Test Drive | Page 18

FAMILY SUPPORT PROGRAM Candace Watson and Mona Cooley I t was almost 20 years ago when her daughter was officially diagnosed with Bipolar 1 Disorder. For Mona Cooley, as she started on this new, complex and unpredictable journey, she became acutely aware that there was little available in terms of support programs specifically for families of those with mental illness. And as she quickly realized, reaching out for immediate family support was a life-saving necessity. “When she was diagnosed, we didn’t understand mental illness,” Cooley says. “I didn’t know what mental illness was – we didn’t know the symptoms, we didn’t know the problems, until we read about it. And at that time we were back and forth with our conflicts.” Those conflicts were taking a toll on their relationship, and Cooley says she felt lost and uncertain. What she was able to see was the importance of self-care and looking introspectively, rather than just focusing on her daughter’s diagnosis as the problem. It didn’t take long for Cooley to take the need she identified, necessity for family supports, to CMHA. By the spring following her daughter’s diagnosis, Cooley had determined there was a critical need to have something for families. She went to CMHA - Calgary to discuss what this aspect of 16 mental illness would look like. In initiating the idea of a Family Support program she found an immediate uptake, showing a critical need in the community. The program developed along the way. They started with drop-in sessions, which quickly moved to the six-week psycho-education program, as it was called at that time. Today, that program is now the eight-week Capable Carers program, which ensures caregivers are cared for themselves. “We learned a lot through trial and error,” Cooley says, adding this was a necessity as there wasn’t a model to work from. The now integral part of CMHA’s program grouping, the Family Support program provides assistance, education and information to help individuals learn how to support a family member or friend who is living with a mental disorder, filling a much-needed gap. Through it, clients learn communications and self-care techniques, receive counselling and education about mental health and the resources that can assist them. Support can be found in one-on-one and family counseling, telephone support, weekly peer support drop-in groups and the eight-week support program. Family Support group facilitators are individuals with lived experience, and Cooley continues to facilitate groups for CMHA - Calgary Region. Canadian Mental Health Association – Calgary Region cmha-2013-ar.indd 16 14-06-23 1:05 PM