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Number: 718

Mandates:
January 27, 2025 - January 29, 2025
0800 - 1700

The ICISF’s Assisting Individuals in Crisis and Group Crisis Interventions training is a 3 day curriculum designed to prepare attendees for critical incident response and support of their peers. This class will focus on the critical incident needs of the first responder community and ways to best serve members of this community.

Training Topics:

•  Fundamentals of Crisis Intervention
•  The Grieving Process
• Communication Skills and Group Dynamics
•  Stress and PTSD
•  CISM Interventions

This course will achieve the following learning objectives:

  1. To increase awareness of key terms and concepts relevant to the practice of crisis intervention and disaster mental health intervention.
  2. To become familiar with relevant research findings.
  3. To become familiar with relevant recommendations for practice.
  4. To understand the nature and importance of incident assessment and strategic intervention planning.
  5. To understand the nature of the “resistance, resilience, recovery” continuum and the role of the integrated multi-component Critical Incident Stress Management System (CISM).
  6. To become familiar with large group crisis interventions, demobilizations and crisis management briefings (CMB).
  7. To become familiar with small group crisis interventions, defusings, Critical Incident Stress Debriefing (CISD) and Small Group Crisis Management briefing (CMB).
  8. To become familiar with risks of adverse outcome associated with crisis intervention and how to reduce those risks.
  9. To practice large and small group crisis intervention and how to reduce those risks.
  10. To practice specifically the small group Critical Incident Stress Debriefing (CISD).
  11. Understand the natures & definitions of a psychological crisis and psychological crisis intervention.
  12. Discuss issues and findings of evidence-based practice as it relates to psychological crisis intervention.
  13. Practice basic crisis communication techniques.
  14. Be familiar with common psychological and behavioral crisis reactions, including empirically-derived predictors of post-traumatic stress disorder.
  15. Understand the putative and empirically-derived mechanisms of action in psychological crisis intervention.
  16. Practice the SAFER-Revised model of individual psychological crisis intervention.
  17. Understand how the SAFER-Revised model may be altered for suicide intervention.
  18. Understand and discuss the risks of iatrogenic “harm” associated with psychological crisis intervention and will further discuss how to reduce those risks.

 

**MTU 8 is not taking enrollment in this course. Registration is completed through an application process found on ICISF’s website. Please see further training details at ICISF Training – 100 Club Of Illinois (100clubil.org) and complete the application online to be considered for a seat in the class. Applications submitted by October 18 will be reviewed the following week. Any further applications will be reviewed on a rolling basis and approved upon availability. Due to the high demand of this course, admission to participate may be limited to 1-2 member per agency.