LIVE: Integrated Behavioral Health and the Criminal Justice System
November 6, 2024
10:00 AM - 11:00 AM Pacific
1 Hour | 1 CE
Live Virtual Training via Zoom
Jerrod Brown, Ph.D. presents a live virtual professional training program on Integrated Behavioral Health and the Criminal Justice System. This badge-earning program can be shared digitally on platforms like LinkedIn or your resume and counts towards a certificate. Enroll in this program to earn credit towards the Integrated Behavioral Health Certificate and share your new digital credentials with prospective employers and colleagues.
Integrative behavioral health is a type of whole-person care, focusing on the interconnections between the body, mind, and physical actions. As such, integrated behavioral health can include a diverse variety of topics including mental health, life stressors and crises, nutrition, sleep, stress-related physical symptoms, and substance use. Because clients with mental health problems often suffer from co-occurring physical health issues, providing services through an integrated behavioral health lens may result in improved outcomes.
Persons involved in the criminal justice system commonly experience a host of behavioral health and physical health issues. As such, an integrated behavioral health approach to care is desperately needed.
This training is designed for professionals interested in learning about the causes and consequences associated with behavioral health and physical health issues among criminal justice-involved populations. Implications for interviewing, screening, and intervention will be explored through an integrated behavioral health lens. Empirically based research findings will be highlighted throughout this training.
Relevant topics reviewed during this training include:
- Chronic diseases
- Blood sugar dysregulation
- Gut dysbiosis
- Sleep issues
- Cognitive health problems
- Food insecurity
- Neurocriminology
- Neurocounseling
- Psychoneuroimmunology
- Poverty and homelessness
- Offender reentry
- Criminal recidivism