Open help menu
On-Demand

Weaving Dignity Through Treatment: Where We Get In Trouble With It And What To Do About It

|

Information

Recorded

  • -

Description

Mentalization Based Treatment (MBT) is an evidence-based framework, derived from attachment and object relations theories, which promotes curiosity about oneself and others in order to increase emotional regulation and interpersonal effectiveness. Mentalizing helps us slow down and explicitly name, to ourselves and others, what is happening in any given moment. This presentation will discuss how to use mentalizing to preserve people's dignity when risk is present and help restore it when it is inevitably infringed on in the helping process.

We will discuss the basic tenets of mentalizing, how to recognize non-mentalizing in both clients and providers during times of high stress, and techniques and interventions for balancing dignity with safety, using shifts in language and radical openness to help dignity flow through clinical practice.

Learning Objectives

Participants will be able to:

  • Explain what mentalization is and how it can be used to create a relationship that supports worthiness.

  • Identify concrete strategies for bringing mentalization back “online” when high levels of risk are present and dignity feels threatened.

  • Practice mentalizing in complex clinical situations.

  • Describe how to shift the language used with clients to recenter dignity.

Educational Goal

The educational goal of this workshop is to improve clinicians’ capacity to apply Mentalization-Based Treatment (MBT) principles in practice by strengthening their ability to identify mentalizing and non-mentalizing states, and to use curiosity, reflective language, and openness to support patient dignity while maintaining safety during periods of heightened clinical risk.

Target Audience

  • Addiction Professional
  • Counselor
  • Marriage & Family Therapist
  • Psychologist
  • Social Worker

Presenters

Lauren Pellettieri, LCSW
Lauren Pellettieri is a licensed clinical social worker with close to a decade of varied experience supporting children, adolescents, and adults living with extreme states of mind and physical illness. She holds a bachelor’s degree in psychology from Fordham University and a master’s degree in Social Work from The Silberman School of Social Work at Hunter College. Lauren has worked in a variety of settings including a hospital-based substance use clinic, public middle school, drop-in center and shelter for transitional age youth experiencing homelessness in San Francisco, and an outpatient mental health clinic. Most recently, she helped develop and implement a scattered-site housing program in the Bronx for people living with chronic illness, providing comprehensive support in people’s transition from homelessness to community living. Lauren employs a strength-based approach that focuses on accepting people for who they are, supporting them in how they want to live their lives, and evoking internal resources for personal development and change. In complement to her clinical work, Lauren is the founding Executive Director of a dance non-profit, Liberated Movement®, which provides donation-based dance classes to the NYC community. As a life-long dancer and movement enthusiast with over 15 years of teaching experience, Lauren is passionate about helping people get into their bodies in healthy, accessible ways. She enjoys incorporating mindfulness, movement, and breath-work into therapeutic practice, to help people to build a holistic, empowered, and cohesive sense of self.

Financially Sponsored By

  • Ellenhorn