will Hall, author, teacher and American leader in the mental health field, United States; Paul Baker, social actor in community development, co-founder of the Voice Hearing Network in England and of Intervoice, the international network, England; Marité Lord, Project Manager, ReprésentACTIONsmQ, AGIDD-SMQ (Association des groupes d'intervention en défense des droits en santé mentale du Québec, a Quebec association of advocacy intervention groups in mental health), Montreal; Audrey Bernard, community organizer at the CIUSSS of the Capitale-Nationale, Quebec; Mélanie Courtois, coordinator in social development, Uauitishitutau Mobilisation, Mahteuiatsh Innu community; Charles Rice, director of AGIR in mental health, Quebec.

“Grassroots” or “Astro Turf”? A reflection on mobilization, community development and the emergence of an activist citizen movement. Are the implementation and development of programs and services, through social activists so far from our basic needs? In the process of diluting and dissolving the collective a true dimension of community organization? How is the community organization involved in the emergence of a citizen movement in mental health?

A02 Co-construire de meilleures pratiques d’accompagnement à la réintégration scolaire des adolescents hospitalisés en pédopsychiatrie

Mots clés : Santé mentale des adolescents, trajectoire de soins et services intégrés, collaboration intersectorielle, méthode Photovoix

Anne-Marie Tougas et Isabelle Thibault, toutes deux professeures, Université de Sherbrooke; Betty Gagné, chef de service, Centre intégré universitaire de santé et de services sociaux de l’Estrie - Centre hospitalier universitaire de Sherbrooke

Présentation du processus de co-construction, à la confluence des savoirs scientifiques, pratiques et expérientiels, d’un guide novateur de meilleures pratiques d’accompagnement à la réintégration scolaire des adolescents ayant été hospitalisés en pédopsychiatrie et illustration de son contenu à partir d’une vignette clinique. Expérimentation de la méthode Photovoix et échanges sur son potentiel à intégrer la vision des adolescents dans l’élaboration du guide.

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A03 Lutter contre la stigmatisation par les stratégies de contact : un essentiel vers l’intégration sociale

Mots clés : Lutte contre la stigmatisation, stratégies de contact, intégration sociale

Lyne Larivée de la Locomotive du Regroupement des organismes de base en santé mentale 04-17, Trois-Rivières; Éric Skulski, chargé de projet de la mesure 1, DPSMD du CEMTL, CIUSSS de l’Est-de-L’Île-de-Montréal; Laurence Caron, chargé de projet, consultant, formateur, AQRP, Québec

Partir à la rencontre d’expériences humaines afin de se mobiliser pour une meilleure intégration des personnes concernées par la maladie mentale. Présentation de quatre stratégies de contact (bibliothèque vivante, témoignage personnel, atelier artistique et expérimentation de l’entente de voix) pour y découvrir des réalités humaines uniques qui vous permettront de mieux saisir l’importance de contrer la stigmatisation en santé mentale.

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INTERVOICE GENERAL FIRST NATIONS AND INUITS

CINE-MENTAL ARTS & CULTURES

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A04 Pech-Sherpa : une pratique en mouvement

Mots clés : Réappropriation de la vie citoyenne, mixité sociale, éducation populaire.

Benoît Coté, directeur général et Daniel Lévesque, directeur du Centre Sherpa, tous deux de Pech.

Pech accompagne des personnes souffrant de problèmes de judiciarisation, de santé mentale, de toxicomanie et d’itinérance. La présentation abordera l’approche du Centre Sherpa, 7e volet de services de Pech, où nos actions de vie citoyenne, de médiation culturelle et d’art social se font en contexte de mixité sociale. Nous décrirons, notamment, comment cette mixité, essentielle au rétablissement des personnes, est créée et maintenue et comment adopter une posture de pivot dans nos communautés pour favoriser la participation citoyenne.

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FR FRENCH EN ENGLISH SIMULTANEOUS TRANSLATION

CONSECUTIVE INTERPRETATION

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A05 Innovation, pair aidance et accompagnement

Mots clés : Pair-aidance, regroupement, accompagnement, suivi

Alain Métivier, fondateur et coordonnateur, Perspective Autonomie en Santé Mentale (PASM), Montréal

Présentation du nouvel organisme Perspective Autonomie en Santé Mentale (PASM), un organisme sans but lucratif en santé mentale offrant un accompagnement, par des pairs aidants, pour des personnes en processus de rétablissement du Grand Montréal.

A06 Impact du sens donné aux problèmes de santé mentale dans une perspective multiculturelle

Mots clés : Troubles mentaux, modèles explicatifs, identité, culture, religion

Dr Philippe Huguelet, médecin, Hôpitaux Universitaires, Genève, Suisse

Les explications quant aux troubles mentaux impliquent des dimensions scientifiques, culturelles et/ou religieuses. Cela aide – ou pas – à faire face au trouble. Le défi est donc de concilier des concepts « scientifiques » avec la compréhension culturelle, afin notamment de définir une prise en charge. Comment intégrer ces dimensions? Nous en débattrons avec l’audience à partir de situations exemplaires.

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A08 Walking Between Worlds: Awakening the heart and liberating the spirit

Key Words : Metis people, spiritual journey, belonging, hearing voices

Tyrone Gamble, Peer support worker, Psychiatric Survivors of Ottawa (PSO)

Tyrone will be presenting his own experiences as both a person who lives with hearing voices and parallel realities and as a peer support worker. The presentation will include an interactive discussion on ways to achieve enriching and meaningful lives using the Sacred to go beyond human barriers and constraints. The presenter will be drawing upon his Orthodox Christian and Metis’ teachings and experiences.

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EN

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 12 11 AM TO 12:30 PM

A07 Transmission de la culture autochtone et solidarité intergénérationnelle via la réalité virtuelle

Mots clés : Réalité virtuelle, solidarité et transmission intergénérationnelle, savoirs autochtones, renforcement de l’identité culturelle

Amalia Nanu, chargée de projet et technologue pédagogique, Université Laval, Québec; Steve Desbiens, programmeur en chef du projet, UQAM, Montréal; Mélina Vassiliou, protectrice culturelle et intervenante sociale, UQAC, Chicoutimi

Présentation d’un projet innovateur qui utilisera la réalité virtuelle pour créer une expérience de partage entre aînés et générations plus jeunes. Vous aurez la chance d’expérimenter brièvement ce projet qui vise à accompagner les autochtones à transmettre leurs savoirs et est porteur d’impacts positifs, tant au niveau du bien-être gériatrique, que de la réussite scolaire et de la solidarité entre les générations.

A09 Addressing the legacy of colonialism with minority ethnic voice hearers

Key Words : Stigmatisation, racism, forensic, prison, hearing voices, unveiling

Jessica Pons, Voices Unlocked Development Worker, Mind in Camden, England

Using her background as a mixed-race woman with experience of mental health problems, the presenter will talk about developing hearing voices groups in prisons, immigration removal centers and forensic units in England. These institutions have a high proportion of minority ethnic people. Why is this? Discussion about the experience of being 'other' in a country composed of majority white people, and reflection on the impact of racism and migration.

EN

FR

INTERVOICE GENERAL FIRST NATIONS AND INUITS

CINE-MENTAL ARTS & CULTURES

FR FRENCH EN ENGLISH SIMULTANEOUS TRANSLATION

CONSECUTIVE INTERPRETATION

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TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 12 11 AM TO 12:30 PM

A10 Allions nos histoires : place aux entendeurs!

Mots clés : Témoignages, entendeurs de voix, partage du vécu

Nathalie Godfrind : facilitatrice du groupe Par mille et une voix, Lisa Benisty intervenante, toutes deux de Prise II

Cet atelier rassemblera, d’une part, des personnes qui entendent des voix, qui vivent des expériences multi-sensorielles et qui souhaitent partager leur vécu et, d’autre part, des participants qui souhaitent entendre leurs témoignages afin de mieux comprendre leurs histoires et ainsi, de mieux les soutenir.

A11 Médication, voix et droits : se réapproprier du pouvoir avec la Gestion autonome de la médication en santé mentale (GAM)

Mots clés : Appropriation du pouvoir, droits, qualité de vie, médication, émancipation, approches inspirantes

Linda Little, militante, Prise II, Montréal; Annie Pavois, responsable au développement des pratiques et à la formation, Regroupement des ressources alternatives en santé mentale du Québec (RRASMQ), Montréal; Céline Cyr, formatrice GAM, RRASMQ, Montréal; Analice Palombini, professeure à l’Institut de psychologie de l’Université Fédérale de Rio Grande do Sul, Brésil; Pierre-Luc St-Hilaire, intervenant, accompagnateur GAM, Prise II, Montréal, Lourdes Rodriguez, professeure, École de service social, Université de Montréal et directrice scientifique à la recherche sociale du CIUSSS du-Nord-de-l’île-de-Montréal

Cette présentation vous fera découvrir la GAM, le développement de cette approche au Québec et au Brésil ainsi que ses affinités avec la vision et les principes du mouvement des entendeurs de voix. La GAM porte un questionnement critique à l’égard du modèle traditionnel de la santé mentale. Elle ouvre un espace de dialogue, favorise la reconnaissance de l’expertise des personnes et permet à chacun de s’outiller afin de jouir de son plein potentiel et d’exercer ses droits.

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A13 The Simulation Argument and What it Might Mean for Voices, Visions and Other Unusual Experiences

Mots clés : Nature of reality, quantum physics, mental health

John Herold, Hearing Voices Network Trainer and Facilitator, Gig Harbor, USA

Most mainstream notions of "psychosis" assume the existence of an objective, unchanging, material reality - and that those of us who live with voices or extreme states must be out of touch with that reality. But what if we live in a simulation, a virtual reality? Many scientists believe we do. What would that mean for unusual sensory experiences?

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EN

A14 CINÉ-MENTAL : « Tenir-tête »

Une réalisation cinématographique québécoise de Mathieu Arsenault, diffusée en salle de cinéma et acclamée par la critique. Production de Natalie Barton, InformAction Film

Synopsis : Louis a été batteur du groupe les Sinners, détective privé et toxicomane. Frédérique est une photographe talentueuse et pas toujours sage comme une image. Mathieu Arsenault est cinéaste et père de famille, mi-ange, mi-démon. Ce qui les unit, c’est leur trouble affectif bipolaire. Ils ont connu les extases de la psychose et les méandres de la dépression. Ils ont trébuché et sont tombés très bas, puis ils se sont relevés. Aujourd’hui, en pleine possession de leurs moyens et ils se racontent pour combattre les préjugés et donner de l’espoir à tous ceux et celles qui sont aux prises avec la maladie mentale.

Une discussion aura lieu suivant la projection avec l’équipe de production/réalisation.

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A12 Connecting Campuses and Communities: How Can Institutions Provide Space for the Community to Heal and Connect?

Key Words : Hearing Voices, institutions, community, transversality

Benjamin Bandosz, Ph.D Student and Vanier Scholar, University of Toronto; Kevin Healey, Hearing Voices Worker, Inner City Family Heath Team of Toronto

How can the insular space of the university, as an institution of knowledge production, include the community’s voices? This workshop explores how the borders between communities and institutions are dismantled by making spaces for collective dialogues about lived experience. By listening to and accepting diverse voices we can learn to connect and heal.

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TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 12 2 PM TO 3:30 PM

B02 Le Soutien intentionnel par les pairs (Intentional Peer Support) : pour aller plus loin dans l’entraide

Mots clés : Pair-aidance, pratique réflexive, relation d’entraide intentionnelle, approche sensible aux traumatismes

Pierrette Richard, directrice générale; Céline Cyr, intervenante; Linda Little, intervenante, toutes trois de Prise II; Marie-Laurence Poirel, professeure et chercheure, École de travail social de l’Université de Montréal

Passer d’une relation fondée sur un modèle aidant/aidé à une relation d’entraide entre pairs implique un réel changement de posture. Voilà ce que les présentateurs ont expérimenté avec l’approche Intentional Peer Support de Sherry Mead qui s’appuie sur le savoir expérientiel des personnes et sur le développement de compétences spécifiques à la relation d’entraide. Une pratique inspirante, prometteuse et différente.

B03 Maintien en emploi : cinq rituels pour gérer les symptômes cliniques

Mots clés : Travail compétitif, symptômes cliniques, autogestion, rituels, conciliation travail-santé

Dominique Therrien, étudiant doctoral, Université du Québec à Montréal; Marc Corbière, professeur, UQAM, Montréal; Karine Molloy et Luc Gibeault, travailleurs; Émilie Boisvenu, agente d’intégration en emploi, les trois derniers de l’Envol SRT, Gatineau

Une étude de cas réalisée auprès de cinq travailleurs et de six professionnels qui les ont accompagnés, a permis de recenser les pratiques qui ont favorisé leur maintien en emploi compétitif. Certains rituels de préparation au travail, de réassurance, d’assertivité, de valorisation et de transition travail-repos utiles pour gérer l’anxiété au travail seront illustrés par les conférenciers (chercheur, travailleurs et intervenants).

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B01 Une mise en pratique de l’approche du rétablissement : un karaté-do de proximité et de solidarité, au-delà de l’activité physique et de l’intervention (formation de 3 heures)

Mots clés : Aide mutuelle, intervention en groupe, rétablissement, estime de soi, approche inspirante

Christiane Cadieux, coordonnatrice clinique des services de soutien continu et transitoire, suivi communautaire; Mohamed Loutfi, éducateur d’arts martiaux et animateur de groupe, tous les deux de Diogène, Montréal

Un projet novateur qui utilise art martial et intervention en groupe auprès d’adultes vivant avec un problème de santé mentale, en priorisant l’aide mutuelle et l’effort plutôt que la performance. Présentation, témoignages DVD, réflexion clinique et expérimentation, afin de nous inspirer à développer ensemble de nouvelles pratiques en santé mentale, visant à modifier notre posture d’intervention. 1re partie : 90 minutes – Vous devez vous inscrire à la 2e partie présentée à la plage horaire C-01.

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B04 De nouveaux outils psychoéducatifs pour OSER intervenir différemment, faire PARTICIPER la personne et TRANSFORMER les modèles de soins

Mots clés : Outils psychoéducatifs, collaboration, approche holistique, nouvelles technologies

Tin Ngo-Minh, psychiatre, CISSS Outaouais, Gatineau

Avant de véritablement s’engager dans des soins complexes en santé mentale, la personne doit reconnaitre qu’elle les requiert. Cet « autocritique » dépend autant de la personne que du soignant qui a la responsabilité d’expliquer. Cette primordiale tâche est malheureusement souvent négligée au profit des urgentes tâches d’évaluer et de traiter. Une panoplie d’outils psychoéducatifs à utiliser au quotidien sera présentée.

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TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 12 2 PM TO 3:30 PM

B05 Comment créer un guide de savoirs expérientiels avec une stratégie de pirate

Mots clés : Transfert des connaissances, savoir expérientiel, schizophrénie

Marie-Claude Jacques, professeure chercheure, École des sciences infirmières, Paul Morin, professeur chercheur, tous deux de l’Université de Sherbrooke - Institut Universitaire de Première Ligne en Santé et Services Sociaux du CIUSSS-Estrie CHUS.

Cet atelier raconte la stratégie originale utilisée pour créer un guide visant à enrichir les soins et services destinés aux personnes qui vivent avec la schizophrénie. Il est basé sur le croisement de savoirs expérientiels, scientifiques et professionnels. La stratégie a laissé la plus grande place aux personnes détentrices du savoir expérientiel lié à la schizophrénie.

B06 Programme Double

Une pierre, deux coups: traiter la dépendance et la santé mentale simultanément Mots clés : Dépendance, santé mentale, rétablissement, approche communautaire, activités thérapeutiques

Kierra Beattie-Dagenais, travailleuse sociale et Anthony Berger, superviseur clinique, tous deux de la Maison Dunham, Dunham, Québec

À cause des lacunes dans les services offerts aux individus atteints de troubles concomitants, ceux-ci font face à une stigmatisation sévère les empêchant d’accéder à des services appropriés. En réponse à cette problématique, le programme de traitement résidentiel de la Maison Dunham propose un modèle qui traite à la fois la dépendance et les troubles concomitants. Il vise à enseigner le développement des compétences de vie au travers d’une approche communautaire, des ateliers psychoéducatifs, des activités thérapeutiques ainsi que la thérapie individuelle et de groupe.

Étude de cas : L’implantation du premier groupe Dual Recovery Anonymous (DRA) au Québec Mots clés : Dépendance, santé mentale, groupes anonymes

Mishaun States, usager-partenaire, co-fondateur du premier groupe DRA, Montréal; Jennifer Dahak, chargée de projet Primauté de la personne, CIUSSS de l’Ouest-de-l’Île-de-Montréal; Don Mckay, co-fondateur du premier groupe DRA et mentor de Mishaun States, Montréal; Annie Lebeau, chef de service rétablissement et intégration sociale au CIUSSS de l’Ouest-de-l’Île-de-Montréal

Revivez l’implantation du premier groupe anonyme non professionnel, autofinancé et autogéré par les pairs, qui s’attarde à la double problématique de dépendance et de santé mentale. Le Dual Recovery Anonymous trouve ses racines dans un programme en 12 étapes, calqué sur celui des Alcooliques Anonymes mais adapté dans son contenu. Cette initiative est celle d’un usager du CIUSSS de l’Ouest-de-l’Île-de-Montréal.

B07 Femmes autochtones : Enjeux, réalités et avenir

Mots clés : Violence faite aux femmes autochtones, stigmatisation, répression, résilience et rétablissement

Viviane Michel, présidente, Femmes Autochtones du Québec, Kahnawake

Cette conférence sera l’occasion de dresser un bilan des luttes des femmes autochtones au Québec et d’exposer la discrimination qui aujourd’hui prend des formes très diverses. Ce sera également une occasion d’explorer les pistes de solutions pour favoriser la reconnaissance des droits des femmes des Premières Nations et les bénéfices de les inclure dans les processus décisionnels.

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TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 12 2 PM TO 3:30 PM

B09 Young voice hearers & the future of the hearing voices movement

Key Words : young people, the future, next generation, support, hearing voices movement

Lucy Fernandes, Voice Collective Development Worker; Akiko Hart, Hearing Voices Project Manager, both from Mind in Camden, London, England.

In this workshop, participants will be brought to think together about how they can support the next generation of young voice hearers to ensure a bright future for the hearing voices movement. Delivered by workers at 'Voice Collective', a service based at Mind in Camden in London that supports young voice hearers and their networks. Young people are especially welcome to this workshop!

B10 Voice hearers who helped to make our world!

Key Words : Voices, culture, achievements, awareness raising

Ivan Barry, freelance, unwaged, awareness raiser, currently based in Germany

How many voice hearers does it take to change the world? In this illustrated talk, Ivan Barry will surprise and amaze us with figures from history who have made significant contributions to human culture. Travel through time, meet with philosophers, religious pioneers, scientists, musicians, actors and sports stars, from Socrates and Moses to Paul McCartney and more. A fun and enlightening experience!

B08 Creative ways of working with voices

Key Words : peer directed, understanding voices, from victim to victor

Karen Taylor, director of Working to Recovery & Midwife of the Soul, Isle of Lewis, Scotland, UK

Presentation about a new way of exploring voices developed by Ron Coleman and Karen Taylor that allows a person, through externalization techniques, to see how they can get caught up in the “illness trap”. The voice profiles and their narratives are explored and then, with the help of the group, the protagonists co-direct a way to sculpt the voices to see them from the outside. This allows the voice hearer to experience their voices differently and aid in the process from victim to victor.

B11 Entente de voix + autogestion = émancipation

Mots clés : Entente de voix, émancipation, autogestion, rétablissement

Magali Molinié, vice-présidente, REV France, Paris, France

Les groupes autogérés sur l’entente de voix et autres expériences déroutantes sont, depuis le début, l’un des piliers du Réseau international sur l’entente de voix. Peut-on mettre en lumière les effets produits par ces groupes sur leurs participants? Par quels moyens? Des réponses plus détaillées à cette question seront explorées dans des allers retours avec les participants de l’atelier, du travail en petit groupe et des jeux de rôle. Explorons de nouvelles pistes!

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B13 « On parle! Écoutez-vous? » ou Comment reprendre son droit de parole par le théâtre?

Mots clés : Théâtre engagé, participation citoyenne, entendeur de voix, droits et alternatives

Nathalie Godfrind, coordonnatrice du projet d’art-action communautaire, Le Rebond, Montréal; Céline Chevrier, artiste associé au projet, Montréal; 4 comédiens participants (noms à confirmer)

Joanie, entendeure de voix, a de la difficulté à gérer ses voix mais souffre encore plus du manque d’écoute autour d’elle. Découvrez son histoire à travers un extrait de la création théâtrale collective du groupe d’art-action communautaire du Rebond revendiquant d’être pleinement au cœur de leur rétablissement! Cette production théâtrale sera suivie d’un échange avec les comédiens sur les bienfaits d’une telle démarche artistique.

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 12 2 PM TO 3:30 PM

B12 Techniques d’ancrage par imagerie stratégique pour entendeurs de voix : le programme TAISE

Mots clés : Innovation, créativité, prise de pouvoir, ancrage

Julie Ohanessian, coordonnatrice du développement clinique; Carlisle Boivin, co-animateur groupe d’entendeurs de voix et conférencier, tous deux du Centre Inter-Section, Gatineau

S’inspirant de la thérapie d’impact, de la programmation neurolinguistique et des approches orientées vers les solutions, le programme TAISE du Centre Inter-Section, s’adresse aux intervenants/professionnels du milieu de la santé mentale, animateurs de groupes d’entendeurs de voix, proches et entendeurs de voix voulant découvrir une façon créative et novatrice de bonifier leurs interventions et stratégies de gestion des phénomènes.

B14 Podcast sur la santé mentale

Mots clés : Podcast, media

Pierre Craig, journaliste et animateur d’affaires publiques et Roger Archambault co-créateur de la série de podcast « Les frères humains » avec son acolyte Pierre.

« Il y a un peu plus de 15 ans, quand j’ai fait ma première attaque de panique à la télé, en direct, tout mon courage, toute ma force, ne m’ont servi à rien. Je m’en suis sorti tant bien que mal, mais abîmé dans ma confiance en moi. J’ai fait d’autres attaques de panique, à la radio en direct. Une autre peur est alors apparue, terrifiante celle-là : que ça arrive encore, que je m’effondre devant tout le monde. Et je ne pouvais absolument rien y faire. » (Pierre Craig)

Suivant la projection, un échange aura lieu entre l’équipe de production/réalisation et les participants.

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CDV The « Carnival des Voix »

An original concept by Kevin Healey, Hearing Voices Support Worker, Inner City Family Health Team of Toronto. Organized by: Kevin Healey and Dave Umbongo, Toronto

Puppets allow all forms of languages, dialects and expressions to be heard. They provide a space that is safe and rich in meaning. They can help to overcome taboos and barriers. It is from this perspective that the Carnival des Voix invites you to this fun activity of expression and solidarity with voice hearers (see detailed advertisement on page 18).

Free and continuous entrance, without prior registration.

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TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 12 4 PM TO 5:30 PM

C02 Modèle « Recovery College » : une première implantation au Québec!

Mots clés : Co-construction des savoirs, auto-gestion, rétablissement, recherche-action

Gabriella Molina, coordonnatrice de recherche; Myreille Bédard, formatrice Recovery College et agente de projet; Joanie Thériault, assistante de recherche, étudiante au doctorat en sciences biomédicales à l’UQTR, toutes trois du Centre de recherche de l’Institut universitaire en santé mentale de Montréal; autres partenaires du projet à confirmer.

Dans un premier temps, les présentatrices présenteront brièvement le modèle « Recovery College », entre autres à travers ses principes-clés. Dans un deuxième temps, elles présenteront le premier processus d’implantation de ce modèle au Québec. Cette partie inclura notamment le témoignage d’une organisation partenaire et de deux formateurs du projet « Recovery College » québécois.

C03 Les regroupements régionaux d’organismes communautaires comme acteur pivot du développement communautaire et de l’innovation en santé mentale

Mots clés : Développement communautaire, mutualisation des pratiques, communautés de pratiques, pratiques innovantes

Charles Rice, directeur, AGIR en santé mentale, Québec; Andréa Simard, coordonnatrice, ARASM-02, Alma; Yves Blanchet, directeur, ROBSM-04-17, Trois-Rivières; Lucy Hébert; animatrice de l’atelier et contractuelle pour le ROCSMM, Saint-Constant, tous du réseau communautaire en santé mentale (COSME)

On connaît les regroupements régionaux pour leur mission de représentation et de promotion de l’action communautaire en santé mentale. Moins connu est leur rôle pivot et mobilisateur dans l’émergence de pratiques innovantes. Prenant à témoin des réalisations dans trois régions du Québec, la présentation dégagera les conditions pour assurer la diffusion et la pérennité de ces initiatives. Perspectives et enjeux.

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C01 Une mise en pratique de l’approche du rétablissement : un karaté-do de proximité et de solidarité, au-delà de l’activité physique et de l’intervention (formation de 3 heures)

Mots clés : Aide mutuelle, intervention en groupe, rétablissement, estime de soi, approche inspirante

Christiane Cadieux, coordonnatrice clinique des services de soutien continu et transitoire, suivi communautaire; Mohamed Loutfi, éducateur d’arts martiaux et animateur de groupe, tous les deux de Diogène, Montréal

Un projet novateur qui utilise art martial et intervention en groupe auprès d’adultes vivant avec un problème de santé mentale, en priorisant l’aide mutuelle et l’effort plutôt que la performance. Présentation, témoignages DVD, réflexion clinique et expérimentation, afin de nous inspirer à développer ensemble de nouvelles pratiques en santé mentale, visant à modifier notre posture d’intervention. La 1re partie est présentée à la plage horaire B-01

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C04 Oser innover ensemble pour favoriser la participation citoyenne : PISE, Programme intégré de soutien à l’emploi, un partenariat public-communautaire

Mots clés : Emploi accompagné, exclusion zéro, alliance, travail compétitif

Julie Lesage, directrice adjointe, direction des programmes Santé mentale et dépendances, Josée Duquette, conseillère en adaptation au travail, toutes deux de l’Institut universitaire en santé mentale de Québec du CIUSSS de la Capitale-Nationale, Québec; Francine Cyr, directrice et Stéphane Fortier, coordonnateur, tous les deux du Pavois de Québec; autre présentateur à confirmer

La Capitale-Nationale propose PISE, un modèle novateur d’intégration et de soutien à l’emploi sur le marché du travail régulier, basé sur le modèle américain IPS (Individual Placement and Supports). Ce programme innove en alliant les forces du CIUSSS et de trois organismes communautaires. Bilan de la première année de l’équipe mixte public-communautaire. Du partenariat au bon « Job Match »; enjeux et éléments-clé du succès.

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C06 Working with Crees : Being part of a healing process

Key Words : Crees community, collaborative work between non-native and native, spiritual conception of mental health

Janique Harvey, psychiatrist and Mary-Louise Snowboy, health nurse for Cree Health Board. Cree Health Board, Community of Chisasibi, Quebec James Bay

Within the Cree Health Board, a non-native psychiatrist and a Cree nurse, are working together to unveil the fear of the well known or the unknown. Through different clinical vignettes, they will look at symptoms as part of other spiritual conception establishing a bridge between mental health services (maanuuhiikuu) and traditional healing (nishiyu).

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 12 4 PM TO 5:30 PM

C05 Programme double

Le groupe « Reprendre pouvoir », du rétablissement à la prise de parole commune Mots clés : Rétablissement, prise de parole commune, participation citoyenne, partenariat-patient

Pierre Cardinal, Francine Roberge, Bernard Saulnier, Véronique Lemay-Caron, toutes des personnes en rétablissement associées au groupe « Reprendre pouvoir », Montréal

Des membres de « Reprendre pouvoir », un groupe de rétablissement par et pour, présenteront comment, par une participation citoyenne, ils ont adopté des prises de position commune sur des enjeux tels la rémunération des patients partenaires, le dévoilement et la reconnaissance du savoir expérientiel qu’ils défendent lors de leurs différentes activités de partenariat-patient.

Entre mes psychoses, survivre! Mots clés : Psychose, rétablissement, pair aidant, stigmatisation

Colombe St-Louis, paire aidante, Institut universitaire en santé mentale du CIUSSS de l’Est-de-l’Île-de-Montréal

À partir de son vécu et à titre de pair aidante, la présentatrice abordera sa première psychose et son rétablissement. Elle présentera un livre qu’elle a publié comme outil. Celui-ci comporte deux volets : un témoignage et une série d’exercices pratiques basés sur l’écriture. Cet outil de rétablissement vise à aider la personne à cheminer dans son rétablissement ainsi que ses proches et les intervenants en plus de contribuer à diminuer la stigmatisation!

C07 Spirituality and madness: Voices, extremes states, and visionary experiences

Key Words : Alternative views of mental health, spirituality, voice hearing, visions, other sensorial experiences

Will Hall, mental health advocate, counselor, coach and therapist, Portland, US

Voices, visions, mania, and extreme states are linked to mystical truth, to spiritual emergence across human cultures. Hear how to best embrace a multicultural view to what gets called "mental illness" and give better practical support? When should we understand trauma and psychosis as gifts of the wounded healer? What is a harm reduction approach to the risks of spirituality? What is real?

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TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 12 4 PM TO 5:30 PM

C09 When pain speaks, who listens?

Key Words : pain, wound, trauma, crisis, homelessness, addictions, learning from voices, harm-reduction

Kevin Healey, Hearing voices Support Worker; Roxie Danielson, Registered Nurse; Dave Umbongo, voice hearer, all three from Inner City Family Health Team of Toronto.

We often talk of traumas as events when it is in fact the effects left within us such as the pain of being rendered powerless, dehumanized, disconnected and discarded by the world that constitute the traumas. What happens when that pain finds its voice[s] and speaks? What happens when an urban health team begins to listen to those living with difficult-to-hear voices midst a crisis of homelessness and overdoses?

C11 Voyage dans l’univers d’un entendeur de voix : place à l’expression de soi

Mots clés : Conférence-témoignage, entendeurs de voix, sens, expression de soi

Serge Tracy, auteur, entendeur de voix, Le Pavois de Québec

Conférence-témoignage d’un entendeur de voix qui met en lien des enjeux de ses traumatismes d’enfance avec la manifestation ultérieure des voix. Serge Tracy questionne le sens attribuable aux voix en tenant compte de la place de l’expression de soi dans une quête de sens unique à chacun.

C08 Grassroots movements and conflict

Key Words : Grassroots movements, conflicts as growth opportunities, mutual goals, collaborative work

Lisa Forestell, President, Intervoice, Boston, US; Rachel Waddingham, President, Hearing Voices Network, England

Come together with Lisa Forestell and Rachel Waddingham to discuss conflict in grassroots work in an open discussion framework. Many of us have met with the immovable wall, an argument with someone we had hoped to partner with that just can't be settled. Why does this happen? Why don't mutual goals move us beyond disagreement? This discussion will touch upon the strengths and weaknesses of grassroots-led movements. The presenters hope that, with the wisdom of the attendees, it will be possible to sketch paths that go beyond difficulties and welcome these as opportunities for growth and healing.

C10 Les Acousmates, groupe de jeunes entendeurs de voix

Mots clés : Groupe, adolescents, entraide, activités, rêves

Ariane Pichette, agente de rétablissement jeunesse et Anick Ford, agente de rétablissement, toutes deux du Pavois, Québec; Marie-Josée Marois, psychologue, Centre de pédopsychiatrie de Québec; Juliette Soucy, étudiante, Québec.

Présentation du premier groupe de jeunes adolescents entendeurs de voix à Québec. Ce groupe d’entraide est le fruit d’une collaboration entre le Centre de Pédopsychiatrie de Québec, le Pavois et Bell Cause pour la cause. L’évolution du groupe (objectifs, activités et accompagnement dans le projet de vie) et une vidéo témoignage sur les jeunes et les voix seront présentées. Une jeune participante partagera également son expérience. Brève présentation d’un site Internet dédié aux familles et aux jeunes.

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TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 12 4 PM TO 5:30 PM

C14 CINÉ-MENTAL : Le chemin d’U, La paire-aidance au sein de notre programme FAIRE

Mots clés : Rétablissement, accompagnateur, espoir

Réalisation : Mathieu Durocher, L’Apogée Présentateurs : Ulrique Collin, pair-aidant bénévole, Mathieu Durocher, intervenant psychosocial et Hélène Tessier, directrice générale, tous de L’Apogée

Dans une brève entrevue, Ulrique Collin, pair aidant à L’Apogée, nous présente les différents services offerts par l’organisme, une association pour les parents et amis de la personne vivant avec un trouble de santé mentale. Il relate également son parcours de rétablissement avec un trouble de santé mentale, la schizophrénie, ainsi que la façon dont son entourage l’a accompagné sur le chemin de son rétablissement.

C12 Inspiring Transformation: A Workshop on Innovative Collaborative Recovery-OrientedApproach to Voice Hearing

Mots clés : Recovery, inclusion, empowerment, collaboration, peers

Nicola Wright, Nancy Bahl, Dana Brown, Jackie Dunstan, Tomas Fogl, Danielle Frenette, Tyrone Gamble, Peggy Hickman, Sheri Leroux, Chelsea Meldrum, Lisa Murata, Maryam Khan Kirsten Morris, Kevin Ritchie, Noor Sharif, Helen Thai, Jessica Tutino, Amy Webb, Catherine Zanelli-Daigneault, The Royal Ottawa Health Care Group.

Connecting, empowering, compassionate and collaborative approaches to hearing voices groups (HVG). This will be presented by experts with experience and training. HVG integrating HVN values/philosophies integrated with cognitive behavioural therapy for recovery approaches will be discussed/demonstrated. The critical role of voice hearers (including peer support workers) in mental health organizations’ voice hearing service development and delivery will be highlighted.

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CDV The « Carnival des Voix »

An original concept by Kevin Healey, Hearing Voices Support Worker, Inner City Family Health Team of Toronto. Organized by: Kevin Healey and Dave Umbongo, Toronto

Puppets allow all forms of languages, dialects and expressions to be heard. They provide a space that is safe and rich in meaning. They can help to overcome taboos and barriers. It is from this perspective that the Carnival des Voix invites you to this fun activity of expression and solidarity with voice hearers (see detailed advertisement on page 18).

Free and continuous entrance, without prior registration.

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C13 Lets join our stories - Hearing those who hears voices!

Key words: Testimonies, voice hearers, lived experience, sharing

Lisa Benisty and Nathalie Godfrind,community workers at Prise II, Montreal

If our life courses are all unique, in this workshop, it is particularly true of those of people who hear voices and those who live with other sensorial experiences and we wish to know and understand them better. Come to listen and share to know more about their life experiences, pitfalls, sources of inspiration and resilience.

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INTERVOICE GENERAL FIRST NATIONS AND INUITS

CINE-MENTAL ARTS & CULTURES

FR FRENCH EN ENGLISH SIMULTANEOUS TRANSLATION

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WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 13 8:30 AM TO 10 AM

D02 Oser utiliser des éléments de sa vie personnelle en relation d'aide : enjeux, balises, techniques, risques et possibilités

Mots clés : Stigmatisation, avancées internationales, savoir expérientiel, dévoilement, dévoilement des professionnels

Laurence Caron, chargé de projet, AQRP; Sandrine Rousseau, coordonnatrice du programme Pairs Aidants Réseau et du REV Québécois, AQRP, Québec; François Lauzier-Jobin, chargé de projet, AQRP, candidat au doctorat en psychologie communautaire, UQAM

Les professionnels en relation d'aide (infirmiers, ergothérapeutes, etc.) ont tous une histoire personnelle (liée ou non aux problèmes de santé mentale et au rétablissement). Peuvent-ils l'utiliser dans leur travail en révélant certains éléments (lesquels) judicieusement? L'atelier vise à présenter l'état des connaissances à ce sujet et à proposer des baliser et pistes de réflexions à ceux qui désirent le faire.

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D04 Le déploiement des infirmières navigatrices de proximité et du programme HoPE en santé mentale jeunesse au CIUSSSCN : une pratique novatrice

Mots clés : Accompagnement, santé globale, implication usagers et proches

Marcel Jr Daudelin, chef de programme des services de proximité en santé mentale jeunesse; Genevieve Poirier, infirmière navigatrice au programme HoPE; Jennifer Brown, infirmière navigatrice de proximité en santé mentale des jeunes, tous les trois du CIUSSS de la Capitale-Nationale, Québec; Elsa Gilbert, neuropsychologue et professeure, Centre de recherche CERVO et UQAR-Campus de Lévis

L’infirmière navigatrice constitue la pierre angulaire du virage clinique orienté vers les soins par étapes et la réorganisation des services en santé mentale jeunesse à Québec. Son rôle évolue d’une fonction de responsable des guichets d’accès à un rôle d’infirmière clinicienne qui accompagne les enfants/jeunes et leur famille tout au long du parcours incluant du soutien lors d’épisodes de soins spécialisés.

D01 Thematic Day Dedicated to Hiring People in Recovery as Mental Health Services Providers / Symposium in the morning (D-01 and E-01) and round table in the afternoon

Key Words : Experience of England, recovery and peer support worker, integration goals, exemplary employer

Daniel Gélinas, psycho-educator and retired social worker from the Montreal Mental Health University Institute welcomes three British practitioners to talk about their experiences over the last decade. Emma Watson, Peer Support Development Lead at the Nottinghamshire Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust, Nottingham as well as Suzan Preston-Eyles, Counselor and Registered Psychotherapist and Sharon Gilfoyle, Manager Responsible for Recovery and Resilience, both from the Cambridge and Peterborough NHS Foundation Trust in Peterborough, Peterborough.

Designated by the UK Ministry of Health as demonstration sites to make the necessary changes to “make recovery a reality”, the Nottinghamshire Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust and the Cambridge and Peterborough NHS Foundation Trust (CPFT) have adopted a strategic planning to transform the organisational culture, allowing the massive hiring of peer support workers in all services and the establishment of recovery colleges. As exemplary employers, and one of them (CPFT) even launched a campaign against the stigma inviting professionals to disclose what their challenges are to illustrate that recovery is everyone’s business!

1st part of 90 minutes You must register to the 2nd part presented at the time-slot E-01.

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D03 La participation des usagers et des proches aux politiques de changement : le modèle de la réforme des soins en santé mentale en Belgique

Mots clés : Réforme, participation des usagers et des proches, changement de culture, Belgique

Bernard Jacob, coordinateur fédéral des réformes des soins en santé mentale, Service Public Fédéral Santé Publique, Bruxelles, Belgique

Ces dernières années, la mise en place des soins orientés vers la communauté a marqué la réforme des soins en santé mentale en Belgique. La participation des usagers et des proches aux différents niveaux d’organisation constitue un levier important qui a engendré des avancées considérables. Présentation des orientations, enjeux et avancées : un véritable défi, un changement de culture évident.

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WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 13 8:30 AM TO 10 AM

D06 Mobiliser les forces afin de créer un groupe entourage inspirant pour l’entourage de personnes présentant des troubles psychotiques et des troubles d’utilisations de substances

Mots clés : Membres de l’entourage, troubles concomitants, comité novateur

Karine Gaudreault, étudiante au doctorat, travailleuse sociale, Université de Sherbrooke; Karl Turcotte, travailleur social, CIUSSS de la Capitale-Nationale, Québec; Johanne Bolduc, membre de l’entourage et participante au comité; Louise Carbonneau, membre de l’entourage

Comme proche, comment puis-je influencer positivement le rétablissement d’une personne présentant un trouble psychotique et un trouble d’utilisation de substance? Quoi dire? Quoi faire? Et comme intervenant, comment aborder le tout avec des parents? Comme organisme, comment développer cette pratique? Voici le travail d’un comité courageux ayant développé un groupe pour l’entourage mais surtout, ayant fait preuve d’ingéniosité, d’humilité et d’une mobilisation inspirante.

D05 Intervenants pairs aidants et groupes d’entendeurs de voix : analyse comparative et discussion

Mots clés : Mouvements de clientèle, entraide, pair-aidance, professionnalisation, émancipation

Mathieu Bouchard, pair aidant et chercheur doctoral, HEC Montréal; Benoit Saint-Pierre, intervenant pair aidant, Hôpital Notre-Dame, Montréal; Nathalie Godfrind, facilitatrice du groupe Mille et une voix, Prise II, Montréal

En s’appuyant sur une étude ethnographique réalisée entre 2015 et 2018, Mathieu Bouchard, chercheur doctoral, présentera une analyse comparative des intervenants pairs aidants et des entendeurs de voix en tant que mouvements de clientèle. Benoit Saint-Pierre, pair aidant certifié, et Nathalie Godfrind, entendeure de voix engagée, l’accompagneront pour y partager leur savoir expérientiel comme membres de ces mouvements.

D07 Programme double

Apprivoiser sa solitude et développer son réseau Mots clés : Promotion-prévention, ateliers, groupe, aînés, empowerment

Catherine Gareau-Blanchard, chargée de projet, Association canadienne pour la santé mentale – Filiale de Montréal

Alors qu’une solitude choisie peut être appréciée et agréable, l’isolement social constitue un facteur de risque en santé mentale. Avec la série d’ateliers de groupe « Apprivoiser sa solitude et développer son réseau », l’ACSM-Montréal propose un programme qui vise à répondre aux besoins des Montréalais de 55 ans et plus qui se sentent seuls, et ce dans une approche de promotion-prévention.

La guidance émotionnelle et l’art de vivre Mots clés : Psychologie, spiritualité, estime de soi, mieux-être, pensées positives

Virginie Brastaviceanu, intervenante, Café communautaire Coup de Cœur, Ste-Agathe-des-Monts

En se basant sur l’échelle émotionnelle du livre « Demandez et vous recevrez » de Esther et Jerry Hicks, la présentatrice expliquera comment on peut se servir de cette échelle pour se situer en rapport avec une situation. Elle abordera l’importance de notre perception des situations, l’impact des pensées sur les émotions, le contrôle que nous avons sur les pensées (selon le modèle cognitif comportemental), la responsabilisation sur notre vie, la notion de discernement, ainsi que l’importance d’une hygiène émotionnelle dans nos vies.

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WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 13 8:30 AM TO 10 AM

D09 Kapeciwin : campement en territoire

Mots clés : Réappropriation culturelle et identitaire, intervention, participation de la famille

Jacqueline Rock, agente de relations humaines; Katleen Adams, conseillère à la programmation et à l’intervention, toutes deux du Conseil de la Nation Atikamekw, La Tuque

Kapeciwin signifie campement en territoire, un lieu de ressourcement pour recréer et renforcer les liens familiaux. Selon les présentatrices, dans cet espace et dans le for intérieur de chacun des membres de la Nation, la famille élargie est omniprésente. Elle les aide à se réapproprier leurs valeurs, leurs traditions. Par l’inclusion familiale, la participation, la réappropriation culturelle et identitaire, une meilleure interaction entre les membres et avec leurs enfants peut se développer.

D10 Whole Life Recovery Community: A five-year experience of working with people who hear voices within a mental health service (3-hour training session: first part)

Key Words: Making meaning, emancipation, sharing responsibility, collectivism, co-creation, peer to peer

Paul Baker, Community Development Worker, England and Roberta Casadio, Doctor of Psychology, Hearing Voices Network, Cymru, Wales, UK.

Is it possible for experts by experience, social networks, family members and co-workers to commit to working together as partners with people who hear voices in a democratic space? Can this be done within a mental health service? You must register to the 2nd part at the time-slot E-10.

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D08 Programme double

Quand l’aventure et la nature deviennent une intervention inspirante pour les personnes vivant avec la schizophrénie ou des psychoses apparentées et leurs proches Mots clés : Nature aventure, intervention inspirante, schizophrénie, psychoses, avec les proches

Alice Charasse, directrice générale, Société québécoise de la schizophrénie et des psychoses apparentées, Montréal; Jean-Philippe LeBlanc, fondateur et directeur général, Face aux vents, Montréal

Deux organismes en santé mentale s’allient pour créer une intervention inspirante, différente, nouvelle et dynamique. Et si une activité de plein air deviendrait le cadre d’une intervention? Et si on laissait une place à la nature et qu’on se permettait un peu d’aventure? On bouge pour notre mieux-être : c’est le projet que les présentateurs ont créé!

La neurodiversité et notre droit d’être unique Mots clés : Neurodiversité, rétablissement, pair-aidance

Lucila Guerrero, mentore pair aidante, cofondatrice, Aut’Créatifs, Montréal

À partir de son parcours et de ses expériences de vie en tant qu’autiste et en tant que personne ayant vécu des problèmes de santé mentale (anorexie, dépression), la présentatrice abordera le concept de la neurodiversité soit la diversité naturelle de cerveaux, des esprits et des fonctionnements cognitifs dans l’espèce humaine. Ce concept propose de réviser les idées de « normalisation » pour l’accueil et le respect des individualités avec un regard sur les forces pour favoriser le développement personnel ainsi que le bien-être.

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WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 13 8:30 AM TO 10 AM

D14 CINÉ-MENTAL : Beyond possible: How the hearing voices approach transforms lives, screening and panel discussion of a new film

Key Words: Peer support, alternative approaches, rethinking pathology

Gail A. Hornstein, Mount Holyoke College, South Hadley, Massachusetts, USA; Caroline Mazel-Carlton et Cindy Marty Hadge, Wildflower Alliance of the Western Massachusetts Recovery Learning Community, Holyoke, USA

Our team of voice hearers, researchers, and other peer advocates have created a new 20-minute film in which a diverse range of voice hearers from across the United States describe how hearing voices peer support groups are transforming their lives. The session will include a screening of the film, short presentations by some members of the team, and an open discussion.

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D12 Mes voix, ma dangerosité et mon rétablissement

Mots clés : Voix, perceptions, dangerosité, rétablissement, lutte contre la stigmatisation

Serge Carrier, psychoéducateur et Jacques Grégoire, éducateur spécialisé, tous les deux de l’Institut national de psychiatrie légale Philippe-Pinel; Patients participant aux groupes d’entendeurs de voix et/ou vidéos de participants et de professionnels

« À ce moment-là, mes voix m’ordonnaient de me défendre et de frapper, et je leur ai obéi. » L’implantation d’un groupe d’entendeurs de voix à l’Institut national de psychiatrie légale Philippe-Pinel n’a pas été chose facile. Pourtant, le travail avec les voix devient incontournable pour retourner vivre en société. Récit et témoignages de cette innovation.

D11 Double Program

Killing Rachel: The grief process of extinguished voices Key Words : Voices, grief, narrative, feelings, emotions, stigma, ownership

Samantha Thornton, voice hearer, Shatter Speech, Houston, Texas, US

The presentation will explore the often ignored personal consequence of a voice that has died; particularly when a voice hearer has participated in its extinguishing. A voice hearer will share her lived experience to provide insight into coping with the grief process. The dissonance of grief feelings, considering societal perceptions about voices will be examined in addition to personal experience.

How my voices gave me back my life Key Words : Displacement, immigration, alienation, spirituality, belonging

Claire Bien, voice hearer and scientific, Yale University Program for Recovery and Community Health, Hamden, Connecticut, US.

In this workshop, the presenter will apply a citizenship lens to her own story of familial displacement, refugee flight, immigration, trauma, existential distress, alienation, turning inward, suicidality, hearing voices, and then, somehow, thanks to her kind voices, a return to the world. This is an understanding that is linked to a mostly caring and loving presence that has allowed one women to re-find herself and re-find her life.

D13 Infinite Are the Mercies of God: A Personal and Political History of Hearing the Voice of God

Key words: History of voice-hearing, spirituality

Bradley Aldridge, voice-hearer, Vancouver

Throughout the history of human spirituality, there have been people who report hearing the voice or voices of the Divine. This presentation intersperses narratives of historical figures who reported hearing the voice of God with the presenter’s own personal experience of hearing the voice of God; asking us to consider what such experiences have meant and could mean.

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FR FRENCH EN ENGLISH SIMULTANEOUS TRANSLATION

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WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 13 10:30 AM TO 12 PM

E02 Dare to imagine: Shifting the risk paradigm in mental health care systems through Stepped Care 2.0

Key Words : Stepped care, co-design, rapid access, recovery, e-mental health

Peter Cornish, Psychologist, Associate Professor and former Director of the Student Wellness and Counselling Centre (SWCC), Memorial University, St. John’s, Newfoundland; Laurence Caron, Project Manager, Consultant, Trainer, AQRP

We do not have a mental health system. Instead we have a confusing assortment of limited services that are difficult to access when people need them. “Stepped Care 2.0” promises a recovery-oriented system of care developed through co-design with all stakeholders. It ensures rapid access to a wide range of care options that can be easily adjusted as needs change.

E01 Thematic Day Dedicated to Hiring People in Recovery as Mental Health Services Providers / Symposium in the morning (D-01 and E-01) and round table in the afternoon

Key Words : Experience of England, recovery and peer support worker, integration goals, exemplary employer

Daniel Gélinas, psycho-educator and retired social worker from the Montreal Mental Health University Institute welcomes three British practitioners to talk about their experience over the last decade. Emma Watson, Peer Support Development Lead at the Nottinghamshire Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust, Nottingham as well as Suzan Preston-Eyles, Counselor and Registered Psychotherapist and Sharon Gilfoyle, Manager Responsible for Recovery and Resilience, both Cambridge and Peterborough NHS Foundation Trust in Peterborough, Peterborough.

Designated by the UK Ministry of Health as demonstration sites to make the necessary changes to “make recovery a reality”, the Nottinghamshire Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust and the Cambridge and Peterborough NHS Foundation Trust (CPFT) have adopted a strategic planning to transform the organisational culture, allowing the massive hiring of peer support workers in all services and the establishment of recovery colleges. As exemplary employers, and one of them (CPFT) even launched a campaign against the stigma inviting professionals to disclose how they deal with challenges to illustrate that recovery is everyone’s business!

2nd part of 90 minutes You must register to the 1st part presented at the time-slot D-01.

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E04 Les conditions nécessaires pour une mise à profit du savoir expérientiel dans les projets en santé mentale jeunesse

Mots clés : Santé mentale jeunesse, savoir expérientiel, conditions gagnantes

Emmanuelle Saulnier, chargée de projet jeunesse à l’AQRP; Membres du Comité d’Orientation et Suivi du Grand Rassemblement Jeunesse en Santé Mentale

L’intégration du savoir expérientiel constitue une valeur ajoutée de plus en plus reconnue dans les projets en santé mentale jeunesse. Mais quelles conditions sous-tendent une préparation efficace pour la mise en valeur de leur savoir, un milieu réceptif et accueillant pour leur expertise, et un fort impact postérieur tirant profit de ceux-ci? C’est ce à quoi cet atelier participatif répondra.

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E03 Portrait de la réadaptation psychosociale par le travail au Québec : une pratique innovante pour le rétablissement en santé mentale

Mots clés : Insertion socioprofessionnelle, réadaptation psychosociale par le travail, rétablissement, milieu communautaire

François Lauzier-Jobin, chargé de projet, candidat au doctorat en psychologie communautaire, AQRP, Québec, UQAM, Montréal; Simon Hénaire, agent de projet, étudiant en sciences politiques, AQRP, Université Laval, Québec

Le travail peut avoir une influence positive et négative sur la santé mentale des individus, mais qu’en est-il pour les personnes ayant un problème de santé mentale, trop souvent coupées du marché du travail? Le travail peut être un moteur pour leur rétablissement. Portrait des pratiques de réadaptation psychosociale par le travail (RPST) au Québec, dans lesquelles on se sert du travail comme médium pour favoriser le rétablissement.

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WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 13 10:30 AM TO 12 PM

E06 Mûrs pour construire ensemble: l’espoir d’aller plus loin!

Mots clés : Membres de l’entourage, intervenants, rétablissement, construire ensemble

Marie-Eve Leblond, directrice générale, Le Cercle Polaire; Catie Bergeron, directrice générale, La Marée

En octobre 2017, le comité régional des organismes de proches (CROP) organisait une journée de sensibilisation à la collaboration entre les membres de l’entourage et les intervenants du CIUSSS de la Capitale-Nationale. Cette journée fût un succès. Nous proposons cet atelier afin de présenter cette réalisation et d’en imaginer la suite.

E05 Partenariat entre le réseau et les organismes communautaires: Un peu, beaucoup, à la folie!

Mots clés : Partenariat, collaboration, organismes communautaires, participation citoyenne

Charles Rice, président, Guy Châteauneuf, chargé de projet et Claude Saint-Georges, personne ressource, tous les trois du Réseau COSME, Lucy Hébert; animatrice de l’atelier et contractuelle pour le ROCSMM, Patrick Duchesne; directeur du programme santé mentale et dépendances au CIUSSS de la Capitale-Nationale, Annie Plante; directrice des programmes santé mentale et dépendances au CISSS de Lanaudière

Trente ans après la Politique de santé mentale dont la trame de fond est le partenariat, qu’en est-il des relations entre les organismes communautaires et le réseau public? Une étude réalisée par le Réseau communautaire en santé mentale (COSME) auprès des 22 centres intégrés et des 16 regroupements d’organismes communautaires (100% de réponses) jette un éclairage sur le sujet.

E08 Saqijuq - A Change in Wind Direction

Key Words : Innovative, community participation, collaborate and communicate

Aileen MacKinnon, coordinator, Saqijuq (Nunavik Regional Board of Health and Social Services), Kuujjuaq ; Juani Beaulne, coordinator, Saqijuq Puvirnituq ; Paulusi Beaulne, educator, Saqijuq Puvirnituq, Nunavic

Saqijuq means "A Change in Wind Direction". This innovative approach is better adapted to the reality of Nunavik since the actions, and majority of decisions, are made at the community level. Having a solid partnership with local and regional services and organizations, Saqijuq works to break down barriers, have organizations collaborate and communicate to complement, not duplicate, the services offered.

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E07 Soutenir la participation sociale et le rétablissement des aînés présentant des troubles mentaux graves : des notions clés aux pratiques prometteuses

Mots clés : Participation sociale, personnes âgées, troubles mentaux graves, interventions, pratiques

Christophe Tremblay, étudiant au doctorat, chargé de cours et professionnel de recherche et Bernadette Dallaire, professeure titulaire et codirectrice de l’IPVSA, tous deux de l’École de travail social et de criminologie de l’Université Laval.

Les aînés qui vivent avec des troubles mentaux graves présentent des besoins de soutien complexes. Ils peinent toutefois à accéder à des services qui leurs sont adaptés, notamment en raison de préjugés sur l’âgisme. Cet atelier vise à démystifier la réalité des aînés aux prises avec de tels troubles et à discuter des pratiques novatrices pour soutenir leur participation sociale.

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E09 Favoriser le mieux-être des Premières Nations par des approches d’intervention culturellement adaptées

Mots clés : Approches traditionnelles

Natasha Hervieux, Conseillère en mieux-être et prévention des dépendances ; Marie-Noëlle Logier-Paquette, Conseillère en santé mentale

Comment combiner des approches traditionnelles et cliniques dans l’intervention en santé et mieux-être mental au sein de projets communautaires et culturels. De quoi sagit-il lorsque nous parlons de programmes de guérison en territoire? Nous ferons un survol du contexte d’intervention dans les communautés des Premières Nations et proposerons des exemples d’interventions culturellement adaptées en mieux-être et santé mentale.

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WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 13 10:30 AM TO 12 PM

E11 Ghosts in the Machine: An integrative approach to dissociation, psychosis and supernatural experiences

Key Words : Trauma, spirituality, dissociation, integrated approach

Rory Higgs, Artist and Speaker, BC Hearing Voices Network, Vancouver, British Columbia

Psychosis, dissociative states, and spiritual understandings of voice hearing (and other unusual perceptions/beliefs) have long been held in opposition. This presentation draws on lived experience as well as traumatology, mad studies, and cultural neuroscience to argue that these distinctions are socially constructed, and proposes a radical reimagining of how we categorize experiences as "real" versus "unreal".

E12 Sublimer, surmonter et surpasser avec foliARt.org

Mots clés : Art thérapie, psychose, Internet, réseaux sociaux

Tin Ngo-Minh, médecin psychiatre, Université McGill;

Et si la psychose et les automatismes mentaux étaient revus comme une Muse pour les personnes qui les vivent, telle une génératrice intarissable d’inspiration et d’émerveillement en autant que ces expériences ne leur causent pas de détresse et ne vont pas à l’encontre de leurs valeurs? L’art « sublime » alors la « folie » : célébrons ensemble foliARt.org!

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E10 Whole Life Recovery Community: A Five-year Experience of Working with People Who Hear Voices Within a Mental Health Service (3-hour training session: 2nd part)

Key Words : Making meaning, emancipation, sharing responsibility, collectivism, co-creation, peer to peer

Paul Baker, Community Development Worker, England and Roberta Casadio, Doctor of Psychology, Hearing voices Network Cymru, Wales, UK.

Is it possible for experts by experience, social networks, family members and co-workers to commit to working together as partners with people who hear voices in a democratic space? Can this be done within a mental health service?You must register to the 1st part presented at the time-slot D-10.

E13 Collaborating for a Meaningful Life: An Empowering and Humanizing Group CBTfor Voices and Recovery Integrating Third-Wave Approaches

Key Words : Voice-hearing, CBT, experts by experience collaboration, stigma, third wave

Tomas Fogl, Nancy Bahl, Dana Brown, Jackie Dunstan, Tomas Fogl, Danielle Frenette, Tyrone Gamble, Peggy Hickman, Sheri Leroux, Chelsea Meldrum, Lisa Murata, Maryam Khan Kirsten Morris, Kevin Ritchie, Noor Sharif, Helen Thai, Jessica Tutino, Amy Webb, Catherine Zanelli-Daigneault, The Royal Ottawa Health Care Group.

We are a group of persons with the lived experience of voice-hearing, as well as a nurse, psychologists and psychiatrist. In this highly experiential workshop we outline and re-enact excerpts of group CBT for voices and recovery that integrate mindfulness, ACT and compassion approaches. In these strength-based, destigmatizing collaborations we help each other live meaningful lives despite ongoing struggles.

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WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 13 10:30 AM TO 12 PM

E14 Creative Voices

Key Words : Voice-hearing, website, co-production, creativity

Victoria Patton, Communications, Engagment and Impact Lead, Hearing the Voice, Durham University; Mary Robson, Creative Facilitator for Hearing the Voice, Durham University, Angleterre

Have you got an experience or perspective on voice-hearing to share with the world? Join us at this interactive workshop to express any aspect of your experience of hearing voices through creative activities and playful prompts. You can take what you make home with you or digitize it and share it internationally on a new website, Understanding Voices.

E15 CINÉ-MENTAL : Our voice / Notre voix. Lorsque le peuple parle : l’histoire de la santé mentale au Nouveau-Brunswick

Mots clés : Influencer, résilience, connaissance alternative

Eugène LeBlanc, éditeur, Our Voice / Notre Voix; Sylvette Rousselle, présidente, Réseau des bénéficiaires en santé mentale du Nouveau-Brunswick; Nérée St-Amand, professeur émérite, Université d’Ottawa

Ce documentaire DVD trace un historique de plus de 200 années qui met l’accent sur comment les personnes utilisatrices de services en santé mentale définissent les services psychiatriques et les stratégies de résilience qu’elles ont mise en place pour surmonter leur « psychiatrisation ». Un bijou d’informations sur la reprise du pouvoir d’agir jamais vu ou entendu ailleurs. À ne pas manquer!

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CDV The « Carnival des Voix »

An original concept by Kevin Healey, Hearing Voices Support Worker, Inner City Family Health Team of Toronto. Organized by: Kevin Healey and Dave Umbongo, Toronto

Puppets allow all forms of languages, dialects and expressions to be heard. They provide a space that is safe and rich in meaning. They can help to overcome taboos and barriers. It is from this perspective that the Carnival des Voix invites you to this fun activity of expression and solidarity with voice hearers (see detailed advertisement on page 18).

Free and continuous entrance, without prior registration.

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Yannick Joubert Medium: felt-pen Ce que la Terre offre. L’épopée des gris jours qui reflètent la raison pour l’avènement des nuances. C’est pour l’ensemble des lueurs que nous nous levons. - Elisabeth Retel Coté The Void ~ Are they monsters that haunt us or are we haunting them? - Amy Lee

INTERVOICE GENERAL FIRST NATIONS AND INUITS

CINE-MENTAL ARTS & CULTURES

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WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 13 1:30 PM TO 3 PM

F02 Les aspects sociaux du rétablissement : Oser en parler pour transformer nos pratiques!

Mots clés : Rétablissement, social, relations, stigmatisation, emploi

François Lauzier-Jobin, chargé de projet, candidat au doctorat en psychologie communautaire, AQRP, UQAM; Laurence Caron, chargé de projet, AQRP

Le rétablissement est un principe majeur guidant les pratiques et la recherche au niveau national et international. Au-delà des dimensions individuelles, trop peu d’attention a été portée aux dimensions sociales du rétablissement. Grâce au travail effectué dans différents projets, cette présentation abordera le rôle des relations interpersonnelles, de la stigmatisation, de l’emploi et de l’orientation des services dans le rétablissement.

F03 Le droit pour le rétablissement; un atout

Mots clés : Participation citoyenne, impact de la connaissance des droits sur le rétablissement

Diane Parent, membre bénévole, Comité des usagers Volet santé mentale, CIUSSS de la Capitale-Nationale

Dans la Loi sur les services de santé et de services sociaux, on isole au moins 12 droits qui protègent directement l’usager des services reçus dans le système de santé provincial. En connaître l’existence, les comprendre et les savoir appliqués ou non donnent à l’usager une force, voire une sérénité pour se concentrer sur son rétablissement. C’est une question de gros bon sens.

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F01 Table ronde consacrée aux leçons tirées de l’expérience de l’Angleterre qui pourraient bonifier nos pratiques au Québec d’ici 2022

Mots clés : Pair aidant, cibles d’intégration, employeur exemplaire

Animé par Pierre Craig, journaliste et porte-parole de l’association Revivre, ce panel donnera la parole à Daniel Corbeil, directeur général adjoint par intérim des services en santé mentale et en psychiatrie légale du ministère de la Santé et des Services sociaux du Québec, Patrick Duchesne, directeur des programmes santé mentale, dépendances et itinérance (PSMDI), Institut universitaire en santé mentale de Québec du CIUSSS de la Capitale-Nationale, Alexandre St-Germain, directeur du PSMDI, Institut universitaire en santé mentale Douglas du CIUSSS de l’Ouest-de-l’Île-de-Montréal, Isabelle Legault, Directrice adjointe Programme-services Portail et Hébergement Direction des Programmes Santé Mentale, Dépendance et Itinérance CIUSSS de l'Est-de-l'Île-de-Montréal, Martin Lepage, travailleur social et intervenant pair aidant au sein de l’équipe de suivi intensif dans le milieu en équipe du CISSS du sud de Lanaudière, et Daniel Gélinas, psychoéducateur et travailleur social retraité de l’Institut universitaire en santé mentale de Montréal.

À partir de l’expérience de l’Angleterre présentée lors du symposium en matinée, comment peut-on se projeter au Québec en regard des enjeux et des cibles à atteindre quant à l’embauche des pairs aidants dans les services de santé mentale au Québec? Quelles seront les mesures à prendre pour augmenter le nombre d’intervenants pairs aidants et pour faire en sorte que les établissements du réseau de la santé et des services sociaux deviennent des employeurs exemplaires? À cet effet, un panel constitué de représentants des trois Directions des programmes santé mentale et dépendance et de la Direction de la santé mentale et de la psychiatrie légale du Ministère de la Santé et des services sociaux du Québec viendront partager leur vision et les mesures qu’ils entendent mettre de l’avant.

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F04 Récit de vie en santé mentale

Mots clés : Outil d’intervention, rétablissement, reprise de pouvoir, innovation

Maxine Timperley, participante et une autre à déterminer, Marc Brien, animateur/intervenant et Marie-Christine Roy, directrice, tous quatre de Vers l’équilibre, Montréal

L’atelier propose de partager le processus expérientiel d’une démarche de récit de vie. L’outil « récit de vie » invite les personnes à revisiter leur vie afin de donner du sens, autre que biomédical, à leur souffrance. Pour ce faire, deux participants, ainsi que l’animateur, relateront leurs réflexions autour de la création et de l’expérimentation de cet atelier dans un contexte communautaire.

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INTERVOICE GENERAL FIRST NATIONS AND INUITS

CINE-MENTAL ARTS & CULTURES

FR FRENCH EN ENGLISH SIMULTANEOUS TRANSLATION

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WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 13 1:30 PM TO 3 PM

F05 GESPER : un programme innovant axé sur le rétablissement et la qualité de vie des parents et enfants

Mots clés : Prévention et rétablissement, développement parents-enfants, pair-aidance

Marianne Benny, coordonnatrice, conférencière et formatrice et Chantal Martin, bénévole, toutes deux de Parents-Espoir

GESPER (acronyme de Groupes d’Entraide et de Soutien de Parents Engagés dans leur Rétablissement) mise sur les forces, l’approche réflexive et le développement d’habiletés parentales, personnelles et sociales. La communication saine, les actions bienveillantes, le co-développement, l’intégration de savoirs, jusqu’à la formation de parents pairs aidants, sont aussi des attributs audacieux de ce concept unique.

F07 Intentional Peer Support: A practice for social change, building on mutual relationship

Key Words : Peer support, interpersonal relationships, reciprocity

Lisa Forestell, President of Intervoice (International Hearing Voices Network), Boston and Rachel Waddingham, President, Hearing Voices Network, England

Intentional Peer Support is a powerful framework for thinking about and creating transformative relationships. Learning to navigate relationships to see things from new angles, develop greater awareness of personal relational patterns, and support to challenge each other in trying new things is central to this practice. Intentional Peer Support is used across the world in settings ranging from peer-run programs to traditional human services. Intentional Peer Support grassroots alternatives that focus on building relationships that are mutual, explorative, and conscious of power.

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F06 Reprendre du pouvoir sur sa vie

Mots clés : Atelier psychoéducatif, rétablissement, mieux-être, holistique, Premières Nations

Karine Bérubé, directrice L’Amarrage

À l’aide de la roue du bien-être, élément important dans la culture autochtone, l’atelier fournira des renseignements et favorisera la réflexion afin de contribuer au rétablissement et à l’amélioration du mieux-être de tous et chacun. Sur le plan physique, mental, affectif et spirituel, des éléments seront offerts aux participants afin de soutenir la reprise de pouvoir sur leur vie.

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F08 Listening: A learning circle

Key Words : Active listening, learning circle

Kevin Healey, Peer health promoter, peer support worker – Hearing Voices, Toronto

Too often we have come to think of listening as waiting for our opportunity to interrupt, so we can diagnose, or sound smart. That's not listening . And, "active listening" is more about looking like we are listening then really listening. Join us in learning circle sharing three ideas about listening – the real listening. Three simple ideas that can be used to begin listening more fully will be shared. Each of them will be practiced and there will be a return on the participants’ experiences.

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F09 Recueil d’entente de voix – Manuel pour décoder le message des voix

Key words: le contenu des voix, décoder le message symbolique, le dialogue avec les voix

Zsolt Mérey expert par accompagnement, facilitateur de groupe, conférencier, auteur, traducteur

Plus de 200 phénomènes sensoriels sont regroupés en sept groupes selon leur contenu. Ceux-ci visent à faciliter le décodage du message symbolique des voix et ainsi à renforcer les capacités de la personne, à identifier les causes de l’apparition des voix et à entamer un dialogue avec celles-ci à l’aide des questions fermées, et ce, dans le but de travailler avec les traumatismes de la personne qui entend les voix.

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INTERVOICE GENERAL FIRST NATIONS AND INUITS

CINE-MENTAL ARTS & CULTURES

FR FRENCH EN ENGLISH SIMULTANEOUS TRANSLATION

CONSECUTIVE INTERPRETATION

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WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 13 1:30 PM TO 3 PM

F10 Rethinking the Recovery Narrative

Key Words : Recovery, story, narrative, politics, expression

Akiko Hart, Hearing Voices Project Manager, Mind in Camden, London, UK

The ‘Recovery Narrative’ has become a dominant genre in both mainstream and alternative mental health settings. The ‘Recovery Narrative’ can be positive and empowering, but it can also have a personal and political cost. We’d like to explore other ways of speaking about the experience of hearing voices.

F11 Mentorship: Recapturing and Cultivating Sacred Gifts

Key Words : Peer support, Metis, mentorship, belonging

Tyrone Gamble, Peer Support Worker, Psychiatric Survivors of Ottawa (PSO), Ottawa

Tyrone will be sharing how mentoring from a peer support lens is essential to making sense and meaning of parallel realities and hearing voices. That mentoring can allow one to discover, recapture and cultivate meaningful and enriching lives and roles within their communities. Metis teachings will be used to go beyond just a peer support lens.

F14 CINE-MENTAL: Histoires de voix; paroles d’entendeurs (voices histories; hearers speech) (OFV - English subtitles)

Key Words : Documentary, voice hearers, Quebec reality, recovery

Production: AQRP 2019, Nathalie Godfrind, Édouard Nadeau-Besse and Marc St-Martin, Project agents, all from the Quebec Association for Psychosocial Rehabilitation

Eight voice hearers share their experience with us from within hearing voices groups of Quebec. We'll hear about their search for a meaning , motivation in the heart of the illness and the personal victories that have allowed them to reinvent themselves, or even, to recover. The protagonists show us that it is possible to break down the isolation, to escape the taboos related to voice hearing, to regain power over one’s life, to overcome traumas and regain self-esteem. Following screening, discussions will take place between the production team and the participants.

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F12 Voice Collective’s Online Forum for young voice hearers

Key Words : Young people, peer-support, online peer-support, services and resources for young people

Lucy Fernandes, Voice Collective Development Worker, Mind in Camden, London, UK

This presentation will share the experience of Voice Collective’s online forum for young people (under 26) who hear voices and their supporters. You will learn how we created the forum, how it works, and its challenges and rewards. The presentation is for anyone who’d like to use the forum - or set one up in your own language!

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F13 At the core of extraordinary experiences, spirituality and psychopathology: What is real, and what is reality?

Key Words : Spirituality; What is real? Dialog around extraordinary experiences, reflexivity

Véronique Béguet, professor, Department of Classics and Religious Studies, University of Ottawa

Why is it so difficult to listen to extraordinary experiences (visions, voices, kinesthetic sensations, vivid dreams, relationships with invisible beings…) and to integrate them into one’s life? How can we create a dialog around those experiences and how do we transmit them?

This workshop explores those delicate issues at the borders between spirituality and psychopathology. It tackles the vexing question of what is real and how to deal with various realities.

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INTERVOICE GENERAL FIRST NATIONS AND INUITS

CINE-MENTAL ARTS & CULTURES

FR FRENCH EN ENGLISH SIMULTANEOUS TRANSLATION

CONSECUTIVE INTERPRETATION

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RESERVE YOUR EXHIBIT SPACE (BOOTH) RIGHT NOW! The exhibition booths will be located in the same space as the coffee breaks, which guarantees to the exhibitors many peak times throughout the event on November 12 and 13.

Registration fees per person to hold an exhibit throughout the Congress: Two possibilities are offered to you, depending on whether you wish to participate or not in other activities of the congress (such as lectures, workshops, training sessions, coffee breaks and lunches).

Possibilities NFPO Private organization

Presence at your stand only 300 $ 400 $

Package including standard 2-day congress pass

450 $ 550 $

THE REGISTRATION FEES INCLUDE: X For each organisation, a 6-feet rectangular table, chairs and tablecloth, internet (Wi-Fi), as well as the diffusion of the

logo of the organization in the short version of the program and on the website of the event;

X For each person registered to the package allowing the participation to all activities, the coffee breaks and the lunches of the Tuesday and Wednesday are included. A person can also attend knowledge transfer activities to listen (lectures, workshop and training sessions).

The fees for electrical connection and handling by the hotel are at the expense of the exhibitors.To reserve, register online to the Congress:

To reserve, register online to the congress: www.aqrp-sm.org/colloque-2019

DISCOVER 3 SCIENTIFIC POSTERS AMONG THE EXHIBITS, LOCATED AT THE HEART OF THE ACTION!Benefit from coffee breaks and networking activities to meet the presenters and discover their poster and creativity.

A history of connections Key words: connections, hook, listening, needs, network, rhythm Dr. Philippe Huguelet, physician;Sabine Demski, nurse, specialised in psychiatry and mental healthSibylle Wolf, social assistant, all three from the University hospitals of Geneva, Switzerland

Creative and Innovative Approaches to Voice Hearing The Royal Ottawa Health Care Group. Content and themes related to voices and other sensorial experiences/alternate experiences/parallel realities will focus on group process and content and artistic, musical and other innovative and inspiring ways of representing resilience and empowerment related to voices. Quantitative and qualitative data on group process and outcomes will be presented.

The satisfaction with health services among the homelessness population in Quebec Lia Gentil, post-doctoral researcher, Guy Grenier, institution researcher, Jean-Marie Bamvita, research professional, all three from the Douglas Mental Health Institute; Henri Dorvil, researcher, UQAM (Université du Québec à Montréal); Marie-Josée Fleury, full professor, McGill University.

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THE 19TH AQRP CONGRESS: RECOGNIZED KNOWLEDGE TRANSFER ACTIVITIES!

CONTINUING EDUCATION ACTIVITY: The AQRP is recognized as a training organisation certified by the Labour Market Partners Committee; The congress meets the requirements of Law 90 regarding eligible training expenses.

RECOGNITION BY PROFESSIONAL ORDERS: The 19th AQRP Congress and Intervoice's 11th Congress: DARE - PARTICIPATE – TRANSFORM take ownership of change to influence it, is formally recognized by the Order of Social Workers and Marital and Family Therapists of Quebec, (OTSTCFQ). This recognition affects the members in good standing of the Order and excludes professionals concerned by the acquired rights. Please note that nurses, psychoeducators, occupational therapists and anyone else interested in receiving the CERTIFICATE of participation issued by the OTSTCFQ will be able to obtain it. It will be a matter of requesting it at registration. The number of hours of continuing education (HFCs) granted is 18 hours. The certificate of participation will include the number of hours of continuing education (HFCs) allocated as well as the reference number of the accredited activity.

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YOU LIVE IN QUEBEC, YOU ARE UNEMPLOYED AND YOU NEED FUNDING TO PARTICIPATE TO THE CONGRESS? For its 19th Congress, the AQRP is pleased to announce the renewal, by the Integrated Centers and the University Integrated Centers for Health and Social Services (CISSS/CIUSSS), of the financial support previously granted by the Health and Social Services Agencies, allowing the participation of a lot of people from Quebec living or having lived with a mental health problem and being unemployed.

The objective is to allow the greatest possible number of people to participate to the Congress, keeping in mind the intraregional and interorganizational equity.

X The number of persons that can be supported is limited within each region;

X The funding granted to the persons will be variable depending on the real needs of each to participant to the Congress;

X For one person, the support granted will allow coverage, if needed, for the registration fees to the Congress, the housing, if applicable (up to four nights if necessary, in double occupancy), the meals on site and the transportation (equivalent to bus transportation).

It’s our turn to need your collaboration to facilitate the management of this project:

X To be eligible, you must BE UNEMPLOYED and LIVE IN QUEBEC in one of the participating regions;

X For your request to be treated in priority, you must fill out your registration form for the Congress BY FRIDAY, OCTOBER 4, 2019;

X In the online registration form, do not forget to check the support request boxes specifying the type of help you would need to participate to the Congress and/or the 11th Intervoice Congress;

X Before presenting your request, do not hesitate to talk about it in your milieu to verify if it can help you participate in the Congress; this could offer help to a greater number of persons;

X We will provide an answer to your request toward the end of October 2019.

FOR EACH OF THE FOLLOWING REGIONS (MANAGED BY THE AQRP):Region 01 Bas-St-LaurentRegion 02 Capitale-NationaleRegion 05 Eastern TownshipsRegion 06 West-Central Island of MontrealRegion 06 South-Central Island of MontrealRegion 06 North Island of MontrealRegion 07 OutaouaisRegion 09 Côte-NordRegion 12 Chaudières-AppalachesRegion 13 LavalRegion 16 East MontérégieRegion 16 Central MontérégieRegion 16 West Montérégie

FOR ANY QUESTION REGARDING THE CONGRESS OR THE TERMS AND CONDITIONS OF SUPPORT, CONTACT:

X AM / Marc Saint-Martin, 418 523-4190, ext. 212 X PM / Danielle Lachance, 418 523-4190, ext, 214

AQRP 2380, av. du Mont-Thabor, bur. 205Québec QC G1J 3W7 Fax: 418 523-7645 Phone: 418 523-4190E-mail: [email protected]

PACKAGES OF THE INTEGRATED HEALTH AND SOCIAL SERVICES

CENTERS OF QUEBEC (CISSS/CIUSSS)

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You must address your request to each address, depending on your region of residence. For this, please consult the following table: Region 4-17Mauricie et Centre-du-Québec Regroupement des organismes de base en santé mentale des régions 4 et 17 (ROBSM) 991, rue Champfour, Trois-Rivières, QC G9A 1Z8 Contact Person : Yves Blanchette819 691-2592

Region 06 East-Island of MontrealDirection des programmes santé mentale et dépendances Développement et programmes spécifiques Contact Person : Éric Skulski 514 251-4000, # 2832

Region 06 West-Island of MontrealDirection des programmes santé mentale et dépendances Contact Person : Lynn Hewitt Manager, Rétablissement et continuum traumatismes liés au stress opérationnel (TSO) 514 457-3440, # 3202

Region 14 LanaudièreRegroupement Des Organismes Communautaires et Alternatives en Santé Mentale de Lanaudière (ROCASML)

PENDINGAt the time the program was released in August 2019, the Congress team was still waiting for some answers from CISSS/CIUSSS.

Region 11 Gaspésie et Îles-de-la-MadeleineRegion 15 Laurentides

REFUSAL CISSS/CIUSSSFor the people from the following regions, using mental health services, the AQRP has not been able to obtain the requested funding to support your participation, we are sorry about this.

Region 02 SaguenayRegion 08 Abitibi-Témiscamingue

The AQRP and all the members of its different organizing committees are proud of the implication of the CISSS/CIUSSS contributing to the support of people living or having lived with a mental health problem and who are unemployed. This unique contribution of the public network institutions shows all the importance of access and participation of people using mental health services to have mobilisation and knowledge transfer activities to promote their empowerment and recovery. It is to this end that all of Quebec stands out by this extraordinary collaboration at the heart of this 19th Congress. We thank you for this!

FOR THE FOLLOWING REGIONS, FUNDING FROM THE CISSS/CIUSSS IS ACCESSIBLE BY THE INTERMEDIATE OF A LOCAL ORGANIZATION.

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TO BE A MEMBER OF THE AQRP ALLOWS YOU TO…. Stay at the cutting-edge in an evolving field:

X By offering your staff a specialized continuation in education: fight against stigmatization, recovery and full citizenship, peer-supporting, voice hearing, workplace integration, youth;

X By taking advantage of special rates on our training courses, counselling services, the Congress and the expansion of your public view;

Be part of a diversified network of activist from here and elsewhere in the field of mental health;

Support the cause of psychosocial rehabilitation and recovery and contribute to the achievement of tangible projects to increase the quality of life of people living with mental health problems.

BENEFIT FROM THESE PRIVILEGESRIGHT NOW!

Join online: www.aqrp-sm.org/membre

Within its role of bringing people together, the AQRP provides, a leading forum promoting the harmony of activist from all disciplines and different areas of intervention in mental health, as well as people living or having lived with a mental health problem and people close to them on the Quebec and international stages. The AQRP: the crossroads par excellence to consult and mobilize each other and go even further together!

THE 19TH AQRP CONGRESS TEAM Diane HarveyGeneral Director Sandrine Rousseau19th Congress Coordinator Michèle St-JacquesProject Manager Émilie LebrunProject Manager Diane ParadisAdministrative Assistant

Florence KanyongaAdministrative Agent Yannick JoubertIT Support / Web Integrator Manon VaillancourtResponsible for Technical Support Marie-Chantale Côté RetelProject Agent Danielle LachanceProject Agent

Marc St-MartinProject Agent Elisabeth Côté RetelSupport Agent

AS A MENTAL HEALTH PARTNER, YOU ARE A KEY ELEMENT OF THE AQRP ACTION FORCE!

BECOME A MEMBER OF THE AQRP!

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REGISTRATION FEES TO THE 19TH AQRP CONGRESS AND TO THE 11TH INTERVOICE CONGRESS

DATE CATEGORY MONDAY NOVEMBER 11 (Intervoice)Student Person living with a mental health

problem and unemployedRegular (fee/person)

By October 4th, 2019

Members 60 $ 60 $ 125 $Non-Members 100 $ 80 $ 215 $

After October 4th, 2019

Members 95 $ 95 $ 160 $Non-Members 150 $ 130 $ 265 $

DATE CATEGORY Tuesday-Wednesday, November 12-13 (AQRP Congress)Student Person living with a mental health

problem and unemployedRegular (fee/person)

By October 4th, 2019

Members 335 $ 335 $ 395 $Non-Members 375 $ 355 $ 485 $

After October 4th, 2019

Members 370 $ 370 $ 430 $Non-Members 425 $ 405 $ 535 $

Rates in $CAD, tax-free

Rates in $CAD, tax-free. The coffee breaks and the lunches (served in a Dining room) November 12 and 13 are included (lunches served in a Dining room).

DATE CATEGORY November 11-12-13 (Intervoice) + (AQRP Congress)Student Person living with a mental health

problem and unemployedRegular (fee/person)

By October 4th, 2019

Members 355 $ 355 $ 470 $Non-Members 435 $ 375 $ 560 $

After October 4th, 2019

Members 410 $ 410 $ 505 $Non-Members 445 $ 445 $ 610 $

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION:

X Regarding students, please note that a proof of full-time studies is required. X Breakfast not included in the registration to the Congress and not included with the night’s stay at the hotel

(restaurant services nearby). X The AQRP is a tax-free, charity organization. X Parking not included in the registration and housing fees.

REGISTRATION DATE : Starting August 19, 2019 on our website: www.aqrp-sm.org CANCELLATION: Before October 25, 2019, 50$ fees will be charged for each cancellation. Between October 25 and November 1st, 50% of the registration cost will be billed for each cancellation. After November 1st, 2019, 100% of the registration cost will be billed.

3-DAY PACKAGE - 10% DISCOUNT

Rates in $CAD, tax-free

DATE CATEGORY Per day / Tuesday or Wednesday, November 12-13 (AQRP Congress)Student Person living with a mental health

problem and unemployedRegular (fee/person)

By October 4th, 2019

Members 180 $ 180 $ 210 $Non-Members 205 $ 205 $ 235 $

After October 4th, 2019

Members 215 $ 215 $ 245 $Non-Members 265 $ 255 $ 285 $

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Other facilities

X Free high speed internet connection X All rooms include a workspace X Heated pool (on the roof) year-round X Fitness room 24 hours X ATM automatic teller X Luggage storage X Currency exchange X Gift shop X Secure safe

Hotel connected to the underground town and the central station

X Montreal Fine Arts Museum and Contemporary Arts Museum X Old Port of Montreal and Old Montreal X Grande Bibliothèque of Montreal X Mont-Royal X Place Ville-Marie and Montreal Eaton Centre (commercial centers)

To do (websites to visit)

X Coup de coeur francophone | festival de chansons X Événements divers / 09-11-19 X Festival de films Cinemania X La Vitrine culturelle / 09-11-19

BENEFIT FROM OUR SPECIAL RATES AT HOTEL BONAVENTURE MONTREAL

Right in the middle of downtown Montreal, Hotel Bonaventure Montreal is a real urban oasis.

All the hotel rooms are distributed on two levels creating a quadrangle around the gardens, the pool and

the streams. Book a room and you will have access at any time to our heated pool on the roof, open all year-round. All room types contain a queen or king bed, an ergonomic workspace and an exceptional view on Montreal city and the gardens.

199 $ + taxes / night Single occupancy

100 $ + taxes / night Double occupancy / person

73 $ + taxes / night Triple occupancy / person

60 $ + taxes / night Quadruple occupancy/person

BOOK RIGHT NOW! ONLINE / CODE : CAQRPI OR AT 1-800-267-2575

*MENTION THE AQRP CONGRESS PACKAGE

BE RIGHT IN THE MIDDLE OF THE ACTION OF THE CONGRESS!

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MEMBERS OF THE AQRP BOARD OF DIRECTORS Cathy Roche, présidente

Chef de service, CIUSSS de la Mauricie-et-du-Centre-du-Québec Shawinigan

Christine Boisvert, vice-présidente

Directrice générale, Pivot Centre-du-Québec, Drummondville

Julie Lesage,secrétaire

Directrice adjointe des programmes santé mentale et dépendances, CIUSSS de la Capitale-Nationale Québec

Danielle Lefebvre,administratrice

Traductrice, Gatineau

Maryse Trudel, administratrice

Conseillère en développement de carrière, Academos Trois-Rivières

Pierre Arcand, administrateur

Pair aidant,Institut universitaire en santé mentale Douglas Montréal

Guylaine Cloutier, administratrice

Ergothérapeute, Blainville

MEMBERS OF THE 19TH AQRP CONGRESS PROGRAMMING COMMITTEELaurence Caron Association québécoise pour la

réadaptation psychosociale (AQRP)

Michèle Clément Groupe de recherche sur l’inclusionsociale, l’organisation des services etl’évaluation en santé mentale (GRIOSE)

René Cloutier Réseau Avant de craquer

Michel Gilbert Centre national d’excellence en santémentale (CNESM), Ministère de la Santéet des Services sociaux (MSSS)

Diane Harvey Association québécoise pour laréadaptation psychosociale (AQRP)

Marie-Claude Jacques École des sciences infirmières, Universitéde Sherbrooke (Longueuil)

Julie Lesage Centre intégré universitaire de santéet de services sociaux de la Capitale-Nationale

Jean-Nicolas Ouellet Centre d’activités pour le maintien del’équilibre émotionnel de Montréal-Nord(CAMÉÉ)

Michel Perreault Institut universitaire en santé mentaleDouglas, Centre intégré universitaire desanté et de services sociaux de l’Ouest de-l’île-de-Montréal; Département depsychiatrie, Université McGill

Johanne Rhainds Direction des Affaires autochtones,Ministère de la Santé et des Servicessociaux (MSSS)

Charles Rice Alliance des groupes d’interventionpour le rétablissement (AGIR) en santémentale de la région de Québec

Sandrine Rousseau Association québécoise pour laréadaptation psychosociale (AQRP)

Emmanuelle Saulnier-Leclerc

Association québécoise pour laréadaptation psychosociale (AQRP)

Éric Skulski Direction des programmes santé mentale,dépendance et itinérance, Centre intégréuniversitaire de santé et de servicessociaux de l’Est de Montréal

Michèle St-Jacques Association québécoise pour laréadaptation psychosociale (AQRP)

Myreille St-Onge École de travail social et de criminologie,Université Laval

THANKS TO OUR COLLABORATORS

MEMBERS OF THE ORGANIZING COMMITTEE OF THE 11TH INTERVOICE CONGRESS, THE HEARING VOICES NETWORKLisa Benisty Prise II, Montréal

Carlisle Boivin Centre l’Inter-section, Gatineau

Francine Cyr Le Pavois, Québec

Tyrone Gamble Psychiatric Survivors Ontario, Ottawa

Nathalie Godfrind Prise II, Montréal

Andrea Harowitz Vancouver Coastal Health (VCH),Vancouver

Diane Harvey Association québécoise pour laréadaptation psychosociale (AQRP)

Johanne Martel Maison le Point Commun,St-Jean-sur-le-Richelieu

Renea Mohammed VCH Vancouver

Julie Ohanessian Centre l’Inter-section, Gatineau

Annie Pavois Regroupement des ressourcesalternatives en santé mentale du Québec(RRASMQ)

Sandrine Rousseau Réseau des entendeurs de voix Québécois(REVQ), Association québécoise pour laréadaptation psychosociale (AQRP)

Brigitte Soucy Le Pavois, Québec

Myreille St-Onge École de travail social et de criminologie,Université Laval, Québec

Paul Trahan Maison le Point Commun,St-Jean-sur-le-Richelieu

Gill Walker VCH Vancouver

A special thanks to the members of the International Committee of the 11th Intervoice Congress regrouping REV (Réseau d’Entendeurs de Voix; Hearing Voices Network) France, REV Belgium, HVN England, HVN United Stated, HVN Brazil, HVN Australia and HVN the Netherlands.

Yann Derobert et Magali Molinié (France), Jean-Marc Priels (Belgium), Paul Baker (England), Douglas Holmes (Australia), Dirk Corstens (the Netherlands), Will Hall and Lisa Forestell (United States) and Duart Bastos (Brazil).

MEMBERS OF THE ORGANIZING COMMITTEE FIRST NATIONS AND INUITSDiane Harvey Association québécoise pour la

réadaptation psychosociale (AQRP)

Natacha Hervieux Commission de la santé et des services sociaux des Premières Nations du Québec et du Labrador

Marie-Noëlle Logier-Paquette

Commission de la santé et des services sociaux des Premières Nations du Québec et du Labrador

Johanne Rhainds Direction des Affaires autochtones,Ministère de la Santé et des Servicessociaux

Michèle St-Jacques Association québécoise pour laréadaptation psychosociale (AQRP)

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LIST OF PRESENTERSName Given Name Region/Country Activity Theme Page(s) Adams Katleen Quebec D09 33

Aldridge Bradley British Columbia D13 34

Arsenault Mathieu Quebec A14 22

Archambault Roger Quebec B-14 26

Bahl Nancy Ontario C12 30

Baker Paul England A01; D10; E10 20-33-37

Bamvita Jean-Marie Quebec Affiche 42

Bandosz Benjamin Ontario A12 22

Barry Ivan Germany B10 25

Bérubé Karine Quebec F06 40

Beattie-Dagenais Kierra Quebec B06 24

Beaulne Juani Quebec E08 36

Beaulne Paulusi Quebec E08 36

Bédard Myreille Quebec C02 27

Béguet Véronique Ontario F13 41

Benisty Lisa Quebec A10; C13 22-30

Benny Marianne Quebec F05 40

Berger Anthony Quebec B06 24

Bergeron Catie Quebec E06 36

Bernard Audrey Quebec A01 20

Bien Claire United States D11 34

Blanchet Yves Quebec C03 27

Boisvenu Emilie Quebec B03 23

Boivin Carlisle Quebec B12 26

Bolduc Johanne Quebec D06 32

Bouchard Mathieu Quebec D05 32

Brastaviceanu Virginie Quebec D07 32

Brien Marc Quebec F04 39

Brown Dana Ontario C12; E13 30-37

Brown Jennifer Quebec D04 31

Caday Rafael Ontario E13 37

Cadieux Christiane Quebec B01; C01 23-27

Carbonneau Louise Quebec D06 32

Cardinal Pierre Quebec C05 28

Caron Laurence Quebec A03; D02; E02; F02 20-31-35-39

Carrier Serge Quebec D12 34

Casadio Roberta Wales (UK) D10; E010 33-37

Charasse Alice Quebec D08 33

Châteauneuf Guy Quebec E05 36

GENERAL THEME: INTERVOICE THEME: FIRST NATIONS AND INUIT: CINE-MENTAL:

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Name Given Name Region/Country Activity Theme Page(s) Chevrier Céline Quebec B13 26

Collin Ulrique Quebec C14 30

Corbeil Daniel Quebec F01 39

Corbière Marc Quebec B03 23

Cornish Peter Newfoundland E02 35

Côté Benoît Quebec E03 35

Courtois Mélanie Quebec A01 20

Craig Pierre Quebec B14; F01 26-39

Cyr Céline Quebec A11; B02 22-23

Cyr Francine Quebec C04 27

Dahak Jennifer Quebec B06 24

Dallaire Bernadette Quebec E07 36

Danielson Roxie Ontario C09 29

Daudelin Marcel Jr Quebec D04 31

Demski Sabine Switzeland Affiche 42

Dorvil Henri Quebec Affiche 42

Desbiens Steve Quebec A07 21

Duchesne Patrick Quebec E05; F01 36-39

Dunstan Jackie Ontario C12 30

Duquette Josée Quebec C04 27

Durocher Mathieu Quebec C14 30

El Chaar Joelle Ontario C12 30

Fernandes Lucy England B09; F12 25-41

Fogl Tomas Ontario C12; E13 30-37

Ford Anick Quebec C10 29

Forestell Lisa United States C08; F07 29-40

Fortier Stéphane Quebec C04 27

Frenette Danielle Ontario C12 30

Gagné Betty Quebec A02 20

Gamble Tyrone Ontario A08; C12; F11 21-30-41

Gareau-Blanchard Catherine Quebec D07 32

Gaudreault Karine Quebec D06 32

Gélinas Daniel Quebec D01; E01; F01 31-35-39

Gentil Lia Quebec Affiche 42

Gibeault Luc Quebec B03 23

Gilbert Elsa Quebec D04 31

Gilfoyle Sharon England D01; E01 31-35

Godfrind Nathalie Quebec A10; B13; C13; D05 22-26-30-32

Grégoire Jacques Quebec D12 34

Jacob Bernard Belgium D03 31

Jacques Marie-Claude Quebec B05 24

GENERAL THEME: INTERVOICE THEME: FIRST NATIONS AND INUIT: CINE-MENTAL:

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Nom Given NAme Region/Country Activity Theme Page(s) Guerrero Lucila Quebec D08 33

Hall Will United States A01; C07 20

Hart Akiko England B09; F10 25-41

Harvey Janique Quebec C06 28

Harvey Diane Quebec D01; E01; F01 31-35-39

Healey Kevin Ontario A12; C09; F08 22-29-40

Hébert Lucy Quebec C03; E05 27-36

Hénaire Simon Quebec E03 35

Herold John United States A13 22

Hervieux Natasha Quebec E09 36

Hickman Peggy Ontario C12; E13 30-37

Higgs Rory British Columbia E11 37

A. Hornstein Gail United States D14 34

Huguelet Philippe Switzerland A06 21

Jacob Bernard Belgium D03 31

Jacques Marie-Claude Quebec B05 24

Johnson Stephen Ontario C12; E13 30-37

Khan Maryam Ontario C12; E13 30-37

Lauzier-Jobin François Quebec D02; E03; F02 31-35-39

Lebeau Annie Quebec B06 24

Leblanc Eugène New-Brunswick E15 38

Leblanc Jean-Philippe Quebec D08 33

Leblond Marie-Ève Quebec E06 36

Legault Isabelle Quebec F01 39

Lemay-Caron Véronique Quebec C05 28

Lepage Martin Quebec F01 39

Leroux Sheri Ontario C13 30

Lesage Julie Quebec C04 27

Lévesque Daniel Quebec E03 35

Little Linda Quebec A11; B02 22-23

Logier-Paquette Marie-Noëlle Quebec E09 36

Lord Marité Quebec A01 20

Loutfi Mohamed Quebec B01; C01 23-27

Mackinnon Aileen Quebec E08 36

Marois Marie-Josée Quebec C10 29

Martin Chantal Quebec F05 40

Marty Hadge Cindy United States D14 34

Mazel-Carlton Caroline United States D14 34

Mckay Don Quebec B06 24

Meldrum Chelsea Ontario C12; E13 30-37

Mérey Zsolt Hungary F09 40

Métivier Alain Quebec A05 21

Michel Viviane Quebec B07 24

GENERAL THEME: INTERVOICE THEME: FIRST NATIONS AND INUIT: CINE-MENTAL:

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Name Given Name Region/Country Activity Theme Page(s) Molina Gabrielle Quebec C02 27

Molinié Magali France B11 25

Molloy Karine Quebec B03 23

Morin Paul Quebec B05 24

Morneau Adam Ontario C12 30

Morris Kirsten Ontario C12 30

Murata Lisa Ontario C12 30

Nadeau-Besse Édouard Quebec F13 41

Nanu Amalia Quebec A07 21

Ngo-Minh Tin Quebec B04; E12 23-37

Ohanessian Julie Quebec B12 26

Palombini Analice Brazil A11 22

Parent Diane Quebec F03 39

Patton Victoria England E14 38

Pavois Annie Quebec A11 22

Pichette Ariane Quebec C10 29

Plante Annie Quebec E05 36

Poirel Marie-Laurence Quebec B02 23

Poirier Geneviève Quebec D04 31

Pons Jessica England A09 21

Preston-Eyles Suzan England D01; E01 31-35

Rice Charles Quebec A01; C03; E05 20-27-36

Richard Pierrette Quebec B02 23

Ritchie Kevin Ontario C12 30

Roberge Francine Quebec C05 28

Robson Mary England E14 38

Rock Jacqueline Quebec D09 33

Rodriguez Lourdes Quebec A11 22

Rohde Stephen Ontario C12 30

Rousseau Sandrine Quebec D02; E01; F01 31-35-39

Rousselle Sylvette New-Brunswick E15 38

Roy Marie-Christine Quebec F04 39

Saint-Georges Claude Quebec E05 36

Saint-Pierre Benoît Quebec D05 32

Saulnier Bernard Quebec C05 28

Saulnier Emmanuelle Quebec E04 35

Shah Shahzad Ontario C12 30

Simard Andréa Quebec C03 27

Skulski Éric Quebec A03 20

Snowboy Mary-Louise Quebec C06 25

Soucy Juliette Quebec C10 29

GENERAL THEME: INTERVOICE THEME: FIRST NATIONS AND INUIT: CINE-MENTAL:

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Name Given Name Region/Country Activity Theme Page(s) States Mishaun Quebec B06 24

St-Armand Nérée New-Brunswick E15 38

St-Germain Alexandre Quebec F01 39

St-Hilaire Pierre-Luc Quebec A11 22

St-Louis Colombe Quebec C05 28

St-Martin Marc Quebec F14 41

Taylor Karen Scotland B08 25

Tessier Hélène Quebec C14 30

Thériault Joanie Quebec C02 27

Therrien Dominique Quebec B03 23

Thibault Isabelle Quebec A02 20

Thibaut Raymond Ontario C12; E13 30-37

Timperley Maxine Quebec F04 39

Thornton Samantha United States D11 34

Tougas Anne-Marie Quebec A02 20

Tracy Serge Quebec C11 29

Tremblay Christophe Quebec E07 36

Turcotte Karl Quebec D06 32

Tutino Jessica Ontario C12 30

Umbongo Dave Ontario C09 29

Vassiliou Mélina Quebec A07 21

Waddingham Rachel England C08; F07 29-40

Watson Emma England D01; E01 31-35

Wolf Sibylle Switzerland Affiche 42

Wright Nicola Ontario C12; E13; Affiche 30-37-42

GENERAL THEME: INTERVOICE THEME: FIRST NATIONS AND INUIT: CINE-MENTAL:

Marie Gagné Creation Wave, Mixed media

Of a contemplative nature, my thoughts navigate the depths of my psyche. The imaginary nourishes me. Silences of all kinds reside in me since a long time ago. A continuous wave, a flow of torments and creation.

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THANKS TO ALL PRESENTERS / VOLUNTEERSOur sincere thanks to all the many presenters and volunteers from here and elsewhere that contributed to the elaboration, the richness and the quality of the programming of these two major events in mental health. A special thanks to all the members of the different committees!

IMPORTANT REMINDERS! Here is a brief reminder of the important contact details and web links:

X Visit the internet website of the AQRP: www.aqrp-sm.org X Visit the internet website of Intervoice: www.intervoiceonline.org X Visit the internet website of the Congress: www.aqrp-sm.org/colloque-2019/ X Become a member of the AQRP: www.aqrp-sm.org/a-propos-de-laqrp/membres-aqrp X Get information on funding for people using mental health services from Quebec who are

unemployed: Marc St-Martin, 418-523-4190, ext. 212 (AM) and Danielle Lachance, ext. 214 (PM) X Get support to proceed with your online registration: 418 523-4190, ext. 212 (AM) and 214

(PM) X Book your room at the same site as the Congress: Hôtel Bonaventure Montréal X Get touristic information at Tourisme Montréal: www.mtl.org/en X Contact us any time: 1 418 523-4190

IMPORTANT DATES TO REMEMBER:

X Event: November 11, 12 and 13, Montreal X On-line registration: starting August 19, 2019

THANKS FOR YOUR FINANCIAL SUPPORT• Special thanks to all CISSS and CIUSSS for agreeing to support the participation of users within

their territory

• The Montreal Tourist Office

• Department of Aboriginal Affairs, Department of Health and Social Services

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THE AQRP IS PROUD TO SUPPORT AND HOST THE11TH INTERVOICE CONGRESSFor almost 30 years, the AQRP mobilizes all the people and organizations concerned with rehabilitation and recovery in order to innovate, diffuse and improve mental health practices and services in Quebec. Through its activities of knowledge sharing and its innovative and unifying events, it supports people and organizations to promote social inclusion and well-being of people living or having lived with a mental health problem.

The association considers that it is society’s responsibility to offer people living or having lived with a mental health problem and or people close to them, the means to develop to their full potential; take ownership of their power to act; to recover; to actively participate and contribute to their community; to improve their quality of life; and to assume the roles derived from a full citizenship.

The Quebec Voice Hearers Network (RevQ)

Intervoice, the hearing voices network

The Quebec Voice Hearers Network (le Réseau des entendeurs de voix, REV) has the mission to promote an approach close to voice hearers. Indeed, it embraces, supports and integrates their life experiences and their different perceptions related to the voices. This approach considers the voices phenomenon as meaningful for each person experiencing it. It allows them to recover power over their voices and their life.

The voice hearers network, created by the Pavois organization in 2012, and now managed by the AQRP, is developing cheerfully. About thirty groups across the province of Quebec are members from the network. https://www.aqrp-sm.org/revquebecois

Intervoice aims to support the International Hearing Voices Movement by connecting people, sharing ideas, distributing information, highlighting innovative initiatives, encouraging high quality respectful research, and promoting its values across the world. The International Hearing Voices Movement consists of the diverse conversations, initiatives, groups and individuals around the world that share core values. In particular, it consists of the consideration of hearing voices, having visions and related phenomena as meaningful experiences that can be understood in many ways.

http://www.intervoiceonline.org/about-intervoice