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Liberation Approaches in LGBTQ Behavioral Health and The Crossroads of Racial and Sexual/Gender Identity

DESCRIPTION

A Liberation-focused practice seeks to meet marginalized people where they are, within their cultural, historical, and community contexts, and to support clients in healing from the impacts of white supremacy, homophobia, gender binary rigidity, and other systems of dominance and oppression. We know that substance over-use is a common tool used by marginalized community members to find relief from the continual soul-scraping of living with degrading experiences, microaggressions, exploitation, intergenerational trauma, and colonial legacies.

Effective liberation prevention and treatment approaches are those that pull back from individual choices and focus on the underlying systems that create intolerable conditions for living. These frameworks engage structural and institutional analysis, including a critical look at the ways behavioral health care systems may act as a tool to reinforce systemic inequity, and offer community-nested, strengths-based, empowerment-focused healing approaches.


LEARNING OBJECTIVES

  • Locate substance use as an adaptive tool for managing minority stress.
  • Apply a liberation framework to creative outreach strategies and prevention messaging.
  • Examine the role of behavioral health providers and systems in maintaining oppressive care structures and apply new models to substance use treatment.
  • Develop a liberation framework analysis of current treatment options available to BIPOC LGBTQ people.

PRESENTER

Randall Leonard headshotRandall Leonard, LCSW-C, is a licensed clinical social worker who has specialized in the care of LGBTQ individuals for four years. They currently serve as a Staff Therapist at the Center for LGBTQ Health Equity, a Center of Excellence of Chase Brexton Health Care, providing individual therapy as well as assessments for gender-affirming surgery. They also facilitate “Identity Talk”, a group for trans and gender-diverse people of color to process intersectionality between culture and gender.

Before joining the Chase Brexton team, Randall served survivors of intimate partner violence at Family and Children’s Services, where they provided individual therapy and a weekly support group. In addition, they worked as a Behavioral Specialist in the Emergency Department of Union Memorial Hospital. They started their social work career working with people with severe and persistent mental illness at Sheppard Pratt Health Systems. Randall holds a Master of Social Work from the University of Maryland School of Social Work with a concentration in clinical behavioral health.


*CONTACT HOUR ELIGIBILITY

In order to be eligible for the 1.75 contact hours/certificate of attendance, you must join the live webinar in the Zoom platform.

Certificates must be requested within one week of the event and will be processed within 30 days.

If you are having issues accessing the room/application at the time of the event: Please email [email protected] at the start of the webinar so that we can assist you.


ACCOMMODATIONS

If you are in need of any special accommodations, please notify the Central East PTTC Webinar Team three weeks in advance of the event, or as soon as possible, by emailing [email protected].


This series is brought to you in collaboration with the Central East PTTC.

Central East ATTC logo blue background     Central East PTTC logo green background

Starts: Apr. 5, 2023 1:00 pm
Ends: Apr. 5, 2023 3:00 pm
Timezone:
US/Eastern
Registration Deadline
April 5, 2023
Register
Event Type
Webinar/Virtual Training
Hosted by
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