Lessons from an Integrated Mental Health Care Approach

Saturday 29 February 2020 - Sunday 1 March 2020

With Benjamin Fry, Dr Nuri Gene-Cos, Dr Phil Mollon, Dr Alon Reshef and Dr Yorai Sella

Previous notions of health and disease have tended to separate the mind from other organic processes. However, when we start to think of the mind as an entity that spreads throughout the body in a highly complex network of feedback loops between thoughts, feelings and chemicals then a holistic model of mental health care makes great sense.

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FULL PROGRAMME

Saturday 29 February – Talks

09:30
Registration and Coffee

10.00
Dr Alon Reshef
Integration of Body-mind Therapies in a Psychiatric Ward
In the last eight years the psychiatric service of Emek Medical Center, located in northern Israel has undergone a process of integration with less conventional therapeutic methods: Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM), reflexology, shiatsu, mindfulness, and nutrition counselling. In this talk Alon will discuss the advantages and pitfalls of the process, especially in the ward. It has become apparent that the significant broadening of therapeutic perspectives, often leading many times to breakthroughs with “stuck” treatments, can also induce difficulties regarding issues of complex dialogue, boundaries and “territorialism” (“this is my field”).

11.00
Coffee

11.30
Benjamin Fry
The Invisible Lion – The Nervous System Root of the Tree of Integration
Psychology, psychotherapy and psychiatry all have observed something we call mental health and given their observations labels. This is like getting to know and labelling each leaf on a huge oak tree. Nervous system theory looks at the roots and the trunk of the same tree. From there each branch and each leaf becomes more predictable; phenomenology [or observation] gives way to aetiology [or causation] and thus solutions start to suggest themselves. This presentation illustrates these roots and some clinical solutions.

12.30
Lunch

13.30
Dr Yorai Sella
From Vienna to Beijing and Back: a New Vocabulary for the “Talking Cure”
Intersubjective, neuro-psychological and mystically inclined psychotherapies show that wellbeing involves working with the “body-mind” whole. However, this requires creating an integrative language and integrated mind-body practice of psychotherapy. Some 25 years ago, Yorai and his colleague Naomi Urbach-Shvili responded to this need by creating a model called “Presence and Vitality Psychotherapy”, which assimilates Taoist-based Oriental medicine including Shiatsu massage, Buddhism and psychoanalytic psychotherapy. In this presentation he shall describe the model – now incorporated into varied clinical, university and hospital settings and found effective in treating a wide range of psycho-spiritual, psycho-somatic and psychopathological malaise.

14.30
Tea

15.00
Dr Nuri Gene Cos
A Noisy Brain: Complex Trauma and Dissociative Disorders
In this talk, Nuri will address difficulties that therapists encounter when treating patients with complex trauma and severe dissociative disorders. The reduced intellectual capacity and often extreme body dysregulation these patients present can prove a challenge for meaningful therapeutic processing. However, the understanding of neuroscience can be applied to the treatment of these people. Using a holistic approach, three case studies are described in which psychotherapeutic techniques using smells, noises/sounds and body touch are applied to achieve autonomic regulation and increased presence in therapy sessions.

16.00
Dr Phil Mollon
Psychoanalytic Energy Psychotherapy – Working at Multiple Levels
Exploration of the psychodynamics of the mind is often somewhat helpful,but may be insufficient to bring about a desired degree of change. For many decades of its evolution, psychotherapy was conducted as if a conversation between two disembodied minds. Yet emotions are very much bodily events, our most troubling and traumatic experiences are encoded as whole body-brain-mind patterns. In addition, it can be important to attend to the subtle energy system, an interface between body and mind, where the patterns of dysfunction are encoded. By making use of subtle energy centres and energy signalling, we can identify and address with precision the traumas, conflicts, and deep beliefs that have shaped and hold prisoner the client in our consulting room.

17.00
End

Sunday 1 March – Workshops

8.30 – 9.45 (optional)
Social Dream Matrix hosted by Laurie Slade
An opportunity to share dreams and associations, making connections where possible. We don’t interpret the dreams, we meet to pool our resources, seeing how this process may amplify themes of the conference, and otherwise where it takes us. For anyone interested in dreams, imagination, creativity and new thinking.

09:30
Registration and Coffee

10.00
Workshop 1: Dr Alon Reshef
Creating a Dialogue: From Conceptual Ideas of Dialectic Integration, to Real World, Public Service Implementation
Trying to feel the voice of our era, one gets the impression that integration of different and sometimes very remote modalities into mainstream psychiatry and psychotherapy, must have taken off by now. But in fact, integration is largely delayed in psychiatry, especially in the public service. The aim of the workshop is to create a dialogue between different professions, attitudes and values, in order to highlight the common grounds but also the misalignments and deep disagreements regarding integration of complementary and mind-body techniques into psychiatry and psychotherapy. Issues arising such as psychodynamic meanings, team hierarchy, medico-legal concerns will be discussed.

11.30
Coffee

12.00
Workshop 2: Dr Yorai Sella
Presence and Vitality in Psychotherapy: Achieving Body-Mind Congruence in an Integrative Clinic
In the workshop we shall look at the challenge and practice of creating an integrative model of psychotherapy. Beginning with some exercises adapted from Oriental meditative practices we shall follow through the process of an integrative intake, assessment and treatment plan in the clinic. We shall distinguish between a joint-practitioner model (which integrates the best of two worlds but perpetuates dualism) and integrative psychotherapy conducted by one therapist who focusses on sensation and the body thereby raising issues of transference. We shall bring together dynamic, humanistic, Taoist and Zen perspectives to examine issues of presence, vitality, potentiality, attunement space and empathy, demonstrating their contributions to treatment outcome through clinical vignettes.

13.30
Group Discussion with Speakers

13.45
End

FEES

Handouts and lunch included

Confer member:
£128
(Click here to become a member)

Self-funded:
£160

Self-funded x 2:
£280

Organisationally-funded:
£280

Psychotherapy trainee or under 25’s:
£100 (10 places only)

CPD

Certificates of attendance for 9 hours will be provided at the event

VENUE

NCVO
8 All Saints Street
London
N1 9RL

DIRECTIONS & MAP >>

SCHEDULE

Saturday
09.30 Registration and coffee
10:00 Start
11:00 Coffee
12:30 Lunch
14:30 Tea
17:00 End

Sunday
08.30 Social Dreaming Matrix
09.30 Registration and coffee
10:00 Start
11:30 Coffee
13:45 End

BOOKING CONDITIONS

Regrettably, refunds cannot be given in any circumstances except as follows:

  • You cancel in writing to info@confer.uk.com 60 days before the first date of the event you have booked, in which case you will be entitled to a 100% refund.
  • You cancel in writing to info@confer.uk.com 30 days before the first date of the event you have booked, in which case you will be entitled to a 50% refund.

This does not apply to parts of an event such as a seminar within a series but only to a whole event or complete series. You may give your place to another person if you let us know that person's name at least 24 hours before the event begins.

We reserve the right to change a speaker at one of our conferences without offering a refund. However, if a solo presenter cancels we will offer a full refund OR transfer of your fee to another Confer event. If the entire event is cancelled we will offer you a full refund.

We reserve the right to change our prices at any time. Regrettably, discounts offered after you made your booking cannot be claimed or applied retrospectively.