Job Summary: | University Health Services is dedicated to the provision of high-quality health care and wellness services for students, aiming to contribute to a healthy environment for the entire UW-Madison campus community.
UHS Survivor Services provides free and confidential advocacy, mental health, and medical services (including on-campus forensic nurse exams) to student survivors of sexual and intimate partner violence. This work is centered around values of empowerment, inclusion, choice, support, and collaboration.
Under the supervision of the Director of UHS Survivor Services, the Mental Health Provider - Survivor Services Focus, will provide trauma-focused mental health services to UW-Madison student survivors of sexual assault, sexual harassment, sexual exploitation, intimate partner violence, and/or stalking, in an integrated college health center. This position will work alongside victim advocates and medical providers within the broader UHS Survivor Services program, as well as the generalist staff at UHS Mental Health Services. Work assignments and schedules aim to incorporate staff's professional interests. The ideal candidate will demonstrate a trauma-informed, team-oriented, and restorative justice-oriented approach to both clinical work and professional relationships. Given our mission to address the needs of UW student survivors, the ideal candidate will demonstrate willingness to embrace change in order improve the Survivor Services care model.
UHS has an ongoing commitment to building and supporting a diverse community of students and employees. Start date is negotiable. UHS employees receive benefits such as generous vacation, holidays, and sick leave; competitive insurances and savings accounts; retirement benefits. Information can be found at https://hr.wisc.edu/benefits
PRINCIPLE DUTIES (60%): 1) Provides individual and group counseling to student survivors of sexual assault, sexual harassment, sexual exploitation, intimate partner violence, and/or stalking, totaling 24 clinical hours per week. 2) Completes intake/clinical interviews, with a focus on determining the appropriate disposition, providing treatment recommendations, and supporting care coordination. 3) Provides safety planning and crisis de-escalation to student survivors, as clinically warranted. 4) Supports campus outreach and community engagement, with a particular focus on awareness months (Domestic Violence Awareness Month, Stalking Awareness Month, Sexual Assault Awareness Month). 5) Serves as a resource on Title IX, Clery, and UWS Chapter 17 processes and rights, State of Wisconsin victim rights, reporting options, and other services a victim may access on campus or in the community, within the scope/role of mental health clinician. 6) Provide additional clinical services in other areas of Mental Health Services depending on experience and agency need.
ADDITIONAL OPTIONS FOR DIRECT CLINICAL SERVICES MAY INCLUDE: 1) Provision of sexual health services through Wellness program, in collaboration with UHS Gynecology & Sexual Health team; 2) Provision of "Let's Talk: survivors of sexual and relationship violence" drop-in support sessions; 3) Provision of couples/partners therapy services; 4) Provision of behavioral health interventions within Medical Services; 5) Provision of on-call/crisis services through the UHS crisis line and drop-in services; 6) Provision of clinical supervision of assigned trainees including goal-setting, evaluations, and disciplinary action in accordance with training policy and procedures;
ADMINISTRATIVE DUTIES (40%) 1) Maintains accurate and timely documentation for all clinical interactions and consultations; 2) Involved in the development and implementation of programs and services at MHS, as assigned; 3) Collaborates with providers and staff in UHS units and with campus partners, particularly UHS Violence Prevention; 4) Follows agency policies and procedures consistent with state mental health statutes, ethical guidelines, best practices, HIPAA, FERPA, and Title IX; 5) Attends UHS staff and workgroup meetings, as assigned; 6) As resources allow, represents UHS on the UW-Madison campus, in the Madison community, and with local, regional, and national professional organizations; 7) Attends Mental Health-sponsored and other relevant professional development activities; 8) Serves on internal and external committees, as assigned or approved; 9) Other duties, as assigned or approved. |
Institutional Statement on Diversity: | Diversity is a source of strength, creativity, and innovation for UW-Madison. We value the contributions of each person and respect the profound ways their identity, culture, background, experience, status, abilities, and opinion enrich the university community. We commit ourselves to the pursuit of excellence in teaching, research, outreach, and diversity as inextricably linked goals.
The University of Wisconsin-Madison fulfills its public mission by creating a welcoming and inclusive community for people from every background - people who as students, faculty, and staff serve Wisconsin and the world.
For more information on diversity and inclusion on campus, please visit: Diversity and Inclusion |
Qualifications: | REQUIRED: -Minimum of one year experience providing counseling. -Must be licensed to practice independently in the State of Wisconsin within 1 year of hire.
PREFERRED: - Two or more years of experience providing trauma-focused counseling to survivors of intimate partner violence, sexual assault/childhood sexual abuse, sexual harassment, sexual exploitation, and stalking. -Unpaid experience providing counseling may be applied to this requirement if clinical supervision was received during that time, as well as experience providing advocacy services in a community-based victim services agency. - Eligible to practice independently in the State of Wisconsin within six months of hire. - Multi-lingual
STRONGLY PREFERRED experiences of the candidate include: 1. Independently licensed, or license eligible, in the state of Wisconsin. 2. Experience providing trauma-focused counseling to survivors of sexual and relationship violence, across intersecting identities; this may include specialized training including EMDR, somatic experiencing, cognitive processing therapy, brainspotting, TF-CBT, developmental and relational trauma therapy, etc; 3. Experienced in the treatment of common co-morbidities of trauma, including eating disorders, substance use, chronic or recurrent suicidality, nonsuicidal self-harm, etc; 4. Experience providing group therapy and/or non-clinical group-based interventions; 5. Experience in an integrated/interdisciplinary college mental health setting, included coordination with victim advocates, and/or medical providers, and/or prevention staff, and/or academic staff/faculty; 6. Demonstrated attentiveness to intersectionality & health equity; and a commitment to cultural humility and trauma-informed practices in the workplace; 7. Knowledge of best practices in trauma treatment; 8. Knowledge of issues and dynamics related to sexual and intimate partner violence; 9. Demonstrated understanding of how sexual violence disproportionately impacts individuals who hold historically marginalized identities; 10. Experience in consultation and collaboration with campus and community partners; 11. Experience educating campus and community partners on issues related to sexual/relationship violence, how to support student survivors, bystander intervention, and creating trauma-informed communities, and restorative/transformative justice approaches to addressing harm. 12. Knowledge of Title IX and Clery guidance and regulations, specifically as they pertain to victim rights. |