Psychiatry Congress to tackle mental health issues
Psychiatry Congress to tackle mental health issues
28 April 2010 From children and adolescents to old age, mental health across the lifespan will be discussed at The Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Psychiatrists’ Congress in Auckland, 2 to 6 May 2010. With a theme of ‘A shared endeavour’, the Congress’ internationally eminent keynote speakers will present a diverse range of understandings of the human condition:
Professor Vikram Patel, Professor of
International Mental Health and Wellcome Trust Senior
Clinical Research Fellow at the London School of Hygiene and
Tropical Medicine, London whose book Where There Is No
Psychiatrist is widely used manual for community mental
health in developing countries.
Global Mental Health
- a New Discipline Comes of Age, Sunday 2 May
6pm
Jim Crowe, a community worker and mental health
advocate for over 20 years, particularly in Asia.
The
Asian Forum – A Shared Endeavour, Monday 3 May
8.15am
Professor Mason Durie, Professor of Maori
Research and Development and Assistant Vice-Chancellor
(Maori & Pasifika) at Massey University, on the governing
body of Te Wananga o Raukawa, a tribal tertiary education
institution and an expert on Maori mental health and
indigenous development.
Indigenous Interventions in
Mental Health: Maori Experience, Monday 3 May
11am
Professor Sheila Hollins, Professor of
Psychiatry of Intellectual Disability at St. George's,
University of London and key researcher on
deinstitutionalisation, health inequalities for people with
intellectual disabilities and mental health outcomes
following bereavement and abuse.
Better Lives and
Better Mental Health for Children and Adults with
Intellectual Disabilities, Monday 3 May
11.45am
Professor Paul Appelbaum, the Elizabeth K.
Dollard Professor of Psychiatry, Medicine and Law, Director
Division of Law, Ethics, and Psychiatry, Department of
Psychiatry, College of Physicians and Surgeons of Columbia
University, and an expert on law and ethics in clinical
practice and research.
From Institutional Coercion to
Community Leverage: Psychiatry in the 21st Century,
Tuesday 4 May 9am
Professor Dinesh Bhugra,
President of the Royal College of Psychiatrists, Professor
of Mental Health and Cultural Diversity at the Institute of
Psychiatry, Kings College London, and Honorary Consultant at
the South London and Maudsley Trust.
Bollywood to
Hollywood, Tuesday 4 May 9.45am
Professor Richard
Faull, Professor of Anatomy at the University of
Auckland, founder of the internationally recognised Human
Brain Bank to support worldwide research on
neurodegenerative diseases and specialist on Huntington's,
Alzheimer's, Parkinson's disease and Epilepsy.
Stem
Cells and Neurogenesis in the Human Brain - Fact and
Fantasy, Wednesday 5 May 11am
Dr Nancy
McWilliams, teacher at the Graduate School of Applied
and Professional Psychology at Rutgers, the State University
of New Jersey and expert on personality structure and
personality disorders, psychodiagnosis, sex and gender,
trauma and psychotherapy.
What Happened to our Shared
Understanding of Mental Health?, Thursday 6 May
11am
When: 2 to 6 May 2010
Where: SkyCity
Convention Centre, Auckland
Details of the RANZCP 2010
Congress program are available at: http://www.ranzcp2010.co.nz/
ENDS