Role Description
The OHSU-PSU School of Public Health (SPH) is committed to becoming an antiracist SPH and addressing structural and institutional racism. This position is a core member of the EASA Center for Excellence (E4CE) training, clinical consultation, and technical assistance team.
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Provide clinical training, technical assistance, and clinical consultation in prevention and intervention for substance use within early psychosis intervention service delivery and fidelity review processes at national, state, regional, and local levels.
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Evaluate effectiveness of efforts, integrate emerging knowledge, and develop ongoing improvements in substance use prevention and intervention.
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Engage and integrate feedback from early psychosis intervention participants, family members/supports, staff, and community stakeholders using culturally responsive, trauma-informed approaches.
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Design targeted program development efforts, including community education and marketing tailored to local communities.
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Write for publication as needed.
Qualifications
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Master's Degree in relevant field AND 5 years of clinical research coordination experience OR Bachelor's Degree in relevant field AND 9 years of clinical research coordination experience.
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Demonstrated knowledge and experience with adolescent and young adult development, family systems, evidence-based practices, and promising practices in early psychosis intervention.
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Experience with DSM-5 diagnoses and evidence-based treatment interventions for mental health and substance use conditions in adolescents and young adults.
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Experience partnering with individuals and their family members/supports in providing person-centered, strengths-based treatment.
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Experience in integrating participant, family/supporter, and community feedback into service delivery improvement.
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Trained in substance use differential diagnosis and treatment.
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Demonstrated knowledge and experience collaborating with diverse populations, including low density populations, LGBTQ+, and culturally specific communities.
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Experience in cultural humility, anti-racism, and equity practices specific to early psychosis intervention.
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Excellent organizational and communication skills.
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Trained in trauma-sensitive approaches and practices.
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Experience creating, supervising, and/or advocating for service improvement.
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Knowledge of implementation science.
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CADC I, II or III.
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Oregon License or eligibility to become licensed in Counseling, Marriage and Family Therapy, Social Work, psychology, or related field. Valid Driverβs License.
Requirements
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Doctorate Degree in relevant field (preferred).
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Trained and certified in the Structured Interview for Psychosis-Risk Syndromes (SIPS) (preferred).
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Experience facilitating multi-family or single-family psychoeducation interventions (preferred).
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Minimum four years experience delivering early psychosis intervention services within a coordinated specialty care program (preferred).
Benefits
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Oregon's only public academic health center.
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Groundbreaking research and training for the next generation of health care professionals.
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Opportunities to learn and advance in a system of hospitals and clinics across Oregon and Southwest Washington.
Company Description
OHSU welcomes people of all ages, ethnicities, genders, national origins, religions, and sexual orientations. We are striving to build an anti-racist, multicultural institution and encourage people with diverse backgrounds to apply.
To request reasonable accommodation, contact
[email protected]
.