sarah burtenshaw mental health worker & cit coordinator hamilton, ontario, canada

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Sarah Burtenshaw Mental Health Worker & CIT Coordinator Hamilton, Ontario, Canada

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Page 1: Sarah Burtenshaw Mental Health Worker & CIT Coordinator Hamilton, Ontario, Canada

Sarah BurtenshawMental Health Worker & CIT Coordinator

Hamilton, Ontario, Canada

Page 2: Sarah Burtenshaw Mental Health Worker & CIT Coordinator Hamilton, Ontario, Canada

4 full-time police officers worknwith nurse, social workers and occupational therapists

24/7 crisis line Police/mental health

crisis team 2,000 outreach visits 14,000 phone calls

Page 3: Sarah Burtenshaw Mental Health Worker & CIT Coordinator Hamilton, Ontario, Canada
Page 4: Sarah Burtenshaw Mental Health Worker & CIT Coordinator Hamilton, Ontario, Canada
Page 5: Sarah Burtenshaw Mental Health Worker & CIT Coordinator Hamilton, Ontario, Canada

Hamilton Police Service (15)

Niagara Regional Police Service (15)

Brantford Police Service (3)

Halton Regional Police Service (3)

Norfolk OPP (3)

Ontario Provincial Police provide policing across most of Ontario

30 courses

Page 6: Sarah Burtenshaw Mental Health Worker & CIT Coordinator Hamilton, Ontario, Canada

Identify 10 activities you can include in your CIT to make it more interesting and more understandable

Page 7: Sarah Burtenshaw Mental Health Worker & CIT Coordinator Hamilton, Ontario, Canada

Hallucinations are false sensory perceptions Hearing, seeing, smelling, feeling and

tasting things which aren’t there The more stressed the individual is the

more intense the hallucination will be

3 voice experience

Page 8: Sarah Burtenshaw Mental Health Worker & CIT Coordinator Hamilton, Ontario, Canada

If you stare at the blinking pink dots, you will see only one color, pink. If you look at the + in the center, you'll see a circle of pink dots and a rotating green dot. But, if you stare at the + without moving your eyes, the pink dots will disappear and you will see only a rotating green dot. It's amazing how our brain works. There really is no green dot and the pink ones don't really disappear. This is proof that we don't always see what we think we see.

Page 9: Sarah Burtenshaw Mental Health Worker & CIT Coordinator Hamilton, Ontario, Canada

Fixed false beliefs not in keeping with the person’s cultural or religious beliefs

Page 10: Sarah Burtenshaw Mental Health Worker & CIT Coordinator Hamilton, Ontario, Canada
Page 11: Sarah Burtenshaw Mental Health Worker & CIT Coordinator Hamilton, Ontario, Canada

Focus of the training is to slow officers down

The following exercises illustrate how a person who is paranoid processes information and why it is important to take time when interacting with a person who is psychotic

Page 12: Sarah Burtenshaw Mental Health Worker & CIT Coordinator Hamilton, Ontario, Canada

RED BLUE GREEN YELLOW GREY

PINK YELLOW PURPLE ORANGE BROWN BLACK

GREY GREEN YELLOW PINK

BLUE PURPLE BROWN RED

GREEN

Page 13: Sarah Burtenshaw Mental Health Worker & CIT Coordinator Hamilton, Ontario, Canada
Page 14: Sarah Burtenshaw Mental Health Worker & CIT Coordinator Hamilton, Ontario, Canada
Page 15: Sarah Burtenshaw Mental Health Worker & CIT Coordinator Hamilton, Ontario, Canada
Page 16: Sarah Burtenshaw Mental Health Worker & CIT Coordinator Hamilton, Ontario, Canada
Page 17: Sarah Burtenshaw Mental Health Worker & CIT Coordinator Hamilton, Ontario, Canada

Developed by the Ontario Police Video Tape Alliance

www.opvta.com

Page 18: Sarah Burtenshaw Mental Health Worker & CIT Coordinator Hamilton, Ontario, Canada

“Silver Tsunami”

Understanding the neurology of dementia helps with understanding the impact on a person’s functioning

Page 19: Sarah Burtenshaw Mental Health Worker & CIT Coordinator Hamilton, Ontario, Canada

“Silver Tsunami” with the dramatic increase of dementia cases over the next 20 years with the baby boomers coming of age

Page 20: Sarah Burtenshaw Mental Health Worker & CIT Coordinator Hamilton, Ontario, Canada
Page 21: Sarah Burtenshaw Mental Health Worker & CIT Coordinator Hamilton, Ontario, Canada
Page 22: Sarah Burtenshaw Mental Health Worker & CIT Coordinator Hamilton, Ontario, Canada

The diagnosis of dementia does not mean the individual will immediately have to give up the person’s driver’s licence

The diagnosis does mean the person will eventually have to give up driving

Trail Test A and B

Page 23: Sarah Burtenshaw Mental Health Worker & CIT Coordinator Hamilton, Ontario, Canada

Difficulty initiating/directing body parts to do familiar tasks

Mirror/Star Test

Page 24: Sarah Burtenshaw Mental Health Worker & CIT Coordinator Hamilton, Ontario, Canada

A: Age and Appearance- Appearance of the person and their living

environment

B. Behavior: Describe the unusual behaviors the person

demonstrated

C. Cognition: What were they thinking

D. Danger: Risk to self and others

Page 25: Sarah Burtenshaw Mental Health Worker & CIT Coordinator Hamilton, Ontario, Canada

Video-based training online for officers to complete independently

Different options are offered with reference information provided as the scenarios progress

http://cirt.uoit.ca/LOs/mainMenu/

Page 26: Sarah Burtenshaw Mental Health Worker & CIT Coordinator Hamilton, Ontario, Canada

“Psychosis” DVD – www.opvta.com Video-based learning:

http://cirt.uoit.ca/LOs/mainMenu/

Sarah Burtenshaw:[email protected]