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Work Accommodation and Retention in Mental Health
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Table of Contents

I. Conceptual Issues in Job Accommodation in Mental Health.- 1. Law and job accommodation in mental health disability.- 2. Mental health, neurological impairments and job accommodation: a legal perspective.- 3. Disability epidemic in mental health: epidemiological and economic impact of mental health disorders in the workplace.- 4. Effects of stigma and discrimination on the economic employment outcomes of persons with mental health disorders.- II. Mental health disorders and work functioning.- 5. Relationship between psychological impairment and occupational disability: 6. Prediction of vocational outcomes in mental health.- 7. Serious mental illness and work.- 8. Depression and work performance.- 9. Anxiety disorders and work performance.- 10. Brain injuries and work performance.- 11. Personality disorders and work performance.- 12. Learning and Attention Deficit disorders and work performance: (TBA).- III. Employment interventions for persons with mental health disorders.- 13. Integration of mental health and vocational services.- 14. Employment interventions for persons with serious mental illness.- 15. Employment interventions in depression and anxiety disorders.- 16. Employment interventions for persons with cognitive disorders.- 17. Systematic review of psychological return to work interventions for persons with mental health problems.- 18. Company-level interventions in mental health.- IV. Barriers and facilitators of job accommodations in the workplace.- 19. Employer attitudes towards accommodations in mental health disability.- 20. Mental health literacy and stigma associated with depression in the working population.- 21. Systemic barriers and facilitators to job accommodations in mental health: experts’ consensus.- V. Evidence-informed practice in job accommodation.- 22. Job accommodation as a social process: 23. Evidentiary support for best practices in job accommodation in mental health: macrosystems, employer-level and employee-level interventions.- 24. Disclosure and job accommodation for persons with mental illness.- 25. Functional capacity assessments in mental disorders and job accommodations.- 26. Disability management approach to job accommodation in the workplace

About the Author

Dr. Izabela Schultz is a clinical and rehabilitation psychologist specializing in medico-legal and vocational aspects of psychological, neuropsychological and pain-related disability, both in her academic research and in her forensic practice. She is doubly Board-certified and holds the Diplomate distinctions of the American Board of Professional Psychology, in Clinical Psychology and of the American Board of Vocational Experts.

Dr. Schultz is Professor in the Counselling Psychology Program at the University of British Columbia where she also serves as Director of the newly formed graduate program in Vocational Rehabilitation Counselling. She has presented, taught and published extensively in the United States, Canada, and internationally in the area of psychosocial, vocational and psycho-legal aspects of disability. Her particular research expertise is in determination of causation of psychological disability, in multivariate prediction of occupational disability, early intervention with high risk workers and employment retention of employees with complex disabilities including mental health, brain injury and pain. She has provided expert court testimony on psychological and neuropsychological matters.

Dr. Schultz’s two previous books, Psychological Injuries at Trial (2003) and Handbook of Complex Occupational Disability Claims (2005), have contributed to an evolution of the paradigm in the occupational disability field—from medical to biopsychosocial model.

Dr. Schultz is currently co-chair of the American Psychological Association’s Task Force on Guidelines for Assessment and Treatment of Persons with Disabilities, and is on the editorial boards of several scholarly journals.

E. Sally Rogers is Director of Research at the Center for Psychiatric Rehabilitation at Boston University where she had been conducting mental health and vocational research since 1981. The Center was founded under the direction of Dr. WilliamAnthony and has focused on the rehabilitation and recovery of persons with psychiatric disability since that time. Dr. Rogers currently serves as Co-Principal Investigator of a Research and Training Center grant which is funded to carry out research studies on functioning and recovery of individuals with mental illness. She is also a Co-Principal Investigator on a grant to culturally adapt a measure on recovery for Spanish speaking mental health clients. Dr. Rogers was Principal Investigator of a post-doctoral fellowship award from NIDRR for 10 years, Principal Investigator of a multi-site grant to study consumer-operated services funded by the Center for Mental Health Services, and Principal Investigator of several smaller grants.

Dr. Rogers is a reviewer for numerous scholarly publications in the field, has developed instruments currently being used by research studies and service organizations, and is a licensed psychologist in the state of Massachusetts.

Dr. Rogers isalso Research Associate Professor at Boston University, Sargent College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences where she has taught Masters and doctoral-level research courses and seminars. She is the recipient of the Loeb Research Award from the International Association of Psychosocial Rehabilitation Services, the 2007 ARCA award for research. Dr. Rogers has written approximately 50 peer-reviewed papers on various topics related to the vocational rehabilitation, vocational assessment, and recovery of persons with severe psychiatric disability.

Reviews

From the reviews: “This book addresses how mental health issues affect employee productivity, unemployment, and underemployment, emphasizing the importance of vocational rehabilitation and job accommodation. … The primary target audience includes occupational and rehabilitation physicians, vocational rehabilitation providers, occupational therapists, psychiatrists, psychologists, neuropsychologists, and social workers who assist individuals with mental health disabilities to get and keep work. … This book addresses an employment problem, offering practical suggestions to increase job productivity.” (Gary B. Kaniuk, Doody’s Review Service, April, 2011)

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