Annual mental health symposium will spotlight effectiveness and access to care
March 8, 2019 | UHCL Staff
The 29th Annual Emily G. Sutter Symposium for Mental and Behavioral Health will take place Friday, April 12, 8:15 a.m. – 6 p.m., at University of Houston-Clear
Lake, featuring author and Peace of Mind Foundation Director Elizabeth McIngvale as the keynote speaker.
McIngvale is also assistant professor in the Menninger Department of Psychiatry and
Behavioral Sciences at Baylor College of Medicine. The symposium targets behavioral
and mental health professionals intending to learn more about current issues facing
their disciplines and offers a full day of information addressing mental health topics.
It is presented by UH-Clear Lake’s Psychological Services Clinic.
As a teen, McIngvale was diagnosed with obsessive-compulsive disorder. Her case was
so severe, she said, her parents were told it might be untreatable. “As far as OCD
symptomology, you name it and I had it,” she said. “Within a few months, my OCD went
from manageable to causing me to be homebound.”
Her keynote address will focus on the importance of mental health programs for marginalized
communities and the positive impact of mental health services on the healing process.
“There is effective treatment, but people don’t know about it or have access,” McIngvale
said. “It’s really important to talk about what treatment exists and how people can
get it. Houston has a ton of great resources, and a lot of public sector mental health
programs are accessible.”
McIngvale said that the priority was to speak about evidence-based care. “People don’t
believe they can get better. I’m speaking to my own personal story about finding help,”
she said. “We could afford the care, but doctors told my parents that mine was the
most severe case they’d ever seen. People need to be given the same hope and same
opportunity to be helped that I got. Don’t let anyone say there’s no help. It’s available,
no matter how dark it feels.”
She said she would also speak about the stigma associated with mental illness. “We
should encourage people to want treatment and get them to go. The problem is to find
treatment in a broken system,” she said.
The symposium is named for UHCL Professor Emerita Emily Sutter, who joined the faculty
in 1981 and twice served as interim dean of the College of Human Sciences and Humanities. While serving in this capacity, she proposed creating the symposium.
UHCL’s Psychological Services Clinic trains graduate students in clinical psychology,
family therapy and school psychology and serves children, adults, and families from
the community with mental health needs. All proceeds from the symposium goes to supporting
the clinic. It also houses the university’s Center for Autism and Developmental Disabilities, which provides services to children with Autism Spectrum Disorder and extreme behavior
problems.
To register, or for more information about the Emily G. Sutter UHCL Symposium, call
281-283-3330 or visit www.uhcl.edu/psychological-services-clinic/emily-sutter-symposium.
About the Author:
Recent entries by
October 18 2022
Better technology transforms campus safety: Police Chief demonstrates SafeZone to students
October 14 2022
Student's skill with drones takes chicken turtle research to new heights
October 11 2022
Planting event to help UHCL restore native plants to campus, support environmental sustainability