BEGIN:VCALENDAR VERSION:2.0 PRODID:-//132.216.98.100//NONSGML kigkonsult.se iCalcreator 2.20.4// BEGIN:VEVENT UID:20250505T063431EDT-17532pcCVm@132.216.98.100 DTSTAMP:20250505T103431Z DESCRIPTION:The Quebec Child Mental Health Research Day is a popular event bringing together Quebec child psychiatrists and mental health researchers to inform participants of what is happening in this area. Please come and join us at this informative half-day conference.\n\nThis year the event w ill happen hybrid\, in person (RI Auditorium ES1-1129) and by TEAMS\n\nFor any questions please call Tel.: 514-412-4400 (22470) or E-mail: psychiat. division [at] muhc.mcgill.ca\n\nRegistration: https://www.eventbrite.ca/e/ quebec-child-and-adolescent-mental-health-re...\n\nTitle: Trauma Informed Treatment for Vulnerable Young and Older Children\n\nINVITED SPEAKERS:\n Dr . Rachel Kronick is a researcher and child psychiatrist. She directs the O utpatient Child Psychiatry Services at the Jewish General Hospital and chi ld consultant with the Cultural Consultation Service. She completed her re sidency training and masters in Transcultural Psychiatry at ϲ Univers ity. Her clinical and research Fellowship in child and youth psychiatry wa s based at the University of Toronto and focused on trauma\, homelessness and refugeed families. Her primary research is on the social determinants of mental health for refugee\, asylum-seeking and precarious migrant child ren and families\, with a specific focus on migration policies and practic es in Canada. Since 2018\, Dr Kronick has been awarded 19 grants as Princi pal Investigator\, including five Tri-Agency grants. Her work has focused on the immigration detention of children and preventative community- and s chool-based ecosocial interventions for refugee claimants and newcomer fam ilies. Her current CIHR and SSHRC research-to-policy projects address the present public health crisis of mass arrivals of asylum seekers with the r esultant need for temporary accommodation sites in Ontario and Québec and the stressful context this creates for children and families during the fi rst months after arrival Canada. Her research uses qualitative and mixed-m ethods methodologies including Critical Ethnography\, Visual and Arts-Base d Methodologies and Participatory Action Research.\n\n\n Dr. Alicia F. Lieb erman\, Ph.D. is Irving B. Harris Endowed Chair in Infant Mental Health\, Professor in the UCSF Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences\, a nd director of the UCSF Child Trauma Research Program. She directs the Ear ly Trauma Treatment Network\, a center of SAMHSA National Child Traumatic Stress Network funded since 2001 with the mission to increase access and r aise the standard of care for trauma-exposed young children and their fami lies across the United States. She is the senior developer of Child-Parent Psychotherapy (CPP)\, an evidence-based treatment for traumatized childre n aged birth-five with an international reach in Australia\, Hong Kong\, I srael and Europe and nationally disseminated in 40+ states through 2500+ r ostered clinicians and 80+ CPP trainers. CPP has been successfully extende d to the perinatal period as Perinatal Child-Parent Psychotherapy (P-CPP). Her research involves treatment outcome studies in pregnancy and with tra umatized young children from low-income and under-represented minority gro ups. She is the author of The Emotional Life of the Toddler\, described as “groundbreaking” and now in its second edition to mark its 25th year in c ontinuous print. She is also the author of numerous professional books and articles on pregnancy and early childhood mental health. Born in Paraguay \, she received her professional training in Israel and the United States. Her cross-cultural experience as a Jewish Latina informs her commitment t o increasing access and raising the standard of care for low-income and mi nority children and families. She is Board Member Emerita of the Zero to T hree Board of Directors and a board member and past board chair of the Irv ing Harris Foundation. She is the recipient of numerous awards\, including the 2023 Holly Smith Award UCSF Award for Exceptional University Service\ , 2020 Zero to Three Lifetime Achievement Award and 2016 Rene Spitz Award for Lifetime Achievement from the World Association of Infant Mental Healt h (WAIMH)\, and 2016 Hero Award from the San Francisco Department of Publi c Health.\n\n\n PROGRAM\n 8:30 to 8:50 a.m. - Registration\n 8:50 to 9:00 a.m . - Opening Remarks: Dr. Lily Hechtman:\n Introduction of speaker\n 9:00 to 10:00 a.m. - Dr. Rachel Kronick: An ecosocial approach to trauma and stres s-related disorders in school-aged children and youth\n 10:00 to 10:30 a.m. Question Period\n 10:30 to 10:45 a.m. - Break\n 10:45 to 11:45 a.m. - Dr. A licia Lieberman: Trauma-Informed Treatment of Young Children: Speaking the Unspeakable in Child-Parent Psychotherapy\n 11:45 to 12:15 a.m. Question P eriod\n 12:15 to 12:30pm Closing remarks: Dr. Lily Hechtman\n\n\n LEARNING O BJECTIVES:\n 1. To appreciate the impact of early childhood trauma on the m ental health and emotional development of young and older children\n 2. To learn key elements of trauma informed treatment for young and older childr en\n 3. To appreciate specific elements of trauma informed treatment such a s intergenerational transmission of trauma and protective factors\n DTSTART:20250502T123000Z DTEND:20250502T163000Z SUMMARY:Quebec Child Mental Health Research Day 2025 URL:/psychiatry/channels/event/quebec-child-mental-hea lth-research-day-2025-364680 END:VEVENT END:VCALENDAR