Showing posts with label professional trainings. Show all posts
Showing posts with label professional trainings. Show all posts

Thursday, October 8, 2009

Birthingway College of Midwifery Homeopathy Workshop


Birthingway's Homeopathy Workshop

Homeopathy is safe, inexpensive and effective, and it is super fun to create yourself too!

Saturday, October 24 from 9am-3pm

taught by Cari Nyland, ND

at Birthingway College

(Registration deadline is October 16, 2009)

Cost: $70

This workshop is designed to help birth professionals or anyone else who is interested with self-care through creating homeopathy remedies.

Link to our website with the registration form: http://birthingway.org/uploads/File/Homeopathy%20CEU%20reg%20Fall%2009.pdf

Saturday, February 21, 2009

Are you called to be a midwife?

SISTAH MIDWIFE INTERNATIONAL
PRESENTS
“The Blessings of Midwifery, Helping from the Inside Out"
Are Your Called To Midwifery?
Shafia M. Monroe, Certified Midwife since 1982, midwife trainer, mentor, coach, public health activist, author and motivational speaker, will share the spiritual and the service fulfillment of midwifery.
Midwifery is beautiful, spiritual, traditional and evidenced based; is it for you?
Shafia will cover:
Learn how the Spirit calls women to midwifery.
Why Be a Midwife?
Midwifery contributions to healthy families and neighborhoods.
Midwifery Paths: Certified Nurse Midwifery (CNM) and the Certified Professional Midwife(CPM).
Share your call to midwifery.

When: Thursday February 26, 2009, at 6:00pm -8pm over a full course Ethiopian dinner.
Where: The Horn of Africa’s Special Meeting Room, 2nd floor
5237 NE MLK Jr. Blvd. Portland, OR 97211 (inside the Vanport Plaza)
Cost: $20.00 for dinner and a complementary gift of “Black Midwives and Prenatal Provider Directory-Essential Recipes and Words of Wisdom for Expecting and New Parents”.
Payment due by February 21st. There is limiting seating; the first 10 people will be guaranteed a seat.
Please pay through PayPal at www.sistahmidwife.com
or by check to: Shafia M. Monroe, PO Box 11303, Portland, OR 97211,
(503) 281-1688
Sistah Midwife International (SMI) building capacity through motivational speaking, diversity training and coaching. SMI promulgates midwifery as a solution to better birth outcomes, healthy communities, and sustainability and mentors women aspiring to become midwives.
Read Shafia’s bio at www.sistahmidwife.com and www.ictcmidwives.org.

Tuesday, October 14, 2008

Second Annual Nutrition in the Womb Course


Join OHSU, March of Dimes, and The Barker Foundation for
the Second Annual
Nutrition in the Womb Course

Oct. 30-31, 2008
at the Residence Inn, by Marriott, David Evans Conference Center,
2115 SW River Parkway, Portland, OR 97201.

“The diets of mothers today are determining the health of future generations.”


Nutrition in the Womb is a course that will bring together current knowledge in the exciting new field of developmental origins of health and disease, integrating epidemiology with clinical and basic science. We will discuss the biological mechanisms, critical windows and trade-offs that occur during fetal development. Gender and ethnic specific aspects of development will also be described. We will emphasize the importance of the diets of girls and young women, and examine the current barriers to good food choices. The long-term effects of infant feeding and child growth will be reviewed. Round table discussions with invited experts and course participants will begin to explore the strategies by which the epidemic of chronic disease in the US can be brought to an end.


Please take advantage of this unique opportunity to learn how improving the diets of girls and young women will reduce the burden of chronic disease in the next generation.

The course schedule, registration form and other details can be found at http://www.nutritioninthewomb.org/.

Invited speakers from OHSU include Liz Adams, Maternal and Child Nutritionist; Susan Bagby, Nephrologist; David Barker, Physician and Epidemiologist; Dan Marks, Pediatrician; Robert Mckelvey, Psychiatrist; Sally Segel, Obstetrician; and Kent Thornburg, Physiologist and Director of the Heart Research Center.

Invited speakers will include Sarah Hampson, Psychologist, Oregon Institute; Mel Kohn, State Epidemiologist, Public Health Division, Oregon Department of Human Services; Dan Lackland, Public Health Physician, Medical University of South Carolina; Michelle Lampl, Anthropologist, Emory University, Atlanta; and Barrie Margetts, Professor of Public Health Nutrition, University of Southampton, UK.

If you have any questions about this conference, please call Justin Reeves Burke at 503.473.4794 or visit http://www.barker.org/

Monday, June 30, 2008

A Safe Passage Training

A Safe Passage: Supporting Women Survivors of Abuse through the Childbearing Years

Advanced Practitioner Training

September 27 & 28th, 2008
9:00am-6:00pm
at Nurture 1614 NE Alberta St.
$250/participant


A Safe Passage is an Advanced Practitioner Training program designed to help caregivers gain an understanding of the special needs of women survivors of abuse and learn the skills needed to support them through their pregnancy, labor & childbirth and early postpartum.

Caregivers who would benefit from this training include counselors, doulas, midwives, lactation consultants, nurses and other health care professionals caring for women in the childbearing year.

Women who have experienced childhood sexual abuse, sexual violence and woman abuse have unique emotional, psychological and physical needs related to the abuse during pregnancy, birth and postpartum. Trauma from the abuse can manifest itself into a variety of complex thoughts and behaviors through the childbearing year, which may pose particular challenges for caregivers and could have lifelong impacts on women and their children when appropriate and sensitive services are not available. Safety, both physical and emotional for both the care-provider and client can be in jeopardy.

At the same time, as a caregiver you have the opportunity to become a trusted ally. Through continuing education and training, support persons can learn appropriate ways of screening clients for abuse related trauma, techniques to respond to disclosures, can learn how to work collaboratively with their clients to devise an action plan for coping with potential triggers that may arise during the childbearing year and offer referrals to supportive community services.

About the facilitator
Jodi has worked with women as a doula and childbirth educator since 1996, with a focus on the intersections between trauma histories and the experiences of women during the childbearing years. Since 2002 she has been employed in both residential and clinical settings as a full-time Woman Abuse counselor, providing counseling as well as facilitating groups for women whose children have been exposed to their abuse, and groups for children who are coping with the impacts of witnessing the abuse of their mothers. Jodi has a certificate in crisis intervention from Fanshawe College and an Honors Degree in Women's Studies from The University of Western Ontario. As of Fall 2007, she is again attending UWO, this time to obtain her PhD in Health Sciences-Health Professional Education.

Jodi's unique combination of skills from both the birthing community and the Violence Against Women sector has spurred a high demand internationally for her workshops aimed at informing other medical and allied health and social service professionals around the complex issue of trauma and the childbearing years. She was recently a guest presenter at The National Summit to Ensure the Health and Humanity of Pregnant and Birthing Women in Atlanta , Georgia , and provided specialized training in Vancouver at the Canadian Prenatal Nutrition Program's provincial conference Celebrating the Health of Our Children, Families and Communities.

Jodi resides with her family in London , Ontario , where she runs a private counseling practice for women, and operates A Safe Passage, the first and only website dedicated to supporting Women Survivors of Abuse through the childbearing year through providing women, their families and their care providers with information on the impacts of trauma on the perinatal period.

To register or for more information contact Mychelle at Nurture: mychelle@nurturepdx.com or (971) 344-7527

$250/person, some sliding scale spots available
$100 minimum pre-registration deposit

Upon receipt of your registration, your confirmation of registration will be sent to you, which will provide the details of your workshop location, maps, and, if requested, lodging advice.

Nursing infants are welcome in the workshop; however, the intense nature of the workshop precludes the attendance of older, more active children. We ask that you respect the learning needs of the other participants by attending to your child when necessary, and taking him/her out of the room if the need arises.

This workshop has limited enrollment and tends to fill up quickly, so please register early to hold your spot or call to confirm that space is available. A deposit of $100 (non-refundable) is required with your registration.

Fees include materials and certificate of completion.
CAPPA Canada, LAMAZE (therefore DONA), continuing education credits available (11 ceu’s)

If there are other organizations that you would like us to contact for ceu's, please let us know.

For full workshop details please visit:
http://www.asafepassage.info/