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PLEASE VOTE: Tina Champagne, M.Ed., OTR/L, CCAP for The AOTA Special Interest Section Mental Health Special Interest Section Chairperson
Elections begin January 12, 2009 at www.aota.org
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Comment from the January 2006 conference: A Nonlinear Dynamics Approach to Sensory Modulation - "Tina Champagne blew me away! She made me proud to be an OT and inspired to get back into psych OT!" - Hollie Marron, OTR/L
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Comment from the January 2006 conference: A Nonlinear Dynamics Approach to Sensory Modulation - "Excellent conference! Your depth of knowledge and passion is inspirational. I left there with new ideas and motivation to develop a new and improved sensory focus on our unit. I even signed up for an online introduction course to aromatherapy - I got my first lesson today! (I love my lavender scented beanbag.) I’m looking forward to working with you more." - Diane Trikakis, OTR/L
| Statewide Honors Given to Western MA Occupational Therapist (Video) |
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Click on the slideshow to advance
The 2008 Commissioner's Distinguished Service Award & A State Senate Citation
Cooley Dickinson Hospital Media Release - May 21, 2008
BOSTON,
Mass. - On May 6, 2008 Tina Champagne, occupational therapy and
counselor staff supervisor at Cooley Dickinson Hospital was awarded
the Massachusetts Department of Mental Health (DMH) Commissioner's
Distinguished Service Award for Reducing and Eliminating Restraint
and Seclusion . She also received a second award, a Senate citation,
for her local, state-wide and national advocacy and innovative work
in these areas.
At the award ceremony at the State House in Boston, Commissioner Barbara Leadholm praised Champagne for her, "dedication in reducing restraint and seclusion locally and nationally, developing promising alternatives, such as, sensory rooms. Your body of work preventing restraint and seclusion has crossed local borders and informed many states and organizations of the latest research, helping to make Massachusetts a national and international hub of alternative advancement."
Champagne
was lauded for her dedication and leadership in affirming the goals
of the DMH's strength-based and prevention-focused principles.
Specifically, she received the award for bringing a host of
integrative therapies and environmental strategies to acute inpatient
mental healthcare settings as well as initiating and integrating the
use of more safe, humane and recovery-oriented options for mental
health consumers. Champagne says she is, "truly honored to
have been recognized."
Champagne
is an occupational therapist who is considered a pioneer in her
field. In 1999, Champagne developed the region's first
sensory modulation room at Berkshire Medical Center and in 2003,
created a similar therapeutic space at Cooley Dickinson Hospital.
This unique space, located on the inpatient psychiatric unit, is
equipped with tools such as aromatherapy, music, self-help books,
rocking chairs, mindfulness and guided imagery CDs, and weighted
blankets. Champagne says that "while in this room and guided by a
modified approach to treatment, people can discover a new-found way
to self-regulate that in many cases, has decreased the need for
restraints. In fact, at the end of the first year of
implementing the sensory room at CDH, the unit's restraint rates
reduced significantly." Champagne adds that modifications to
the physical environment are just one of the many approaches she has
helped to make available for people with mental health issues.
Since 2005, Champagne has worked with University of Massachusetts Amherst Mechanical Engineering Department conducting numerous formal research studies in the area of weighted modalities. That same year, Champagne helped to develop and initiate a Cooley Dickinson Hospital-wide response, known as code SAM (sensory approaches and methods), to help patients who are experiencing anxiety or distress. Champagne says a quality improvement study has shown that "early response to those in distress has lead to a decreased use of restraints and an increase in patient satisfaction." More recently, Champagne has collaborated with students and professors from the University of Massachusetts Amherst School of Nursing, Baypath College and American International College Occupational Therapy departments and says these "expanded research opportunities have become fruitful in helping to begin establishing an initial body of research in the area of sensory modulation/integrative interventions, and in demonstrating the significance of interdisciplinary collaboration."
In
2006, Champagne was awarded the Catherine Trombly award by the
Occupational Therapy Association of Massachusetts (MAOT) given to a
MAOT member who has made a significant contribution to occupational
therapy practice while exhibiting excellence in a special practice
area, education, research, administration and service.
Employed at Cooley Dickinson Hospital since 2001, Champagne has also been recognized by the Massachusetts Department of Mental Health for providing leadership to hospitals in the areas of facilitating culture change in mental health service delivery, program development and for initiating a broad range of therapeutic interventions designed to offer more person-centered, trauma-informed and recovery-focused care. In addition to her work at CDH, she is a professor, consultant, public speaker, researcher and has authored numerous publications. |
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| Last Updated ( Monday, 29 September 2008 ) | |||
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