Free seminar in London addressing substance use and trauma for women

Practitioners working in substance misuse services are invited to attend a free seminar on the 18 June to discuss treatment responses for women with trauma symptoms and problematic substance use. The seminar will be held in London, in conjunction with Against Violence and Abuse and King’s College London. More details of speakers and booking can be found here.

Among the speakers will be Karen Bailey who has just completed her PhD at King’s College London. She will discuss her study, which was the first of its kind in the UK to assess the feasibility of delivering an international evidence-based group work programme aimed at women with PTSD symptoms and problematic substance use.

The feasibility study involved 2 cycles of a 12-session group of Seeking Safety delivered twice weekly with two facilitators. The study aimed to answer uncertainties about delivering the  programme in a UK substance misuse service:

  • Could women be retained in the group and study?
  • Did participants and facilitators find the material and group structure acceptable and feasible?
  • Were the facilitators able to deliver the manual as anticipated?
  • What service and environmental factors impacted on the group delivery and women’s recovery?

Come along and hear more about the findings of Karen’s study,  and hear from other speakers from South London and Maudsley NHS Trust, Against Violence and Abuse, and Women and Girl’s Network.

 

 

Tenerife resident accused of murdering his wife and son

A German man who is a resident of Tenerife has been accused of murdering his wife and 10 year old son in a cave near Adeje.  The bodies of the woman and child were discovered on Wednesday after hikers found a 5-year-old boy who said his father had taken the family to a cave and attacked them.  Early reports suggest the woman and her 10 year old son were beaten to death.

The father responded violently to the arrest and refused to reveal the location of the rest of his family members, according El Pais newspaper.

Local officials are treating the deaths as a domestic violence case and a local court that specialises in crimes against women has taken charge of the investigation. The Spanish prime minister Pedro Sanchez commented on the murders saying

‘“The worst news arrives from Adeje (Tenerife). A woman and her son have been killed. Again the #ViolenciaMachista [gendered violence] hits double. A son of the couple managed to escape. All my love for him, for his family and loved ones. We have to end this.”

He has made women’s rights a key campaign topic for the general election this month. More than 990 women have been killed by their partners or former partners since 2003, when official Spanish records on such killings began. Deputy Prime Minister Calvo said 18 women had been murdered by partners or ex-partners so far this year. She condemned the Adeje case, saying “we must stop criminal machismo”.

You can access more about this case here.