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Mental Health
Professionals Working Collaboratively With Patients to Educate &
Promote Peer Support
Mental health care professionals across
the country are donating their time each week to work with members of
the Depression and Bipolar Support Alliance (formerly National
Depressive and Manic-Depressive Association) (DBSA) to promote education
and peer-to-peer support group opportunities.
Each year, thousands of people attend one
of DBSA’s 800 free, patient-led support groups, and hundreds of
thousands more receive educational materials from the Association.
DBSA’s newly-formed Chapter
Professional Advisors Committee is leading the important partnership
effort of social workers, psychologists, nurses and psychiatrists. The
new group will seek ways to enhance educational and support group
opportunities across the country.
Beyond the leadership that they provide,
DBSA professional advisors help chapters increase their visibility in
the community by participating in programs that provide needed education
and assistance to those living with a depressive disorder.
DBSA’s support groups play an important
role in improving mental health in the U.S. Together with medication and
talk therapy, support groups have proven to be an effective adjunct in
helping patients and families living with mood disorders. Participation
in a DBSA support group has a positive impact on treatment adherence,
and participants are less likely to stop taking medication against
medical advice, report depression and mania, or have been hospitalized.
For more information on becoming an
advisor to a DBSA support group, please contact Lisa Goodale, ACSW, LSW,
DBSA’s Constituency Relations Director at 1-800-826-3632, ext. 155, or
LGoodale@DBSAlliance.org.
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