Migrant Clinicians Network (MCN) is pleased to offer a four-session virtual educational and support program for health care workers. The program focuses on tools to manage the stressors that arise at work and at home during challenging times. The sessions will present a model of the helper as a witness that provides concrete suggestions as to how the provider can shift from feeling ineffective to feeling effective and competent. The sessions are facilitated by an experienced clinician. The curriculum emphasizes ways to strengthen individual resilience to better face current and future personal and workplace challenges. The curriculum addresses topics such as empathic distress, moral injury, grief, adaptive change, resilience, and hope. We believe that hope is not just a feeling but something we do together! Each session will include video materials followed by the application of the core concepts to personal and workplace situations in a highly interactive format.
Presenters
Kaethe
Weingarten
Ph.D.
Migrant Clinicians Network
Kaethe Weingarten, Ph.D. (she/her) is the founder the Witness to Witness (W2W) Program. The goal of W2W is to help the helpers, primarily serving health care workers, attorneys and journalists working with vulnerable populations. She received her doctorate from Harvard University in 1974. She has taught at Wellesley College (1975-1979), Harvard Medical School (1981-2017), where she was an Associate Clinical Professor of Psychology in the Department of Psychiatry at Children’s Hospital Boston and then Cambridge Health Alliance, and at the Family Institute of Cambridge (1982-2009). She founded and directed the Program in Families, Trauma and Resilience at the Family Institute of Cambridge. Internationally, she has taught in Africa, Australia, Canada, Europe and New Zealand, where she was a Fullbright Specialist. She has given over 300 presentations and been a keynote speaker at numerous local, national and international conferences. She serves on the editorial boards of five journals. In 2002 she was awarded the highest honor of the American Family Therapy Academy, the award for Distinguished Contribution to Family Theory and Practice. She has written about her work in six books (which she has authored or edited) and over 100 articles, chapters and essays. Her most recent book, Common Shock: Witnessing Violence Every Day- How We Are Harmed, How We Can Heal won the 2004 Nautilus Award for Social Change. Dr. Weingarten’s work focuses on the development and dissemination of a witnessing model. One prong of the work is about the effects of witnessing violence and trauma in the context of domestic, inter-ethnic, racial, political and other forms of conflict. The other prong of the witnessing work is in the context of healthcare, illness and disability. Her work on reasonable hope has been widely cited. In 2013, Dr. Weingarten and her husband moved to Berkeley, CA to be near their children and five grandchildren. There she resumed a dance and choreography practice she had let lapse for forty-five years. Since moving to Berkeley, she and her dance collaborator have been awarded five grants for their choreography with elder dancers applying a witnessing model in public spaces. In 2018 they performed at the Oakland Museum of California. In her spare time she enjoys hiking, baking and crocheting afghans.
Jennifer Slack, LMFT, is a clinical supervisor and member of the American Association of Marriage and Family Therapy (AAMFT) as well as the American Family Therapy Academy (AFTA). Jennifer is an adjunct professor and clinical supervisor at Fairfield University. She was the Clinical Director of a Fairfield Counseling Services, a neighborhood mental health clinic, from 2011-2016. Today, she has a private practice, where she meets with individuals, couples, and families as well as students and clinicians she supervises. Jennifer has been a volunteer with W2W since 2019.