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Main course

Module 1: Immigration and social determinants of health

Module 2: Intro to Mental Health

Summary

Module 3: Key populations - women

Module 4: Key populations - children

Module 5: Key populations...

Summary

Module 6: Treatment and support

Summary

Module 7

Summary

Module 8: Service delivery + pathways to care

Summary

Module 9: Partnerships + mental health promotion

9.1 Strategies for promoting mental health
Strategies for promoting mental health + +
Summary

Module 10: Self-care

Summary Glossary

Developing clients' personal skills

The following strategies develop immigrants' and refugees' personal skills to reduce the stressors associated with integration into Canadian society:

Reorienting health services

Settlement and social service providers working at the community level may need training to address the needs of clients from many diverse backgrounds. It is also important to acquire an understanding of the spectrum of services available for clients, including preventative care and treatment to recovery.

The following organizations provide this type of training:

Video: Partnerships between mainstream and ethno-specific agencies

With Baldev Mutta (CEO, Punjabi Community Health Services)

We are often working in our own silos. We have our own agencies, we have our own funding envelopes, we have our own expertise. And what happens within everyday work is that we tend to forget how do we support each other. And the support can be in terms of board recruitment. I often get other CEOs asking me: “Do you have a South Asian member who can be a board member?” So that could be a partnership. I think it's very important for both the ethno-specific agencies and the mainstream organizations to partner together. And I can give you one concrete example that mainstream organizations have a particular expertise in providing specialized services. So for example at PCHS, we do not have ACT programs. The ACT program is a very specialized program that is provided to severely mentally ill patients. When we have a Punjabi-speaking client that requires ACT services, we partner with other agencies to make a referral. They have the specialized programs. And when they have a client that speaks Punjabi that they think that they are unable to serve, they refer the person to us. So in that sense, I think it's a win-win situation. So I will strongly encourage everyone that we should all partner and learn from each other because at the end of the day, it's about the client receiving the services, it's not about the agency. It's about the client. Where can the client receive the best care possible?

Review question