The Chinese University of Hong Kong Department of Psychiatry Schedule for November, 2018
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for favour of posting dated on: 2018/11/01 The Chinese University of Hong Kong Department of Psychiatry Schedule for November, 2018 Date Time Activity Speaker/Team Nov 1 16:30-17:30 Clinical Neuroscience Seminar* Dr. Sandra Chan Journal Club - Pleasure system in the brain Nov 8 14:30-16:00 Academic Lecture* Dr. Kelly Lai Support for students with mental health problems in Associate Professor the school setting: an overview of the School Mental Department of Psychiatry Health Support Scheme in Hong Kong CUHK 16:00-17:30 Clinical Case Conference* Child Team A case from school mental health support scheme - “A Buddha like student” Nov 15 14:30-16:30 Quality Assurance Meeting (TPH) All Clinical Staff Nov 22 14:30-16:30 Quality Assurance Meeting (SH) All Clinical Staff 16:30-17:30 Clinical Forum/Research Meeting (SH) 14:30-16:00 Psychotherapy Case Conference* Dr. Iris Lai, Jenny Kwok, Teresa Good enough daughter Chan, Irene Kam 16:00-16:45 Psychotherapy Supervision* Dr. Teresa Chan, Irene Kam Nov 29 14:30-16:00 Academic Lecture* Prof. Tatia Lee Neurobiological basis of affective processing Head of Department Department of Psychology HKU 16:00-17:30 Skills Workshop*# Prof. Linda Lam, Dr. Victor Lui How to prepare a medical report #Please note there will be no CME credits. Venue: *Seminar Room TPH SH G/F, Multicentre Conference Room 1 Dining Room Tai Po Hospital G/F, Wing D Ward 7AB Tai Po, N.T. Tai Po Hospital Dept. of Psychiatry Tai Po, N.T. 7/F, Shatin Hospital Shatin, N.T. Please contact 2607-6025 two days before hand to arrange presentation equipment. http://www.psychiatry.cuhk.edu.hk Department of Psychiatry Date: November 8, 2018 Time: 14:30-16:00 Venue: Seminar Room, G/F, Multicenter, Tai Po Hospital, Tai Po, N.T. Academic Lecture: Dr. Kelly Lai, Associate Professor Department of Psychiatry The Chinese University of Hong Kong Topic: Support for students with mental health problems in the school set- ting: an overview of the School Mental Health Support Scheme in Hong Kong. Abstract: Children and adolescents with mental health problems require an array of services that is child- centred and community-based. While specialist services can provide assessment and manage- ment of the more serious and complicated problems, children need continuing support in the community, particularly schools and families, to continue learning and maturing. For those with early signs of mental health issues, they will benefit from early identification and intervention to prevent the escalation of their problems that jeopardize their development. With these in mind, a well-accepted model of care is a three-tier stepped care service model that facilitates cross-sectoral and multi-disciplinary collaborations. Better coordination and col- laboration between medical, educational, and social sectors in the community can faciliate early identification and timely access to services. Towards this end, Food and Health Bureau has steered and implemented the Student Mental Health Support Scheme to facilitate such a collab- oration. Under the Scheme, a school-based multi-disciplinary communication platform which involves healthcare, education and social welfare professionals and parents/guardians has been set up to assist in the assessment of students’ mental health needs and formulation of multi- disciplinary interventions through regular case meetings and interventions in the school set- ting. An overview of this Scheme and preliminary findings will be presented. All are welcome and no registration required. For enquires, please contact 26076025 Department of Psychiatry Date: November 29, 2018 Time: 14:30-16:00 Venue: Seminar Room, G/F, Multicenter, Tai Po Hospital, Tai Po, N.T. Academic Lecture: Prof. Tatia Lee, Head of Department Department of Psychology The University of Hong Kong Topic: Neurobiological basis of affective processing. Abstract: Emotion, emerged in the course of evolution, helps us survive various challenges. For example, “fear” protects us against danger; “joy” facilitates bonding between people offering nurturance to each other. Emotional im- pulses, on the other hand, may lead to socially inappropriate behaviors. For production of adaptive and goal-directed behaviors, efficient and ef- fective emotion regulation must be in place. In this seminar, we shall visit the behavioral and neuroimaging data that reveal the neural underpin- nings of normal and abnormal affective processing. Behavioral interven- tion for promotion of affective regulation will also be explored. Biography: Tatia Lee is the May Endowed Professor in Neuropsychology and Chair Professor of Psychology at The University of Hong Kong. She is also the Di- rector of the State Key Laboratory of Brain and Cognitive Sciences of the University. All are welcome and no registration required. For enquires, please contact 26076025 .