Monday, September 25, 2017

HALF A LEAGUE, HALF A LEAGUE, HALF A LEAGUE ONWARD

  The Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) recently highlighted September as Suicide Prevention Month.  VA Secretary David Shulkin: "We know that in 2014, an average of 20 Veterans a day died in this country from suicide, which is 20 too many.  This is a national public health crisis requiring a national public health approach.  When it comes to preventing Veteran suicide, VA can't – and should not – do this alone."  This pronouncement, which Ken Pope thoughtfully shared with us, stressed the VA's commitment to increasing the number of Veterans and providers connecting through its Telemental Health services, as well as the number of its partnerships, including a national network of volunteer professionals at Give an Hour, in order to expand the availability of community-based mental health services for Veteran and military communities.  The VA further noted that it will continue working with the Department of Defense (DoD) to identify at-risk service members and enroll them for VA care and engage them through community programs before they transition out of the military.  Barbara Van Dahlen, President of Give an Hour, will be hosting a special interview with Secretary Shulkin on Sirius XM radio, honoring the VA's role in changing the culture of mental health during September.

During the period leading up to our inspirational 125th APA annual convention, I had the opportunity to attend a meeting of the Association of VA Psychology Leaders (AVAPL), conducted under the stewardship of Russell Lemle, where those present actively addressed these issues and psychology's potential contributions.  I would have hoped that Division 19's leadership would have been present as a number of your members will someday be providing or receiving care through the VA.  There is a unique military culture which should definitely be represented throughout VA's psychology and nursing corps, which employs (and is a major trainer of) more members of these professions than any other organization in the nation.

We have been particularly pleased with the flexibility Give an Hour has demonstrated in adjusting to "changing times."  Their successful model is now being expanded to address the mental health concerns of other populations who also clearly are in need -- including at risk teens, at risk seniors, survivors of gun violence, and victims of human trafficking.  Give an Hour offers psychologists, psychiatric nurse practitioners, and other mental health professionals the opportunity to join their network in order to respond to natural and man-made disasters.  Give an Hour has opened its network in response to the trauma in Charlottesville and most recently is now partnering with the Red Cross to respond to the unprecedented devastation on the Gulf Coast as a result of Hurricane Harvey.

            From a broader policy perspective, health care in the United States is dramatically changing, as is the federal government's approach to its historical clinical delivery and training responsibilities.  Health care providers serving in the military should appreciate the significance of the fact that, along with VA Secretary David Shulkin, U.S. Army Surgeon General Nadja West, the highest ranking woman to graduate from the U.S. Military Academy, is also actively attempting to reshape military (i.e., federal) health care delivery by creating a culture of innovation and shifting the historical mindset that treatment can only be provided in a clinic.  Two of her expressed priorities are: * Better access to behavioral health -- embedded behavioral health specialists and more virtual appointments to make it easier for soldiers and their families to get needed care more quickly and discreetly.  And, * Telehealth – making virtual medical appointments become more commonplace as the Army ramps up its ability to deliver care at home with new equipment and training for care givers.  Her underlying expressed goal is to build a "premier, expeditionary, globally integrated medical force."

            As Interim CEO, Cynthia Belar established the APA Office of Director of Military and Veterans Health Policy and appointed Heather O'Beirne Kelly, who has worked for APA for 19 years, as its first director.  The administrative and legislative agendas of colleagues serving within these two federal agencies have considerable overlap; for example, providing visionary leadership in the training of the next generation of psychology's clinicians to provide quality psychopharmacological (RxP) integrated care.  Both Departments have long possessed the clinical expertise and clinical placements necessary to develop cutting-edge, quality training initiatives.  From my discussions with students at the Uniformed Services University (USU) and during our annual conventions, many of our next generation desire to obtain this clinical skill – which former APA President Ron Fox and current President Tony Puente have always appreciated.  Why is it, regardless of professional discipline, that those who have obtained positions of leadership (and perhaps authority) often seem to be the most difficult to convince that change is inevitable?

On August 15, 2017 for the second time a Governor of the State of Oregon vetoed the OPA RxP legislation.  Several decades ago, U.S. Navy pioneers Morgan Sammons and John Sexton demonstrated that psychology could provide quality clinical psychopharmological care, notwithstanding the "public health hazard" arguments of organized medicine.  Her expressed concern "related to patient safety and ensuring appropriate prescribing" has been addressed for over two decades.  Our sincerest appreciation to Robin Henderson and her colleagues for continuing their quest on behalf of the citizens of Oregon.  The "Nobel six hundred!"  Aloha,

Pat DeLeon, former APA President – Division 19 – September, 2017

 



Sent from my iPhone

Sunday, September 24, 2017

ALOHA - D19 column

“HALF A LEAGUE, HALF A LEAGUE, HALF A LEAGUE ONWARD”

            The Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) recently highlighted September as Suicide Prevention Month.  VA Secretary David Shulkin: “We know that in 2014, an average of 20 Veterans a day died in this country from suicide, which is 20 too many.  This is a national public health crisis requiring a national public health approach.  When it comes to preventing Veteran suicide, VA can’t – and should not – do this alone.”  This pronouncement, which Ken Pope thoughtfully shared with us, stressed the VA’s commitment to increasing the number of Veterans and providers connecting through its Telemental Health services, as well as the number of its partnerships, including a national network of volunteer professionals at Give an Hour, in order to expand the availability of community-based mental health services for Veteran and military communities.  The VA further noted that it will continue working with the Department of Defense (DoD) to identify at-risk service members and enroll them for VA care and engage them through community programs before they transition out of the military.  Barbara Van Dahlen, President of Give an Hour, will be hosting a special interview with Secretary Shulkin on Sirius XM radio, honoring the VA’s role in changing the culture of mental health during September.

During the period leading up to our inspirational 125th APA annual convention, I had the opportunity to attend a meeting of the Association of VA Psychology Leaders (AVAPL), conducted under the stewardship of Russell Lemle, where those present actively addressed these issues and psychology’s potential contributions.  I would have hoped that Division 19’s leadership would have been present as a number of your members will someday be providing or receiving care through the VA.  There is a unique military culture which should definitely be represented throughout VA’s psychology and nursing corps, which employs (and is a major trainer of) more members of these professions than any other organization in the nation.

We have been particularly pleased with the flexibility Give an Hour has demonstrated in adjusting to “changing times.”  Their successful model is now being expanded to address the mental health concerns of other populations who also clearly are in need -- including at risk teens, at risk seniors, survivors of gun violence, and victims of human trafficking.  Give an Hour offers psychologists, psychiatric nurse practitioners, and other mental health professionals the opportunity to join their network in order to respond to natural and man-made disasters.  Give an Hour has opened its network in response to the trauma in Charlottesville and most recently is now partnering with the Red Cross to respond to the unprecedented devastation on the Gulf Coast as a result of Hurricane Harvey.

            From a broader policy perspective, health care in the United States is dramatically changing, as is the federal government’s approach to its historical clinical delivery and training responsibilities.  Health care providers serving in the military should appreciate the significance of the fact that, along with VA Secretary David Shulkin, U.S. Army Surgeon General Nadja West, the highest ranking woman to graduate from the U.S. Military Academy, is also actively attempting to reshape military (i.e., federal) health care delivery by creating a culture of innovation and shifting the historical mindset that treatment can only be provided in a clinic.  Two of her expressed priorities are: * Better access to behavioral health -- embedded behavioral health specialists and more virtual appointments to make it easier for soldiers and their families to get needed care more quickly and discreetly.  And, * Telehealth – making virtual medical appointments become more commonplace as the Army ramps up its ability to deliver care at home with new equipment and training for care givers.  Her underlying expressed goal is to build a “premier, expeditionary, globally integrated medical force.”

            As Interim CEO, Cynthia Belar established the APA Office of Director of Military and Veterans Health Policy and appointed Heather O’Beirne Kelly, who has worked for APA for 19 years, as its first director.  The administrative and legislative agendas of colleagues serving within these two federal agencies have considerable overlap; for example, providing visionary leadership in the training of the next generation of psychology’s clinicians to provide quality psychopharmacological (RxP) integrated care.  Both Departments have long possessed the clinical expertise and clinical placements necessary to develop cutting-edge, quality training initiatives.  From my discussions with students at the Uniformed Services University (USU) and during our annual conventions, many of our next generation desire to obtain this clinical skill – which former APA President Ron Fox and current President Tony Puente have always appreciated.  Why is it, regardless of professional discipline, that those who have obtained positions of leadership (and perhaps authority) often seem to be the most difficult to convince that change is inevitable?

On August 15, 2017 for the second time a Governor of the State of Oregon vetoed the OPA RxP legislation.  Several decades ago, U.S. Navy pioneers Morgan Sammons and John Sexton demonstrated that psychology could provide quality clinical psychopharmological care, notwithstanding the “public health hazard” arguments of organized medicine.  Her expressed concern “related to patient safety and ensuring appropriate prescribing” has been addressed for over two decades.  Our sincerest appreciation to Robin Henderson and her colleagues for continuing their quest on behalf of the citizens of Oregon.  The “Nobel six hundred!”  Aloha,

Pat DeLeon, former APA President – Division 19 – September, 2017

 

Tuesday, September 12, 2017

SOME MEN SEE THINGS AS THEY ARE, AND ASK WHY

   The Windy City:  After our inspirational 125th APA annual convention, I was invited by Beth Rom-Rymer to participate in her third, extraordinarily exciting prescriptive authority (RxP) Illinois "social gathering."  "Illinois is continuing to move quickly with the implementation of our Prescriptive Authority Law.  It is expected that our Rules will be approved on or about September 15, 2017.  We have at least 150 psychologists who are currently training to become prescribing psychologists and 20 psychologists who have completed their Masters Degrees in Clinical Psychopharmacology and their seven required basic science undergraduate courses and are poised to enter their medical rotations.  These medical rotations include: psychiatry, family medicine, internal medicine, emergency medicine, pediatrics, geriatrics, ob/gynecology, surgery, and an elective.  We have at least eight hospitals and medical centers, throughout the state, whose CEOs and Medical Directors are working with us to provide the rotation opportunities for our prescribing psychology trainees.

"It has been a great gift of our law that we have been mandated to create training programs in hospitals, clinics, and medical centers.  Creating the medical rotations has, indeed, generated much good will and lots of interdisciplinary work among the medical, the psychiatric, and the psychological communities.  Undergraduate and graduate students are also taking advantage of training opportunities in our state to become prescribing psychologists.  There are currently as many as 15 graduate students who are ready to embark on earning their joint degrees in Clinical Psychopharmacology at New Mexico State University while pursuing their doctorates in clinical psychology at schools in Illinois.  At the University of Illinois, Champaign-Urbana, there are 75 undergraduates who have chosen to 'concentrate' in a 'pre-prescribing psychologist' curriculum and I have been asked to formally mentor them.  The Chicago School of Professional Psychology will be opening its doors to training students in Clinical Psychopharmacology on September 1st.

"On August 18th I hosted a networking dinner for our prescribing psychology trainees, ranging in age from 19 to 85 years old; our hospital and medical center CEOs and medical directors; the assistant director and the chief psychologist of the Illinois Department of Corrections; the Executive Director of NAMI; the Vice President of our largest social service organization, Thresholds; and the President, administrative staff, and faculty of The Chicago School of Professional Psychology.  Governor Pat Quinn, our former Illinois governor who signed our legislation into law on June 25, 2014, was there to give a rousing speech on the importance of prescribing psychologists and the revolution in healthcare around the nation.  More than 105 individuals were present and we are looking forward to our next event in January, 2018 with some additional special guests [Beth Rom-Rymer]."  Beth recently sponsored up to nine $5,000 scholarships – following up on her earlier commitment at Alliant International University -- to support graduate students and practicing licensed psychologists to complete their training in psychopharmacology.  Her expectation is that half of the scholarships, which give a preference to those committed to working with the underserved, will be awarded to pre-doctoral graduate students.

Give an Hour:  For the past 12 years, Give an Hour has provided free mental health care to those who serve, our Veterans and their families.  Give an Hour's generous volunteer mental health professionals have collectively donated over 124,000 hours of free care and support valued at nearly $23 million.  Psychologist Barbara Van Dahlen founded the organization and has become a noted expert on harnessing skill based volunteers as well as the mental health consequences of military service.  She has received numerous honors for this innovative work – most notably, she was named to Time Magazine's list of the 100 Most Influential People in the World for her creation of Give an Hour in 2012.  In 2013 she received an APA Presidential Citation from President Don Bersoff and in 2014 Barbara received the Outstanding Civilian Service Award from the U.S. Army.

Give an Hour also leads the Campaign to Change Direction [www.changedirection.org], a collective impact effort that includes the APA as a founding member.  This public health approach is focused on changing the culture of mental health by encouraging everyone to Know the Five Signs of Emotional Suffering.  It also encourages everyone to Learn the Healthy Habits of Emotional Well-Being.  President Barack Obama has personally heralded their importance.

Barbara's work has been so successful in identifying and engaging champions for this work including First Lady Michelle Obama, Dr. Jill Biden, Richard Gere, Brian Wilson, and Chris Stapleton.  Through her relationship with the Royal Foundation, Barbara secured participation in the Campaign by Prince Harry.  She recently wrote a poignant piece about the anniversary of Princess Diana's death – and how Price Harry and Prince William are carrying on their mother's legacy of caring for those who are suffering emotionally [http://bit.ly/2vART1E].

Give an Hour's model has been proven and is now being expanded to address the mental health concerns of other populations in need including at risk teens, at risk seniors, survivors of gun violence, and victims of human trafficking.  Give an Hour offers psychologists, psychiatric nurse practitioners, and other mental health professionals the opportunity to join the network in order to respond to natural and man-made disasters.  Most recently, Give an Hour opened its network in response to the trauma in Charlottesville and is opening its network to respond to the devastation in Houston.  If you aren't currently giving your hour, please consider giving your gift of time and expertise and join today at [www.giveanhour.org].

We are especially pleased with the extent to which Barbara has been supportive of our efforts at the Uniformed Services University (USU) to train the next generation of military clinical psychologists and psychiatric nurse practitioners.  Faculty member Teresa Combs of the Daniel K. Inouye Graduate School of Nursing: "For approximately the past two years, I've volunteered for Give an Hour.  I've treated several members and volunteered at several of their local events.  The Service Members I've seen are genuinely appreciative to have this service available.  I'm convinced there is the need for more mental health providers to offer services.  It is not uncommon for the Members to report the length of time they have waited for services.  Furthermore, there is a sign of relief when they are convinced the sessions are absolutely confidential."  Will you make that all important individual commitment?

Especially in the Face of Adversity:  In April, 2010 the Governor of Oregon vetoed the OPA psychology RxP legislation.  This August, another Governor vetoed HB 3355, expressing concern "particularly related to patient safety and ensuring appropriate prescribing."  OPA's legislation had overwhelming passed both houses of the Oregon legislature, which clearly has a different perspective.  Our sincerest appreciation to Robin Henderson and her colleagues for continuing to work tirelessly on behalf of the citizens of their state.  The Governor's expressed concerns can be satisfactorily addressed.  Her comment "There is insufficient evidence that the bill will improve access or quality of care" ignores the federal experience, especially that of Oregonian Morgan Sammons.  "I dream of things that never were, and ask why not."  Aloha.

Pat DeLeon, former APA President – HPA -- September, 2017

 




Sent from my iPhone

Monday, September 11, 2017

HPA - September column

“SOME MEN SEE THINGS AS THEY ARE, AND ASK WHY”

            The Windy City:  After our inspirational 125th APA annual convention, I was invited by Beth Rom-Rymer to participate in her third, extraordinarily exciting prescriptive authority (RxP) Illinois “social gathering.”  “Illinois is continuing to move quickly with the implementation of our Prescriptive Authority Law.  It is expected that our Rules will be approved on or about September 15, 2017.  We have at least 150 psychologists who are currently training to become prescribing psychologists and 20 psychologists who have completed their Masters Degrees in Clinical Psychopharmacology and their seven required basic science undergraduate courses and are poised to enter their medical rotations.  These medical rotations include: psychiatry, family medicine, internal medicine, emergency medicine, pediatrics, geriatrics, ob/gynecology, surgery, and an elective.  We have at least eight hospitals and medical centers, throughout the state, whose CEOs and Medical Directors are working with us to provide the rotation opportunities for our prescribing psychology trainees.

“It has been a great gift of our law that we have been mandated to create training programs in hospitals, clinics, and medical centers.  Creating the medical rotations has, indeed, generated much good will and lots of interdisciplinary work among the medical, the psychiatric, and the psychological communities.  Undergraduate and graduate students are also taking advantage of training opportunities in our state to become prescribing psychologists.  There are currently as many as 15 graduate students who are ready to embark on earning their joint degrees in Clinical Psychopharmacology at New Mexico State University while pursuing their doctorates in clinical psychology at schools in Illinois.  At the University of Illinois, Champaign-Urbana, there are 75 undergraduates who have chosen to ‘concentrate’ in a ‘pre-prescribing psychologist’ curriculum and I have been asked to formally mentor them.  The Chicago School of Professional Psychology will be opening its doors to training students in Clinical Psychopharmacology on September 1st.

“On August 18th I hosted a networking dinner for our prescribing psychology trainees, ranging in age from 19 to 85 years old; our hospital and medical center CEOs and medical directors; the assistant director and the chief psychologist of the Illinois Department of Corrections; the Executive Director of NAMI; the Vice President of our largest social service organization, Thresholds; and the President, administrative staff, and faculty of The Chicago School of Professional Psychology.  Governor Pat Quinn, our former Illinois governor who signed our legislation into law on June 25, 2014, was there to give a rousing speech on the importance of prescribing psychologists and the revolution in healthcare around the nation.  More than 105 individuals were present and we are looking forward to our next event in January, 2018 with some additional special guests [Beth Rom-Rymer].”  Beth recently sponsored up to nine $5,000 scholarships – following up on her earlier commitment at Alliant International University -- to support graduate students and practicing licensed psychologists to complete their training in psychopharmacology.  Her expectation is that half of the scholarships, which give a preference to those committed to working with the underserved, will be awarded to pre-doctoral graduate students.

Give an Hour:  For the past 12 years, Give an Hour has provided free mental health care to those who serve, our Veterans and their families.  Give an Hour’s generous volunteer mental health professionals have collectively donated over 124,000 hours of free care and support valued at nearly $23 million.  Psychologist Barbara Van Dahlen founded the organization and has become a noted expert on harnessing skill based volunteers as well as the mental health consequences of military service.  She has received numerous honors for this innovative work – most notably, she was named to Time Magazine’s list of the 100 Most Influential People in the World for her creation of Give an Hour in 2012.  In 2013 she received an APA Presidential Citation from President Don Bersoff and in 2014 Barbara received the Outstanding Civilian Service Award from the U.S. Army.

Give an Hour also leads the Campaign to Change Direction [www.changedirection.org], a collective impact effort that includes the APA as a founding member.  This public health approach is focused on changing the culture of mental health by encouraging everyone to Know the Five Signs of Emotional Suffering.  It also encourages everyone to Learn the Healthy Habits of Emotional Well-Being.  President Barack Obama has personally heralded their importance.

Barbara’s work has been so successful in identifying and engaging champions for this work including First Lady Michelle Obama, Dr. Jill Biden, Richard Gere, Brian Wilson, and Chris Stapleton.  Through her relationship with the Royal Foundation, Barbara secured participation in the Campaign by Prince Harry.  She recently wrote a poignant piece about the anniversary of Princess Diana’s death – and how Price Harry and Prince William are carrying on their mother’s legacy of caring for those who are suffering emotionally [http://bit.ly/2vART1E].

Give an Hour’s model has been proven and is now being expanded to address the mental health concerns of other populations in need including at risk teens, at risk seniors, survivors of gun violence, and victims of human trafficking.  Give an Hour offers psychologists, psychiatric nurse practitioners, and other mental health professionals the opportunity to join the network in order to respond to natural and man-made disasters.  Most recently, Give an Hour opened its network in response to the trauma in Charlottesville and is opening its network to respond to the devastation in Houston.  If you aren’t currently giving your hour, please consider giving your gift of time and expertise and join today at [www.giveanhour.org].

We are especially pleased with the extent to which Barbara has been supportive of our efforts at the Uniformed Services University (USU) to train the next generation of military clinical psychologists and psychiatric nurse practitioners.  Faculty member Teresa Combs of the Daniel K. Inouye Graduate School of Nursing: “For approximately the past two years, I’ve volunteered for Give an Hour.  I’ve treated several members and volunteered at several of their local events.  The Service Members I’ve seen are genuinely appreciative to have this service available.  I’m convinced there is the need for more mental health providers to offer services.  It is not uncommon for the Members to report the length of time they have waited for services.  Furthermore, there is a sign of relief when they are convinced the sessions are absolutely confidential.”  Will you make that all important individual commitment?

Especially in the Face of Adversity:  In April, 2010 the Governor of Oregon vetoed the OPA psychology RxP legislation.  This August, another Governor vetoed HB 3355, expressing concern “particularly related to patient safety and ensuring appropriate prescribing.”  OPA’s legislation had overwhelming passed both houses of the Oregon legislature, which clearly has a different perspective.  Our sincerest appreciation to Robin Henderson and her colleagues for continuing to work tirelessly on behalf of the citizens of their state.  The Governor’s expressed concerns can be satisfactorily addressed.  Her comment “There is insufficient evidence that the bill will improve access or quality of care” ignores the federal experience, especially that of Oregonian Morgan Sammons.  “I dream of things that never were, and ask why not.”  Aloha.

Pat DeLeon, former APA President – HPA -- September, 2017

 

HPA - September column

“SOME MEN SEE THINGS AS THEY ARE, AND ASK WHY”

            The Windy City:  After our inspirational 125th APA annual convention, I was invited by Beth Rom-Rymer to participate in her third, extraordinarily exciting prescriptive authority (RxP) Illinois “social gathering.”  “Illinois is continuing to move quickly with the implementation of our Prescriptive Authority Law.  It is expected that our Rules will be approved on or about September 15, 2017.  We have at least 150 psychologists who are currently training to become prescribing psychologists and 20 psychologists who have completed their Masters Degrees in Clinical Psychopharmacology and their seven required basic science undergraduate courses and are poised to enter their medical rotations.  These medical rotations include: psychiatry, family medicine, internal medicine, emergency medicine, pediatrics, geriatrics, ob/gynecology, surgery, and an elective.  We have at least eight hospitals and medical centers, throughout the state, whose CEOs and Medical Directors are working with us to provide the rotation opportunities for our prescribing psychology trainees.

“It has been a great gift of our law that we have been mandated to create training programs in hospitals, clinics, and medical centers.  Creating the medical rotations has, indeed, generated much good will and lots of interdisciplinary work among the medical, the psychiatric, and the psychological communities.  Undergraduate and graduate students are also taking advantage of training opportunities in our state to become prescribing psychologists.  There are currently as many as 15 graduate students who are ready to embark on earning their joint degrees in Clinical Psychopharmacology at New Mexico State University while pursuing their doctorates in clinical psychology at schools in Illinois.  At the University of Illinois, Champaign-Urbana, there are 75 undergraduates who have chosen to ‘concentrate’ in a ‘pre-prescribing psychologist’ curriculum and I have been asked to formally mentor them.  The Chicago School of Professional Psychology will be opening its doors to training students in Clinical Psychopharmacology on September 1st.

“On August 18th I hosted a networking dinner for our prescribing psychology trainees, ranging in age from 19 to 85 years old; our hospital and medical center CEOs and medical directors; the assistant director and the chief psychologist of the Illinois Department of Corrections; the Executive Director of NAMI; the Vice President of our largest social service organization, Thresholds; and the President, administrative staff, and faculty of The Chicago School of Professional Psychology.  Governor Pat Quinn, our former Illinois governor who signed our legislation into law on June 25, 2014, was there to give a rousing speech on the importance of prescribing psychologists and the revolution in healthcare around the nation.  More than 105 individuals were present and we are looking forward to our next event in January, 2018 with some additional special guests [Beth Rom-Rymer].”  Beth recently sponsored up to nine $5,000 scholarships – following up on her earlier commitment at Alliant International University -- to support graduate students and practicing licensed psychologists to complete their training in psychopharmacology.  Her expectation is that half of the scholarships, which give a preference to those committed to working with the underserved, will be awarded to pre-doctoral graduate students.

Give an Hour:  For the past 12 years, Give an Hour has provided free mental health care to those who serve, our Veterans and their families.  Give an Hour’s generous volunteer mental health professionals have collectively donated over 124,000 hours of free care and support valued at nearly $23 million.  Psychologist Barbara Van Dahlen founded the organization and has become a noted expert on harnessing skill based volunteers as well as the mental health consequences of military service.  She has received numerous honors for this innovative work – most notably, she was named to Time Magazine’s list of the 100 Most Influential People in the World for her creation of Give an Hour in 2012.  In 2013 she received an APA Presidential Citation from President Don Bersoff and in 2014 Barbara received the Outstanding Civilian Service Award from the U.S. Army.

Give an Hour also leads the Campaign to Change Direction [www.changedirection.org], a collective impact effort that includes the APA as a founding member.  This public health approach is focused on changing the culture of mental health by encouraging everyone to Know the Five Signs of Emotional Suffering.  It also encourages everyone to Learn the Healthy Habits of Emotional Well-Being.  President Barack Obama has personally heralded their importance.

Barbara’s work has been so successful in identifying and engaging champions for this work including First Lady Michelle Obama, Dr. Jill Biden, Richard Gere, Brian Wilson, and Chris Stapleton.  Through her relationship with the Royal Foundation, Barbara secured participation in the Campaign by Prince Harry.  She recently wrote a poignant piece about the anniversary of Princess Diana’s death – and how Price Harry and Prince William are carrying on their mother’s legacy of caring for those who are suffering emotionally [http://bit.ly/2vART1E].

Give an Hour’s model has been proven and is now being expanded to address the mental health concerns of other populations in need including at risk teens, at risk seniors, survivors of gun violence, and victims of human trafficking.  Give an Hour offers psychologists, psychiatric nurse practitioners, and other mental health professionals the opportunity to join the network in order to respond to natural and man-made disasters.  Most recently, Give an Hour opened its network in response to the trauma in Charlottesville and is opening its network to respond to the devastation in Houston.  If you aren’t currently giving your hour, please consider giving your gift of time and expertise and join today at [www.giveanhour.org].

We are especially pleased with the extent to which Barbara has been supportive of our efforts at the Uniformed Services University (USU) to train the next generation of military clinical psychologists and psychiatric nurse practitioners.  Faculty member Teresa Combs of the Daniel K. Inouye Graduate School of Nursing: “For approximately the past two years, I’ve volunteered for Give an Hour.  I’ve treated several members and volunteered at several of their local events.  The Service Members I’ve seen are genuinely appreciative to have this service available.  I’m convinced there is the need for more mental health providers to offer services.  It is not uncommon for the Members to report the length of time they have waited for services.  Furthermore, there is a sign of relief when they are convinced the sessions are absolutely confidential.”  Will you make that all important individual commitment?

Especially in the Face of Adversity:  In April, 2010 the Governor of Oregon vetoed the OPA psychology RxP legislation.  This August, another Governor vetoed HB 3355, expressing concern “particularly related to patient safety and ensuring appropriate prescribing.”  OPA’s legislation had overwhelming passed both houses of the Oregon legislature, which clearly has a different perspective.  Our sincerest appreciation to Robin Henderson and her colleagues for continuing to work tirelessly on behalf of the citizens of their state.  The Governor’s expressed concerns can be satisfactorily addressed.  Her comment “There is insufficient evidence that the bill will improve access or quality of care” ignores the federal experience, especially that of Oregonian Morgan Sammons.  “I dream of things that never were, and ask why not.”  Aloha.

Pat DeLeon, former APA President – HPA -- September, 2017