Thirty-two corrections officers are receiving correctional behavioral health training that officials say will reduce violence and self-harm among inmates. “What we’re doing is training the basic fundamentals of mental illness,” Dr. Elizabeth Gondles of the American Correctional Association said at a press conference yesterday. “How does an officer understand that maybe there’s an inmate out in the
Coping with our collective trauma - The Nassau Guardian
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YOUNG and veteran figures in The Bahamas’ psychiatric community gathered for a Zoom session last week to pay tribute to Dr Timothy McCartney – the “father of Bahamian psychology” – who died last month from COVID-19 at 87.
Dr McCartney was the first Bahamian to earn a PhD in psychology. He worked as a clinical psychologist at the Ministry of Health mostly at Sandilands Rehabilitation Centre from 1967 to 1993 before relocating to the United States.
The Zoom tribute event featured a mixture of tributes, dramatisations and even a snippet of a recording from a Dr McCartney interview. Dr McCartney was widely remembered as a pioneer, for his eagerness to help the professional development of his peers, his infectious personality and for his gift as a communicator. He was described as a good cook and a capable musician who liked to tell stories. For some, he played a notable role determining the field of psychology in which they ultimately chose to make th