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November 2019
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Alberta Initiatives

Specialized Police and Court Support 

AASAS member agencies have police and court support workers trained in sexual assault trauma and experienced in the justice system in unique roles where they answer questions about the options around reporting sexual violence. If an individual chooses to report, they provide specialized support throughout the entire justice process, which can take years.

1,597 Albertans accessed our Specialized Police & Court Support programs April through September of this year.

Program staff delivered 10,298 client sessions, conducted 4,494 hours of direct client work, and 2,591 hours of consultation, case management, and advocacy work on behalf of clients. This is an indicator that these clients require consistent and ongoing support as they engage with the criminal justice system. Clients remain active within the police and court support program accessing information, emotional support, accompaniment and advocacy for months at a time. 
November is Family Violence Prevention Month in Alberta. It’s a time to increase awareness of the resources and supports available, and work together to end family violence and build healthier relationships in our communities.

This year’s theme, #WhereToTurn, encourages you to learn what resources are available in your community to support those affected by family violence.

In the News

Supporting Seniors 

Anyone of any age can experience sexual violence so our member agencies provide support to everyone - from children to seniors. Seniors may reach out for help regarding a historic or recent sexual assault. Central Alberta Sexual Assault Support Centre discusses the issue in the Red Deer Advocate.
 

Training Opportunities

First Responder to Sexual Assault and Abuse Training

What will Participants Learn?

This training is intended to build the capacity of professionals, paraprofessionals and community members to assess and respond effectively to disclosures of sexual assault and sexual abuse. Survivors who receive safe and supportive responses to disclosures of sexual violence are more likely to reach out for help from medical and counselling services and/ or report to police. First Responder to Sexual Assault and Abuse Training™ is a comprehensive two day training, inclusive of the full continuum of sexual violence and across the lifespan.

Upcoming training dates:
Nov 5-6      Lloydminster (Session Full)
Nov 7-8      High Level (Registration Open)
Nov 13-14  Edmonton (Registration Open)
Nov 18-19  Fort McMurray (Registration Open)
Nov 21-22  Peterborough (Private Training)
Nov 21-22  High Level (Registration Open)
Dec 5-6      Bonnyville (Registration Open)
Jan 15-16   Lethbridge (Registration Open)

Please visit the AASAS website regularly for new training dates.

If you would like to coordinate a First Responder Training in your community, organization, or institution – please email AASAS.
Counselling Adult Survivors of Sexual Violence

The Association of Alberta Sexual Assault Services (AASAS) is thrilled to announce an upcoming Counselling Adult Survivors of Sexual Violence Course, taking place in an online classroom from January 23rd through April 9th, 2020. 
 
What will Students Learn?
This course offers an integrative, mindfulness-based approach to ongoing assessment and interventions with adult survivors (all genders) of sexual assault and childhood sexual abuse. It draws on the most current theory including feminist, attachment, regulation, and interpersonal neurobiology; and evidence-based practices, including mindfulness, cognitive, emotion-centred, somatic, neurofeedback and other emergent approaches for trauma, addiction and mental health.
 
Who Is This Course For?:
This 12-week online integrative course is designed for counselors, therapists, and other mental health practitioners who may wish to work with survivors of sexual violence, or who may be already working with survivors and would like to more deeply inform their counselling practice. Registrants must have, at a minimum, a bachelors level education in a social or health services discipline and/or are registered/licensed with a professional association that maintains a code of ethics and standards of practice that provide parameters for the registrant’s scope of practice. Special considerations may be accommodated on a case by case basis.
 
Participant Feedback about the Course:
  • “I really enjoyed every part of this course… I felt my instructors were very informative and presented the course great”
  • “I very much appreciated how comprehensive this course was”
  • “I feel I learned things about myself and am aware of it now”
Association of Alberta Sexual Assault Services #1645 is approved to offer social work continuing education by the Association of Social Work Boards (ASWB) Approved Continuing Education (ACE) program. Organizations, not individual courses, are approved as ACE providers. State and provincial regulatory boards have the final authority to determine whether an individual course may be accepted for continuing education credit. Association of Alberta Sexual Assault Services maintains responsibility for this course. ACE provider approval period: 11/29/2018-11/29/2021. Social workers completing this course receive 20 Category A continuing education credits.

For more information and to register, click on the poster below. 
Community Support Training

Pace is proud to offer training designed for community members, professionals, students, first responders (including law enforcement, medical, fire, etc.) and frontline workers in their region.

Sessions are facilitated by professional, skilled, and enthusiastic instructors with decades of training and experience, making this training invaluable.

To achieve a Crisis Response Management certificate, an individual must complete the required six core courses, plus a minimum of 12 hours of elective courses of their choosing. 

Member Agency Events & Updates

Meet Nanuq, the Sexual Assault Centre of Edmonton’s newest (and furriest!) team member

Laura joined the SACE team as a Counsellor in this past summer, and her beloved pet and certified Therapy Dog, Nanuq, joined shortly afterwards. Right now, Nanuq is in the office one day each working week and with such high demand it is being organized to have her in the office for an additional day. SACE has been considering adding a Facility Dog to our team as well to be a supportive presence to staff and clients, and having Nanuq in the office serves as a motivator and reminder of why Therapy Dogs are so important and appreciated.

I sat down with Laura to chat about her professional background and experience with Nanuq in the counselling capacity. Sitting in Laura’s office I face a beautiful painting done by one of her friends of Tin Can Hill in Yellowknife with a dog (Nanuq) in the frame. She mentioned to me that it is a painting representing her Calm Place, an exercise often used in EMDR counselling. 

E: Can you tell me a little bit about your professional experience/your journey to becoming a psychologist?

L: I started my journey to become a counsellor because of Nanuq. I was volunteering in 2010 at the Young Offenders Facility in Yellowknife with Nanuq and noticed that she knows how to do something that I do not, as the kids would start to open up with her around. I wanted to go to school to be as good as my dog.

E: How did Nanuq come into your life?

L: My partner at the time had an auntie whose dog had puppies and we met them when they were two days old. Their eyes and ears were still closed. I picked up Nanuq and looked at her with her white paw and knew it was my dog. At this time I was actually doing my Masters in Philosophy.

E: Tell me a little bit about Nanuq’s personality.

L: She is super friendly, she loves people. When we are walking and she decides some people need pets she stops in front of them and nudges them as they walk by. Nanuq is gentle, smart, and perceptive. She can tell how people are feeling and can be really grounding. She is also timely and keeps my appointments on schedule by rustling around at the hour mark.

E: What are some of Nanuq’s favorite snacks?

L: EVERYTHING. Toast. Chips. Carrots. Pizza Crust. Anything crunchy.

E: What are some of your favorite activities to do together?

L: She really likes to go to work. Nanuq is a bit older now, but she really enjoys hiking, being with us while we paddle, and she also likes to sit on all of our ropes when we go climbing. She likes the outdoors but prefers to be passed out on the couch. Nanuq also likes car rides, sitting in the passenger seat and leaning with the turns. She likes that a lot.

E: When did you decide to get her certified as a Therapy Dog?

L: Before I even had her and I learned about the St.John’s Ambulance literacy program.  After she was trained, we volunteered and children would read to Nanuq and show her the pictures in the book. It was adorable. I also met Nanuq’s parents and they were both also relaxed and lovely like her.

E: How was the journey of getting her trained? Was she always well-behaved?

L: Well, she failed her first test. I think she was too young; she was right around one year old. She put her paws on the table because there were snacks. Have I mentioned she loves food? She has been certified for nine years now. I have been a counsellor since 2012 and Nanuq started working with me in that capacity in 2014. We volunteered together for four years before having her work alongside me in the counselling capacity. Now, Nanuq has seen hundreds of clients. Her virtue is that she will do anything for food. Her vice is that she will do anything for food. It makes her easy to train at least. A lot of it is her temperament. She is relaxed and loves people. You can train a dog really well but you cannot change if it is a naturally anxious dog. You want to set dogs up for success because all dogs really just want to do a good job.

E: What do you perceive to be the benefits of having her in counselling sessions with you?

L: Firstly, she is cute. But really, she is grounding. I can also use her to demonstrate relaxation skills such as diaphragmatic breathing and rate of breathing. She can show clients how it looks to take deep belly breaths and we can breathe alongside her as she is laying down because her resting rate of breathing is not much different than a human’s! Nanuq is also very good comic relief, she snores sometimes. She notices slight changes in feelings and comforts clients by asking to be pet. She makes people comfortable automatically because it is something else to focus on. People can self-regulate by focusing on her. I also find that she is really good at teaching boundaries and communication. It can help clients practice this because sometimes they have to set boundaries with her and say things like “No, you can’t have my lunch.” With a dog you have to use direct communication which is not too passive or aggressive. It is a helpful practice.

E: How have your clients been enjoying Nanuq?

L: They are super pleased to see her and prefer when she is there.

E: SACE is considering adding a Facility Dog to the team to be a welcoming presence to staff, clients, and support people. What do you think the benefits of a Facility Dog will be for SACE in the future?

L: I think a Facility Dog will be calming and comforting to clients and staff. I noticed that Nanuq tends to be a really helpful presence for the staff here. People like to borrow her and are always willing to help when she needs to go outside. I think that a dog in this setting helps make people happy and offers some stress relief.

E: What would you like to see from a Facility Dog in the office?

L: A dog that won’t steal your lunch, (laughter) but seriously, a dog that is happy to come to work.

E: Is there anything Nanuq would like to add?

L: She would say, thanks for the treats and the pets. She would also like you to know that she is multi-talented and knows a crazy amount of tricks. If someone sneezes she brings them a box of Kleenex, even if we are somewhere she has never been before. Nanuq can also play hide-and-seek: I cover her eyes and count while people hide.

E: Is there anything you would like to add?

L: Nanuq makes my world better. I wanted a job where I can give back to my dog. She changed my life and I want to share that with people and be the kind of person that my dog thinks I am.

Interview by Erica, Office Administrator and part of the Communications and Development team at the Sexual Assault Centre of Edmonton.

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