As social media as a communication tool grows, so too has its adoption by the prevention field. Prevention practitioners currently use social media to connect and collaborate with colleagues, partners, and the people we serve to design, deliver, evaluate our prevention efforts, and promote our messages and work. In doing so, it's essential to apply the same code of ethics we use to our face-to-face encounters to this venue. This training highlights some considerations for applying the Prevention Code of Ethics to our prevention work's social media activities. Participants must have completed a course in Prevention Ethics as a prerequisite.
Sandra Puerini Del Sesto, M.Ed., ACPS
Sandra has worked over 35 years in prevention, though her work spans the continuum of care from prevention to treatment to recovery. In Rhode Island's home state, Sandra was the founder and past executive director of Initiatives for Human Development, the only statewide prevention agency. She is a faculty member and on the board of directors for the New England School of Addiction Studies. She has worked extensively at both the community and state levels developing strategic prevention and behavioral health care plans. Sandra is a member of the Board of Directors of the International Certification and Reciprocity Consortium (IC&RC) and is the Prevention Committee's co-chair.
This is an invite-only event.