Mental Health Emergencies Breakthrough Strategies for Crisis Intervention – Tim Webb

Preparing for the worst is vital to the safety of your client, yourself and others in the community. What would you have done in that scenario?

Mental Health Emergencies Breakthrough Strategies for Crisis Intervention by Tim Webb,
Salepage link: At HERE. Archive:

In November, 2014 a 68-year old male was hospitalized near Minneapolis because he was suffering from paranoia and episodes of confusion. Hours later, the man assaulted multiple nurses when he chased them out of their station, furiously swinging a metal pole. One nurse suffered a collapsed lung and another fractured her wrist, along with bruises and cuts. The man then fled the hospital and ran for blocks until police could finally take him down.

As a clinician, you will inevitably be faced with moments of crisis.

Preparing for the worst is vital to the safety of your client, yourself and others in the community. What would you have done in that scenario? In hindsight, were there warning signs hospital workers missed during intake?

As an in-take director for an inpatient psychiatric treatment center and over 20 years’ experience, Tim Webb, MAEd, LPC, will teach you the skills you need to quickly assess, triage, manage and treat clients in crisis.

Leave this seminar with new confidence that you can:

  1. Examine legal and ethical implications in emergency situations.
  2. Complete a mental status exam to better assess for psychotic symptoms.
  3. Demonstrate strategies to assess for suicidal, threatening, or dangerous clients.
  4. Describe proper documentation to avoid legal actions and insurance disputes.
  5. Develop effective safety plans and crisis interventions for suicidal and psychotic patients.
  6. List current street drugs and their effects on client’s mind and body.
  7. Recognize which psychotropic medications a client is using for their diagnosis.

Ethical Responsibilities and Legal Obligations in Emergency Situations

Mental Status Exams

Suicide Risk Assessment

Violent or Homicidal: Assessment & Intervention

Danger in the Chemically Dependent: Alcohol, Street Drugs & Prescriptions

Original Content
Back to Top