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LINK

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Facilitate access to resources and enable students to ... Organizational chart Regions Key components of the program Link card Stickers Posters ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: LINK


1
LINK PROGRAM
COMPANIONS TRAINING
www.thelinkprogram.com
Grand Falls Link Program Committee, 1999.
2
Session Plan
  • The LINK program
  • Video The Link A Life Experience
  • Your availability
  • Confidentiality and mandatory reporting
  • Consent
  • Active listening
  • Using your own judgment
  • Follow-Up

3
Goal of the program
  • Provide students in Grades 6 to 12 who are having
    problems of any kind with easy access to services
    available in the community, with the help of a
    Link companion.
  • Facilitate access to resources and enable
    students to solve their problems before they get
    worse and lead to more serious situations.

4
Background
  • Developed in the 1990s in the Grand Falls region
    following the suicides of 2 teenagers.
  • Implemented by health professionals and school
    and community stakeholders in cooperation with
    the local suicide prevention committee.
  • Partnership with Club Richelieu.
  • In 2001 and 2006 recipient of the New Brunswick
    Suicide Prevention Recognition Award.

5
The symbol
  • Represents the relationship among individuals
    living in the same environment or society.
  • Each link is of equal importance. If one link
    is defective or broken, the whole chain is
    affected and cannot fulfill its role effectively.
  • However, if each link is solid,
  • the chain is as well.

6
Organizational chart
7
Regions
Bathurst 6. Grand Falls 11. Acadian Peninsula
2. Campbellton Kedgwick/St-Quentin 12. Saint John
3. St. Stephen 8. Kent 13. Sussex
4. Edmundston  9. Miramichi 14. Woodstock
5. Fredericton 10. Moncton
8
Key components of the program
Link card
Link companion
Posters
Decisional tree
Stickers
9
Link card
  • Each student is given a card and invited to write
    his or her name on it.
  • The card is a way for students and Link
    companions to communicate with each other.
  • The back of the card provides emergency telephone
    numbers.
  • The card means I need help.

"THE LINK" PROGRAM
Tu fais partie de la chaine! Nous avons tes
préoccupations à cœur. Use your card!
Un lien pour partager tes difficultés. Des
personnes sont là pour laccompagner.
10
Stickers
THE LINK PROGRAM
  • A sticker is used to identify Link companions.
  • It is placed in a visible and strategic location,
    e.g., classroom or office door.

USE YOUR CARD!
www.programmelemaillon.com
Grand Falls Link Program Committee, 1999.
11
Posters
  • The program is identified by banners and posters
    displayed in various strategic locations around
    the school.

12
DECISIONAL TREE
This is a guide for identifying the problem and
accessing the various services available in the
region.
13
Main issues generally included in the decisional
tree
  • Physical health and nutrition
  • Addiction (alcohol, drugs, tobacco, gambling,
    etc.)
  • Grief
  • Difficulties at school (academic, motivation,
  • socialization)
  • Financial, employment, or housing problems
  • Religion Spirituality

14
Main issues generally included in the decisional
tree
  • Support for young parents
  • Social isolation
  • Suicidal thoughts, mental health problems
  • Relationships, broken heart, peer pressure,
    blended families, parents separation or divorce
  • Eating disorders
  • Anger management and self-assertion

15
Main issues generally included in the decisional
tree
  • Sexual health and pregnancy
  • Sexual orientation
  • Physical, emotional or sexual abuse, neglect,
    family violence
  • Threats, harassment, intimidation, bullying,
    dating violence
  • Legal problems
  • Social reintegration

16
Link companions
  • Helpers, not specialists in helping relationships
  • Listen with empathy and offer support to the best
    of their ability
  • Using the decisional tree, refer students in
    distress to the appropriate helping resources

17
Your availability
  • Meet with students only when you are available
    and you feel comfortable doing so.
  • If not available right away, let the student
    know.
  • Explain that you would like to meet with him or
    her at another time when you can give him or her
    your full attention.
  • Confirm a meeting time.
  •  

18
Welcome
  • Give the card back to the student or give him
    or her a card if he or she does not already have
    one.
  • Be natural and stay calm.
  • Adopt a warm, emphatic approach.
  • Take the individual seriously.

19
Confidentiality and mandatory reporting
  • If the student asks questions about
    confidentiality, you must let him or her know
    that certain laws require you to ignore
    confidentiality if a life is in danger or in
    cases of abuse or neglect.
  • Companions, like any citizen, are required to
    report cases of abuse or neglect involving
    children under the age of 19 to the Department of
    Social Development.

20
Consent
  • Companions do not need parental consent to
    direct a young person to a resource or service.
    However, certain resources or services may
    require parental consent.
  • Companions are not responsible for requiring
    parental consent to access resources or services.

21
Active listening
  • Definition The ability to listen to and
    understand a person in need in order to
    strengthen the bond with that person.
  • Hearing is a natural involuntary process
    similar to breathing, whereas listening is a
    cognitive voluntary process. Listening is
    understanding.

22
Active listening
  • To apply active listening, two techniques are
    generally used
  • 1) Validation
  • 2) Empathy

23
Validation
  • This involves rephrasing in our own words what we
    have understood and having it confirmed by the
    other person.
  • The more understood the person feels, the more he
    or she will feel comfortable continuing to share
    his or her concerns.
  • Here are a few phrases that make validation
    possible
  • If I understand correctly, youre telling me
    that is that right?
  • To sum up, youre telling me that is that
    right?

24
Empathy
  • Means showing the other person that you
    understand how he or she is feeling emotionally
    by using the following expressions
  • I understand that what youre feeling may be
    causing you pain
  • I understand you when you tell me that

25
Using your judgment (decisional tree)
  • Before making a referral, and when possible
    and appropriate, encourage the student to talk to
    his or her parents about his or her problems.
  • Use your judgment (e.g., avoid referring a
    student who is experimenting with drugs for the
    first time to the Addiction Centre).

26
Follow-up
  • Follow-up is designed to ensure that the
    student has acted on the agreed-up approach.
  • It must be scheduled to take place within an
    appropriate interval of time.

27
Conclusion
  • Remember that you are serving as a link in the
    chain and that your role is to help young people
    who are experiencing a problem access existing
    services in the community.
  • By facilitating access to resources, they will be
    able to solve their problems before they get
    worse and lead to more serious situations.

28
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