Hot Topics in Mental Health & Law: Civil Commitment series
Tuesday, March 4, 2025, 12:00–1:00 p.m. PT
Webinar description:
In a 2015 position statement, the American Psychiatric Association asserted that involuntary commitment, if systematically implemented and resourced, can serve to mobilize appropriate care and, when it includes a range of biological, psychological, and social services, can promote recovery. A recovery-engendering deployment of involuntary commitment necessitates competent delivery of a range of evidence-based biopsychosocial interventions to treat the underlying psychiatric concerns that gave rise to the detention. Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) is the most well-researched psychological treatment and is indicated both for serious mental illnesses (SMI) and for a range of emotional, cognitive, and behavioral concerns that often accompany SMI, such as suicidality, sleep disturbance, and impulsivity. This presentation will describe a Washington state-funded effort to prioritize CBT delivery to individuals on a 90- or 180-day civil commitment and to shore up CBT care continuity across levels of care.
Learning objectives:
As a result of participating in this presentation, learners will be able to:
- Cite at least one prominent finding related to the efficacy, comparative effectiveness, or implementation of cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) for serious mental illness.
- Articulate the benefits of incorporating CBT for serious mental illness into the standard of involuntary treatment.
- Describe the efforts underway in Washington to enhance CBT care continuity across inpatient, outpatient, and specialty care settings.
About the presenter:
Sarah Kopelovich, PhD, ABPP, is a forensically-trained clinical psychologist in the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at the University of Washington. She is an associate professor; a core faculty member at the Center for Mental Health, Policy, and the Law; and holds the first Professorship of Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Psychosis (CBTp). Dr. Kopelovich has principal and co-investigator status on federal- and state-funded initiatives to develop, deploy, and evaluate strategies to implement evidence-based mental health practices, including cognitive behavioral therapy for psychosis, coordinated specialty care, and digital mental health interventions. Dr. Kopelovich is a founding member and current president of the North America CBT for Psychosis Network, the mission of which is to advance the dissemination of high-quality CBTp across North America.
Continuing Education: This talk is included in an eight-session webinar series hosted by the UW Center for Mental Health, Policy, and the Law, Hot Topics in Mental Health and Law: Civil Commitment, for which continuing education is available.