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Mind. Body.
Spirit. Health.

Associate Post Master’s Mental Health Fellowship – Antioch

Kaiser Permanente Antioch Medical Center
Kaiser Permanente Antioch Medical Center

The city of Antioch is the gateway to the Delta, and is located on the banks of the San Joaquin River in east Contra Costa County. A city of approximately 115,000 residents, Antioch, is one of the few Bay Area communities offering affordable housing; as a result, increased development has created employment opportunities in schools, hospitals, and other local service sectors. The Antioch area offers a wide range of shopping, cultural, and recreational activities, including the John Marsh Historic House State Park, Marsh Creek Regional Trail, art galleries and live music venues.

The Kaiser Permanente Antioch Mental Health and Addiction Medicine Services is located off the Hillcrest Avenue exit on Highway 4 in an office park and just a short walk from the BART extension train station. The department operates in a stand-alone building designed specifically for our services and offers ample parking. The KP Antioch Medical Center and Delta Fair Medical Offices are a 10-minute drive away.

Our department serves a socioeconomically and culturally diverse patient population in a geographical area spanning from Central/Eastern Contra County to southern Sacramento. Many of our clinicians travel from other Bay Area cities to work in Antioch. The commute from the west is a reverse commute, making it an easy drive to our unique clinic.

Program Curriculum

Equity, Inclusion & Diversity

We are committed to nurturing and integrating diversity training into every aspect of our Associate Post Masters Mental Health Fellowship Program by:

  • Providing fellows with opportunities to work with patients who represent a wide range of diversity, including ethnicity, gender, sexual orientation, age, religion, socioeconomic status and abilities.
  • Placing a high value on encouraging and supporting fellows’ willingness and ability to engage in self-reflection and learning about their assumptions, privileges and habits that could have a negative impact on clinical interactions with patients who are different in significant ways from them.
  • Maintaining a consistent focus in clinical supervision on expanding fellows’ multicultural awareness and competence in the provision of psychotherapeutic services and by providing guidance and resources on topics related to diversity.
  • Providing formal didactic training on a range of diversity topics (e.g., discovering and mitigating unconscious bias, respecting every voice, and cultivating a sense of inclusion and belonging in the workplace).
  • Encouraging fellows to participate in the Regional Mental Health Training Program EID Forums, which provide advanced training on topics related to cultural humility and competence and a safe space in which to reflect upon and discuss their varied experiences.

Didactic Training

Regularly scheduled weekly didactic seminars are organized and administered at the regional level for all Kaiser Permanente Northern California mental health trainees. Fellows are required to attend the two-hour weekly seminar, which focuses on aspects of clinical practice that the residents may not regularly encounter. Diversity issues are always integrated into seminar presentations.

Recent seminar topics included: Frontiers in Trauma Treatment; Advanced Risk Assessment; Updates in Substance Abuse Research & treatment; Advancements in Psychopharmacology; Cognitive Processing Therapy; Technology and Mental Health; Trans/Nonbinary Mental Health; Building a Better Brain through Exercise, Nutrition, Sleep and Stress Management; and Self-compassion.

Our Regional Mental Health Training Program also sponsors professional training courses for continuing professional development. These courses and presentations are offered at select times during the year for all KP mental health trainees and staff at Kaiser Northern California Medical Centers. We bring in national experts and keynote speakers on a variety of cutting-edge topics in mental health treatment and research. Fellows are required to attend these monthly regional trainings in addition to the weekly didactic seminars. Training course dates and a list of speakers and topics can be found on the Regional Mental Health Training Programs website. In addition, many of these lectures are recorded and available under the continuing education lecture library.

Seminars and Meetings

Along with the extensive regional and local didactic program and their weekly individual and group supervision, fellows participate in a weekly team huddle and monthly MH Department meeting. Fellows also participate in regular Feedback Informed Care (FIC) case consultations.

Supervision

The primary and secondary supervisor is responsible for supervising the direct delivery of clinical services. This supervisor takes the lead role in monitoring the fellow’s progress, providing feedback on strengths and areas in need of further development, ensuring effective and safe patient care, adequate documentation, and evaluating training schedules.

Group supervision will be shared across the Diablo Service Area to provide broader and more diverse clinical opportunities. Group supervision includes opportunities for fellows to present and discuss cases. Fellows learn how to address treatment through a cultural framework including ethnicity, language, age, gender and sexual identity. Group supervision allows for vicarious learning, practice with professional public clinical presentations, and learning how to give and receive feedback.

Community Partnership Program

Reflecting Kaiser Permanente’s core commitment to mental health and wellness in our communities, each trainee will spend at least 32 hours during their training year on a Community Partnership Project that focuses on improving mental health in the local community beyond our Kaiser Permanente members. Most recently our partnerships have been with Trinity Center, Dozier Libbey Medical High School, KP Launch Summer Internship. Other local opportunities available.

The goal of these projects is to provide outreach to underserved populations in the community to promote healthy behaviors. Training Objectives include developing acquaintance with the tenets of Community Psychology, as well as gaining experience in community outreach, and the development of partnerships within internal and external systems.

Tracks and Rotations

Child and Family Generalist

This track offers fellows the opportunity to work on a multidisciplinary treatment team utilizing evidence-based and multimodal treatment with children, teens, and their families. Fellows are assigned cases from the broad and diverse patient population in the clinic and will address needs related to the treatment of mood disorders, anxiety disorders, autism spectrum disorders, attention and impulse control disorders, trauma, behavioral issues, and more. Fellows will evaluate and diagnose mental health conditions based on DSM-5 and ICD-10 criteria, develop treatment plans and learn how to articulate those plans to their patients.

Fellows will utilize evidence-based interventions within a feedback informed care model including the use of outcomes monitoring at each session. Training in evidence-based individual and family treatment will consist of providing therapy within a focused treatment model. Training in evidence-based group therapy will consist of co-facilitating groups under the supervision of licensed therapists. Fellows generally start with a schedule that introduces them broadly to the teams and range of programming in the department. After three months, when their foundational skills and general understanding of best practices and standards is internalized, in conjunction with their supervisors and training director, fellows will choose specialty areas for additional experience and training.

Adult Team Generalist

This track offers fellows the opportunity to work on a multidisciplinary treatment team utilizing evidence-based and multimodal treatment with adults. Fellows are assigned cases from the broad and diverse patient population in the clinic and will address needs related to the treatment of mood disorders, anxiety disorders, personality disorders, trauma, aging, adjustment, crises, work or life stress, schizophrenia and other psychotic disorders, obsessive-compulsive and related disorders, bipolar disorder, and eating disorders.  Fellows will evaluate and diagnose mental health conditions based on DSM-5 and ICD-10 criteria, develop treatment plans and learn how to articulate those plans to their patients.

Fellows will utilize evidence-based interventions within a feedback informed care model including the use of outcomes monitoring at each session.  Training in evidence-based individual and family treatment will consist of providing therapy within a focused treatment model. Training in evidence-based group therapy will consist of co-facilitating groups under the supervision of licensed therapists.  Fellows generally start with a schedule that introduces them broadly to the teams and range of programming in the department. After three months, when their foundational skills and general understanding of best practices and standards is internalized, in conjunction with their supervisors and training director, fellows will choose specialty areas for additional experience and training.

Schedule

Direct Patient Care: 20 hours

Non-Patient Care: 12 hours

Individual Supervision: 2 hours

Group Supervision: 2 hours

Didactic Training: 2 hours

Feedback Informed Care and case consultation: 2 hours

Community Benefit Project: 32 hours over the course of the year

 

Current Opportunities

Position Track(s)
Adult (2 Positions) Adult
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