ASAP Cultural Diversity Committee Mission Statement:
The ASAP Cultural Diversity Committee strives to enhance awareness relative to cultural diversity with an emphasis on inclusion of all groups.
ASAP CULTURAL DIVERSITY COMMITTEE CONFERENCE
JUNE 22, 2012
NEW YORKER HOTEL
481 EIGHTH AVENUE, NEW YORK, NEW YORK
The Cultural Diversity Committee of ASAP is delighted to invite you to attend their Second Annual Conference – The Culture of Wellness. The "Culture of Wellness" encourages Administrators and Practitioners to examine the many ways we can work together to promote health and well being within our worksites, homes, and our communities.
This conference will be a unique experience that includes evidencebased overviews of health and wellness approaches for mind, body, and spirit. Through interactive seminars and holistic activities, participants will have an opportunity to engage in their self-care, health and wellness in “real time”.
The goals of the conference are to:
- Identify the role of body, mind, and spirit in health and wellness.
- Discuss current research for approaches to holistic health and wellness.
- Explore holistic wellness practices for self-care and review strategies for engaging in wellness
conversations with clients.
Save the Date Flyer (click through for more information)
Call for Papers (click through for more information)
Marketing Opportunities (click through for more information)
TO PROMOTE ENHANCED DIVERSITY AND COMPETENCY IN
NEW YORK STATE'S ALCOHOLISM AND SUBSTANCE ABUSE SERVICES,
THE COMMITTEE SUPPORTS THE FOLLOWING:
TWELVE-POINT PLATFORM:
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Ongoing advocacy for program management and staff that is representative and reflective of the diverse clients they serve. This also includes the management and staff of OASAS
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We recommend that this commitment to diversity should be institutionalized and articulated in the mission, vision, values statement and strategic plan of every treatment and prevention service provider.
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Every service provider should ensure that their management and staff undergo regular, formal training in diversity and competency, consistent with OASAS Local Service Bulletin #2001-01.
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Every service provider should develop a written strategy to recruit, retain and promote diverse, culturally competent administrative, managerial, clinical and support staff who are trained and qualified to address the specific needs of the diverse racial and ethnic communities served. Every service provider should review and adjust its policies and procedures to ensure that they reflect their commitment to diversity and competency, including areas such as intake, treatment planning, discharge planning and client satisfaction.
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We support the plans by OASAS and ASAP for leadership development and would recommend that these plans include cultural diversity and cultural competency training.
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Every service provider should ensure that all written materials are fully accessible to all clients served, such as forms, rules and regulations, and consents for disclosure of information ("releases") and bibliotherapeutic materials. These materials should be written in a variety of languages which would make them easily understood by the populations served.
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Every service provider should have a practical written policy and procedure manual which includes addressing the needs of clients, applicants and collateral contacts who are disabled.
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OASAS should continue to develop and deliver curricula on competency-related issues and skills, and make these trainings more available to providers.
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As part of the CASAC credentialing and re-credentialing process, OASAS should require that applicants complete a minimum number of training hours in diversity and competency training.
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We advocate that OASAS create a statewide service directory for providers that would list trainers, including the specific expertise in the are of cultural diversity/competency. This directory should be made available to all providers and updated with reasonable frequency.
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We advocate that ASAP includes in its PEER REVIEW process a mechanism for gauging whether systems are in place to address the needs of the ethnic communities in the programs being reviewed.
We recommend that OASAS and ASAP continually explore funding streams that would lend financial support to programs for their efforts to enhance services in the areas of cultural diversity and competency.
ASAP Cultural Diversity Committee Members
Sonskeshana Kornegay, Chair • Private Practice
Valerie Lyons, Co- Chair • Valerie J. Lyons Enterprises
Lenard Hebert • Reality House
Louis Burnes • Private Practice
David Caba • Create
Ricky Cottingham • JCAP
Donna Mae DePola • Resource Training Center
Zoraida Diaz • OASAS
Patricia Hincken • Zucker Hospital
Andres Hoyos • LGBT Center
Roy Kearse • Samaritan Village
Joseph Kelly • Private Practice
Loretta Poole, Secretary • OASAS
Deirdre Rice-Reese • Samaritan Village
Cesar Sosa • New York Therapeutic Community
Omar Speight • ARGUS
Ramon Welsh • The New York Foundling