This document contains a client intake form and mender-client agreement for Cherry River Wellness. The intake form collects the client's personal information, medical history, and reason for seeking services. It notes the cancellation policy requires at least 48 hours notice.
The mender-client agreement outlines the partnership between mender and client, with commitments to mutual respect, trusting the client's intuition, honesty, and acknowledging they are both human and will do their best. It describes the mender's role as supporting self-healing mechanisms through thoughts, beliefs and feelings rather than "fixing." Both parties must fully participate and respect each other's time. Financial constraints or limiting beliefs should be discussed to modify plans as needed. The
Cody Cambridge created a presentation to convey to people with chronically ill spouses that they can still have happy, fulfilling relationships. When Cody started dating his wife, she became chronically ill with interstitial cystitis. This caused many health problems and made it difficult for her to do activities. Cody discusses things he has learned like being patient when his wife cannot attend events, supporting her by following difficult diets together, and keeping a positive attitude. He hopes his experiences can help others in similar situations have strong relationships.
This document discusses the benefits of independent advocacy support for cancer patients and their caregivers. It provides quotes from patients and caregivers about the challenges of navigating cancer diagnosis, treatment, and care without support, and how an advocate helped by listening without judgment, explaining information, accompanying them to appointments, addressing issues with care, and empowering them. The advocate offers continuity, builds confidence, and helps manage both the emotional and practical difficulties of cancer. The document concludes by providing contact information for Dorset Macmillan Advocacy.
The document discusses tools for self-care and healing, including maintaining a parasympathetic nervous system state to support cell regeneration. It notes that negative thoughts can constrict DNA while positive thoughts relax it. Various brain integration techniques are described to address environmental factors, parts of the brain, and repattern learning difficulties and emotional trauma. Living in a parasympathetic state involves staying hydrated, eating well, spending time with positive people, breathing, meditation, learning, and more. Healing attachment and depression involves addressing neurotransmitters, the heartwall, brain function, emotional reactivity, body awareness, and emotional diffusion.
This document summarizes the findings of a 2015 needs assessment conducted by Mercy Care, a healthcare provider for the homeless in Atlanta. The needs assessment gathered feedback from Mercy Care clients, staff, and community partners through surveys. It found that over half of Mercy Care's homeless clients rated cleanliness/hygiene, inconsistent access to food and meals, poor sleep/fatigue, and safety concerns as major issues. All groups agreed that untreated mental health was a significant unmet health need. Transportation limitations, lack of income/insurance, and not knowing where to access care were common barriers to healthcare access. Clients, staff, and partners provided ideas on how Mercy Care can improve, such as strengthening community partnerships and exploring
This document provides a 2015 population health profile of Orange County, Florida. It summarizes key demographic and socioeconomic characteristics including the population size, density, growth rate, age, race/ethnicity distributions, and life expectancy. Orange County has a population of over 1.2 million residents, making it the 5th most populous county in Florida. It has experienced rapid population growth and has a younger population profile than the state overall. The county is also more racially and ethnically diverse compared to Florida.
Cody Cambridge created a presentation to convey to people with chronically ill spouses that they can still have happy, fulfilling relationships. When Cody started dating his wife, she became chronically ill with interstitial cystitis. This caused many health problems and made it difficult for her to do activities. Cody discusses things he has learned like being patient when his wife cannot attend events, supporting her by following difficult diets together, and keeping a positive attitude. He hopes his experiences can help others in similar situations have strong relationships.
This document discusses the benefits of independent advocacy support for cancer patients and their caregivers. It provides quotes from patients and caregivers about the challenges of navigating cancer diagnosis, treatment, and care without support, and how an advocate helped by listening without judgment, explaining information, accompanying them to appointments, addressing issues with care, and empowering them. The advocate offers continuity, builds confidence, and helps manage both the emotional and practical difficulties of cancer. The document concludes by providing contact information for Dorset Macmillan Advocacy.
The document discusses tools for self-care and healing, including maintaining a parasympathetic nervous system state to support cell regeneration. It notes that negative thoughts can constrict DNA while positive thoughts relax it. Various brain integration techniques are described to address environmental factors, parts of the brain, and repattern learning difficulties and emotional trauma. Living in a parasympathetic state involves staying hydrated, eating well, spending time with positive people, breathing, meditation, learning, and more. Healing attachment and depression involves addressing neurotransmitters, the heartwall, brain function, emotional reactivity, body awareness, and emotional diffusion.
This document summarizes the findings of a 2015 needs assessment conducted by Mercy Care, a healthcare provider for the homeless in Atlanta. The needs assessment gathered feedback from Mercy Care clients, staff, and community partners through surveys. It found that over half of Mercy Care's homeless clients rated cleanliness/hygiene, inconsistent access to food and meals, poor sleep/fatigue, and safety concerns as major issues. All groups agreed that untreated mental health was a significant unmet health need. Transportation limitations, lack of income/insurance, and not knowing where to access care were common barriers to healthcare access. Clients, staff, and partners provided ideas on how Mercy Care can improve, such as strengthening community partnerships and exploring
This document provides a 2015 population health profile of Orange County, Florida. It summarizes key demographic and socioeconomic characteristics including the population size, density, growth rate, age, race/ethnicity distributions, and life expectancy. Orange County has a population of over 1.2 million residents, making it the 5th most populous county in Florida. It has experienced rapid population growth and has a younger population profile than the state overall. The county is also more racially and ethnically diverse compared to Florida.
Laporan Akhir Kegiatan Geladi BPJS Kesehatan - Mutiara Hikmah NofitasariMutiara Nofitasari
Laporan ini membahas kegiatan Geladi selama 38 hari di BPJS Kesehatan Purwokerto. Mahasiswi ditempatkan di bagian Pelayanan Peserta untuk membantu calon peserta dalam pendaftaran, verifikasi data, dan memberikan informasi tentang persyaratan kepesertaan BPJS Kesehatan. Tujuan Geladi adalah memberikan pengalaman kerja nyata dan mengaplikasikan ilmu kampus di lingkungan industri.
Elizabeth wants to be a skilled and empathetic mental health counselor, specializing in disorders like dual diagnosis, substance abuse, eating disorders, and neuropsychology. Her dream job is to work at the Amen Clinics in California, where she is passionate about how neuroimaging can help diagnose and understand the biological causes of mental illness. She believes therapy, supplements, and medication can repair the brain and truly change a patient's life. Elizabeth also wants clients to understand how their disorder affects their behavior so they are more willing to change, and to show clients she understands their experience through her own history as a patient.
Edwards Credo outlines the perspective of a cancer patient named Edwards on his illness and treatment. It acknowledges that Edwards' cancer is serious, the treatment risks are high, and many people die from what he has. However, it maintains hope and asks others to support him with positivity rather than pessimism. Edwards believes in utilizing all medical, mental, spiritual and immunological resources available to fight his cancer. He intends to buy as much good time as possible and knows others who have faced the same challenges and done well despite the odds.
To heal from an affair, both partners must be open and willing to work through intense emotions like anger, betrayal, and grief. The hurt partner needs to freely express their pain, while the unfaithful partner listens without being defensive, validates the hurt felt, and gives a sincere apology that shows understanding. Rebuilding trust is a long process that requires transparency, tangible trust-building actions, and acknowledging that the hurt partner may periodically reopen discussions as they process the trauma of the betrayal. Professional help can aid recovery if issues resurface over time.
This document analyzes six virtues discussed in the book of Proverbs: courage, service, forgiveness/love, love, humility, and truthfulness/honesty. For each virtue, the document provides a definition and example from the author's own life where that virtue was important. It also discusses how each virtue is essential for nurses in caring for patients, advocating for their needs, building trust, and ensuring the best possible outcomes and care. The virtues of courage, service, forgiveness, love, humility, and honesty are described as integral to nursing practice.
Melanie Tarnow outlines her personal value system with core values of love, health, trust, confidence and happiness at the inner circle. Each core value has two supporting values. For example, happiness is supported by peace and fulfillment. She also describes her meaningful purpose at different ages, from providing for her family now to enjoying life with her husband at age 60 after a career. Some distractions on her human path include her focus on organization, negative body image, and hanging out with certain friends from her past job at a bar.
This document outlines 4 reasons for choosing a relationship with the author:
1. Personal growth - The other person would feel encouraged to develop their talents and aspirations.
2. Inner peace - The relationship would meet all relational needs and avoid need for deception.
3. Healthy home environment - The home would be a sanctuary providing love, warmth, and shared responsibilities.
4. Spending life with an "awesome" man - The author believes he is a man who can be depended on, continually improving, and nurturing to potential children.
This document provides an overview and copyright information for the book "50 Ways to Flourish After Divorce" by Patti Handy. It notes that Patti Handy is not a licensed therapist or investment advisor and the book is not a substitute for professional advice. It encourages readers to visit the author's website for a free e-book on financial healing after divorce. The document contains a dedication and thanks to family and friends for their support. It then lists the first 10 of 50 suggestions for ways to flourish after divorce, including leaning on family and friends, exercising, getting massages, praying, and volunteering.
Respect should be at the core of all healthcare interactions. A patient's relationship with her provider and trust in the healthcare system was damaged after a disrespectful ER visit where the physician refused to listen to her needs. Showing respect through courteous, validating, and honest interactions can help improve the customer experience. Respect involves avoiding assumptions, dressing professionally, and treating patients the way you want your own family to be treated.
This document provides steps for rebuilding trust in a relationship once it has been broken. It recommends learning to trust yourself first by listening to your inner feelings. Rebuilding trust is a long process that requires understanding the effort needed, owning up to wrong actions, being a good listener, and putting trust into actions through daily affection, attention and appreciation. Embracing the inevitable changes in the relationship from the experience can help strengthen it.
The document provides 4 reasons for choosing a relationship with the author:
1) Personal growth - The relationship would encourage personal development and allow one to pursue aspirations.
2) Inner peace - The relationship would meet all relational needs and eliminate the need to seek them elsewhere, resulting in an honest and harmonious life.
3) Healthy environment - The home would be a sanctuary providing love, warmth, and shared responsibilities for chores. It would be a place of laughter, joy and embrace.
4) The author knows the reader and desires to walk through life together in support, with trustworthy counsel and encouragement to reach one's full potential. The author envisions how their lives could flourish if
Therapeutic and non therapeuitc communication techniquesNursing Path
One of the most important skills of a nurse is developing the ability to establish a therapeutic relationship with clients. For interventions to be successful with clients in a psychiatric facility and in all nursing specialties it is crucial to build a therapeutic relationship.
The document discusses the components of an effective therapeutic relationship between a nurse and patient. It identifies trust, genuine interest, empathy, acceptance, positive regard, self-awareness, and therapeutic use of self as crucial components. It also provides examples of therapeutic techniques nurses can use to develop these components such as active listening, exploring, summarizing, and empathy.
The document discusses forgiveness and anger management. It defines anger as a basic human emotion typically triggered by feelings of hurt, mistreatment, or obstacles to goals. While anger varies between individuals, most adults experience anger once a day on average. Anger can be constructive if well-managed, but expressing anger triggers defensiveness in others and risks damaging relationships or developing a reputation. Forgiveness is defined as letting go of the need for revenge and releasing negative thoughts. Forgiving can be difficult but is healthier than holding grudges. The document provides tips for forgiving such as acknowledging pain, protecting oneself, understanding others' perspectives, and performing acts of verbal or written forgiveness. Asking for forgiveness is also important for health, relationships
Michelle Schmitt wrote a personal mission statement as a nurse. She aims to build trusting relationships with patients through honest and respectful communication, advocating for patients' needs and respecting their beliefs. Schmitt also commits to continuing her education to provide the best and safest care possible according to evidence-based practices, and to voice when she needs assistance. Her overall goal is to "make bad days better" for patients as her nephew said of other healthcare workers in the family.
Laporan Akhir Kegiatan Geladi BPJS Kesehatan - Mutiara Hikmah NofitasariMutiara Nofitasari
Laporan ini membahas kegiatan Geladi selama 38 hari di BPJS Kesehatan Purwokerto. Mahasiswi ditempatkan di bagian Pelayanan Peserta untuk membantu calon peserta dalam pendaftaran, verifikasi data, dan memberikan informasi tentang persyaratan kepesertaan BPJS Kesehatan. Tujuan Geladi adalah memberikan pengalaman kerja nyata dan mengaplikasikan ilmu kampus di lingkungan industri.
Elizabeth wants to be a skilled and empathetic mental health counselor, specializing in disorders like dual diagnosis, substance abuse, eating disorders, and neuropsychology. Her dream job is to work at the Amen Clinics in California, where she is passionate about how neuroimaging can help diagnose and understand the biological causes of mental illness. She believes therapy, supplements, and medication can repair the brain and truly change a patient's life. Elizabeth also wants clients to understand how their disorder affects their behavior so they are more willing to change, and to show clients she understands their experience through her own history as a patient.
Edwards Credo outlines the perspective of a cancer patient named Edwards on his illness and treatment. It acknowledges that Edwards' cancer is serious, the treatment risks are high, and many people die from what he has. However, it maintains hope and asks others to support him with positivity rather than pessimism. Edwards believes in utilizing all medical, mental, spiritual and immunological resources available to fight his cancer. He intends to buy as much good time as possible and knows others who have faced the same challenges and done well despite the odds.
To heal from an affair, both partners must be open and willing to work through intense emotions like anger, betrayal, and grief. The hurt partner needs to freely express their pain, while the unfaithful partner listens without being defensive, validates the hurt felt, and gives a sincere apology that shows understanding. Rebuilding trust is a long process that requires transparency, tangible trust-building actions, and acknowledging that the hurt partner may periodically reopen discussions as they process the trauma of the betrayal. Professional help can aid recovery if issues resurface over time.
This document analyzes six virtues discussed in the book of Proverbs: courage, service, forgiveness/love, love, humility, and truthfulness/honesty. For each virtue, the document provides a definition and example from the author's own life where that virtue was important. It also discusses how each virtue is essential for nurses in caring for patients, advocating for their needs, building trust, and ensuring the best possible outcomes and care. The virtues of courage, service, forgiveness, love, humility, and honesty are described as integral to nursing practice.
Melanie Tarnow outlines her personal value system with core values of love, health, trust, confidence and happiness at the inner circle. Each core value has two supporting values. For example, happiness is supported by peace and fulfillment. She also describes her meaningful purpose at different ages, from providing for her family now to enjoying life with her husband at age 60 after a career. Some distractions on her human path include her focus on organization, negative body image, and hanging out with certain friends from her past job at a bar.
This document outlines 4 reasons for choosing a relationship with the author:
1. Personal growth - The other person would feel encouraged to develop their talents and aspirations.
2. Inner peace - The relationship would meet all relational needs and avoid need for deception.
3. Healthy home environment - The home would be a sanctuary providing love, warmth, and shared responsibilities.
4. Spending life with an "awesome" man - The author believes he is a man who can be depended on, continually improving, and nurturing to potential children.
This document provides an overview and copyright information for the book "50 Ways to Flourish After Divorce" by Patti Handy. It notes that Patti Handy is not a licensed therapist or investment advisor and the book is not a substitute for professional advice. It encourages readers to visit the author's website for a free e-book on financial healing after divorce. The document contains a dedication and thanks to family and friends for their support. It then lists the first 10 of 50 suggestions for ways to flourish after divorce, including leaning on family and friends, exercising, getting massages, praying, and volunteering.
Respect should be at the core of all healthcare interactions. A patient's relationship with her provider and trust in the healthcare system was damaged after a disrespectful ER visit where the physician refused to listen to her needs. Showing respect through courteous, validating, and honest interactions can help improve the customer experience. Respect involves avoiding assumptions, dressing professionally, and treating patients the way you want your own family to be treated.
This document provides steps for rebuilding trust in a relationship once it has been broken. It recommends learning to trust yourself first by listening to your inner feelings. Rebuilding trust is a long process that requires understanding the effort needed, owning up to wrong actions, being a good listener, and putting trust into actions through daily affection, attention and appreciation. Embracing the inevitable changes in the relationship from the experience can help strengthen it.
The document provides 4 reasons for choosing a relationship with the author:
1) Personal growth - The relationship would encourage personal development and allow one to pursue aspirations.
2) Inner peace - The relationship would meet all relational needs and eliminate the need to seek them elsewhere, resulting in an honest and harmonious life.
3) Healthy environment - The home would be a sanctuary providing love, warmth, and shared responsibilities for chores. It would be a place of laughter, joy and embrace.
4) The author knows the reader and desires to walk through life together in support, with trustworthy counsel and encouragement to reach one's full potential. The author envisions how their lives could flourish if
Therapeutic and non therapeuitc communication techniquesNursing Path
One of the most important skills of a nurse is developing the ability to establish a therapeutic relationship with clients. For interventions to be successful with clients in a psychiatric facility and in all nursing specialties it is crucial to build a therapeutic relationship.
The document discusses the components of an effective therapeutic relationship between a nurse and patient. It identifies trust, genuine interest, empathy, acceptance, positive regard, self-awareness, and therapeutic use of self as crucial components. It also provides examples of therapeutic techniques nurses can use to develop these components such as active listening, exploring, summarizing, and empathy.
The document discusses forgiveness and anger management. It defines anger as a basic human emotion typically triggered by feelings of hurt, mistreatment, or obstacles to goals. While anger varies between individuals, most adults experience anger once a day on average. Anger can be constructive if well-managed, but expressing anger triggers defensiveness in others and risks damaging relationships or developing a reputation. Forgiveness is defined as letting go of the need for revenge and releasing negative thoughts. Forgiving can be difficult but is healthier than holding grudges. The document provides tips for forgiving such as acknowledging pain, protecting oneself, understanding others' perspectives, and performing acts of verbal or written forgiveness. Asking for forgiveness is also important for health, relationships
Michelle Schmitt wrote a personal mission statement as a nurse. She aims to build trusting relationships with patients through honest and respectful communication, advocating for patients' needs and respecting their beliefs. Schmitt also commits to continuing her education to provide the best and safest care possible according to evidence-based practices, and to voice when she needs assistance. Her overall goal is to "make bad days better" for patients as her nephew said of other healthcare workers in the family.
This document discusses the empowered self and the personal growth and self-awareness that comes with living an empowered life. Key points include: appreciating accomplishments while seeing challenges as learning experiences, being more comfortable with uncertainty, slowing thoughts and choosing more positive thoughts, embracing emotions as they come and expressing them healthily, accepting imperfections and vulnerability in self and others, overcoming fears and taking responsibility, practicing self-care, having confidence and living authentically, finding balance and setting boundaries to avoid stress, seeing from a new perspective of clarity and understanding others, trusting intuition, and experiencing deep peace and connection when turning inward.
The document outlines the four pillars for a healthy and happy marriage: knowing yourself, effective communication, trust, and having fun together. It provides details on each pillar, such as the importance of understanding where you come from and your goals as a married person for knowing yourself. For communication, it notes that men and women communicate differently and the importance of open communication. Trust involves being able to trust your partner in various ways. And having fun together means scheduling fun activities and date nights to nurture intimacy and relish time together.
Everyone can benefit from developing a personal toolkit of strategies to support wellness and cope with life's challenges. An effective toolkit includes tools like deep breathing, gratitude lists, and calling friends for support. Developing such a toolkit is especially important because most people are not taught wellness strategies as children. Filling one's toolkit with various tips, such as focusing on facts rather than assumptions, being solution-oriented, and recognizing inner strengths, can help transform life experiences.
Tamela M. McGhee provides mental health counseling services in Illinois and has been licensed since [year]. This document outlines her credentials, counseling philosophy, approach, fees, and policies regarding confidentiality. She received her degrees from Capella University and has experience in addiction, family and group counseling, as well as co-occurring disorders. McGhee takes a psychoanalytic and cognitive behavioral approach to help clients understand thinking patterns and make changes. She is a member of several professional counseling organizations and has been involved in community mental health initiatives.
This document advertises a circle event to help people transform feelings of depression, self-doubt, and unworthiness. It teaches participants to identify and release limiting beliefs formed in childhood using a six-step ChooseAgain process, which helps change lives in radical ways. The event provides tools to access one's higher, loving self and experience more joy. It takes place on July 31, 2015 from 7-9 pm in Campbell River, BC, facilitated by a registered therapeutic counselor with 10 years of experience using these transformation techniques.
1. Cherry River Wellness
20 Crescent St. P.O. Box 435, Quincy, CA 95971 (303) 478-3964 www.cherryriverwellness.com
Client name:__________________________________________________________________________
Client date of birth:________________ Parent names if applicable:_______________________________
Address:______________________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
Phone number:___________________________ Email________________________________________
Brief description of why you’re coming to Cherry River Wellness:
_____________________________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
Medical History:
_____________________________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________________________
I declare that the above information is correct to the best of my knowledge: I also understand that payment
is due on date of rendered service.
Our cancellation policy requires notice of cancellation AT LEAST 48 HOURS IN ADVANCE, failure to
provide 48 hour notice will result in full charge for the appointment.
Signed:________________________________________________________ Date:__________________
2. A Sacred Mender-Client Agreement
As mender and client, you and I are entering into a partnership. I am here to support you, guide you, offer you tools,
and support your process, but I will not “fix” you- for I don’t believe you are broken. Instead, I will consult, educate,
and participate in any diagnostic or treatment planning with you, while supporting the natural self-repair mechanisms
of your body, which have been scientifically proven to exist. These natural self-repair mechanisms can be flipped on or
off with the power of your thoughts, beliefs, and feelings, so as much as I can, I will be supporting not just the health
of your body, but the health of your mind. If you are not ready, willing, or able to fully participate in your physical,
emotional, and spiritual healing process, I will be here to nurture and support you without judgment, but we both
acknowledge that your health outcome may not be fully optimized. I can only support you as much as you support
yourself.
Mutual Respect
Although I have committed a lot of time to training to earn the right to be your mender, I am not “better” than you,
and as such, I will treat you as a cherished equal. Although I may know more about anatomy and self healing better
than some clients, I trust that you know your body better than I do. Your body is your business, and I am merely here
to support what is essentially your responsibility. In order for our partnership to be successful, we must respect each
other. You will not put me on a pedestal, and I will never look down upon you.
I accept that my time is not more valuable than yours. As mender and client, we will respect each other’s time.
Barring extreme emergencies, I will not make you wait for your appointment, and you will not be late. We must be
present, fully and completely, during our time together. This means we will make our best efforts to remove
distractions and focus all of our energy on your health and healing.
I Trust Your Intuition
I will call upon my knowledge, experience, and resources to offer you recommendations for preventative care,
emotional healing and treatment plans, but I will also invite you to listen to the intuition of your healing inner
wisdom, your body, and your soul. I will explain why I make the recommendations I do, but I will always respect your
autonomy, without judgment. You consent to me, as your mender to utilize the power of placebos when I feel it is in
your best interest.
If you choose not to follow my advice, I will respect that and we will negotiate another plan that resonates with your
intuition. If I am unable to provide the care you need or desire, I will release you to follow your heart or find another
provider without taking it personally.
If you have financial constraints, please tell me so that we can modify your plan. If you are having issues with limiting
beliefs, self-sabotaging behaviors, or issues with willpower, I can help support you, but only if I know what you’re
dealing with. Follow through is key if we expect optimal outcomes.
3. We Must Be Honest With Each Other
We have to be open and tell the truth, even if it is painful or uncomfortable. I will promise you confidentiality, and
you must promise to tell me anything I need to know in order to provide the best care possible. We can trust that we
are safe together, so that we can explore things that may be tough to explore. We can open our hearts to the loving
kindness and compassion that is a necessary part of any healing relationship.
We Are Only Human
As my client, you will understand that I am a mere mortal, prone to mistakes, flaws, insecurities, ego, fatigue, tears and
distractions in my personal life. I will strive to always be in integrity and to never betray your trust.
As mender and client, we agree to accept that we’re both doing the best we can at any given time, and we won’t always
get it right. We commit to open communication, mutual respect, a belief in the infinite capacity for whole health and
healing, and a dedication to cherishing the process and viewing health issues as an opportunity to seek higher ground.
We acknowledge that, between you and me, anything is possible.
Are you on board? If so, sign here.
Your signature______________________________________________________________________________
My signature Kelsha LeAnne Hardy______________________________________