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CET: An EBP Improving Cognitive and Social Functioning 2014 NAMI National Convention September 3, 2014 Ray Gonzalez, ACSW, LISW-S Center for Cognition and Recovery 2011 SAMHSA Science & Service Award www.cetcleveland.org
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CET: An EBP Improving Cognitive and Social Functioning 2014 NAMI National Convention September 3, 2014 Ray Gonzalez, ACSW, LISW-S Center for Cognition.

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Page 1: CET: An EBP Improving Cognitive and Social Functioning 2014 NAMI National Convention September 3, 2014 Ray Gonzalez, ACSW, LISW-S Center for Cognition.

CET: An EBP Improving Cognitive and Social Functioning

2014 NAMI National Convention

September 3, 2014

Ray Gonzalez, ACSW, LISW-SCenter for Cognition and Recovery2011 SAMHSA Science & Service Awardwww.cetcleveland.org

Page 2: CET: An EBP Improving Cognitive and Social Functioning 2014 NAMI National Convention September 3, 2014 Ray Gonzalez, ACSW, LISW-S Center for Cognition.

Bridgehaven CET Video Louisville, KY

Page 3: CET: An EBP Improving Cognitive and Social Functioning 2014 NAMI National Convention September 3, 2014 Ray Gonzalez, ACSW, LISW-S Center for Cognition.

True or False ?

Cognitive problems are due to laziness and lack of effort

Cognitive problems will go away when symptoms like hallucinations go away

Cognitive problems are caused by medications

Cognitive problems are caused by being in the hospital or nursing home or at home too long

Page 4: CET: An EBP Improving Cognitive and Social Functioning 2014 NAMI National Convention September 3, 2014 Ray Gonzalez, ACSW, LISW-S Center for Cognition.

CET is an active treatment that changes our clients’ brains: To have increased capacity to learn To remember what they learn To act in real time To improve their social cognition To act wisely in novel social and

vocational situations To have hope HOPE VIDEO CLIP

Page 5: CET: An EBP Improving Cognitive and Social Functioning 2014 NAMI National Convention September 3, 2014 Ray Gonzalez, ACSW, LISW-S Center for Cognition.

Components of CET

1. Specialized computer exercises done in pairs in a group setting

2. Homework reporting in social cognition group, no one can hide

3. Weekly Psycho-ed talks

4. Cognitive Group Exercises done in

pairs

5. Individual ‘coaching’ once a week

Page 6: CET: An EBP Improving Cognitive and Social Functioning 2014 NAMI National Convention September 3, 2014 Ray Gonzalez, ACSW, LISW-S Center for Cognition.

Ray Gonzalez, ACSW Disclosures

Executive Director of The Center for Cognition and Recovery (CCR) a nonprofit LLC, division of JFSA of Cleveland

The CCR has received grants from The Cleveland Morgan, Mount Sinai Health Care and Woodruff Foundations for the development and disseminat-ion of CET

OSU School of Social Work grad with 37 years as psychiatric social worker; Optimist

Has helped disseminate CET to 31 sites in 11 states

Page 7: CET: An EBP Improving Cognitive and Social Functioning 2014 NAMI National Convention September 3, 2014 Ray Gonzalez, ACSW, LISW-S Center for Cognition.

Anita’s RecommendationWhen Anita, a CET Graduate, was asked why she would recommend CET to other people recovering from a mental illness, she answered:

I would recommend CET to help those with mental illnesses reach their true potential. And while potential can sometimes be measured in terms of work and productivity, I would say that even more importantly is the subjective aspect, enjoying the lives that we were meant to live.

 

Page 8: CET: An EBP Improving Cognitive and Social Functioning 2014 NAMI National Convention September 3, 2014 Ray Gonzalez, ACSW, LISW-S Center for Cognition.

Typical Course of Schizophrenia

Page 9: CET: An EBP Improving Cognitive and Social Functioning 2014 NAMI National Convention September 3, 2014 Ray Gonzalez, ACSW, LISW-S Center for Cognition.

CET Focuses on Negative Symptoms Of Schizophrenia

Flat or blunted emotion Lack of motivation or energy, often on Auto Pilot Limited or impoverished speech Lack of pleasure or interest in things

Cognitive difficulties are also usually present: Slow, effortful thinking process Concrete thinking Poor concentration and memory Difficultly understanding or expressing feelings Difficulty integrating thoughts, feelings and behaviors

Page 10: CET: An EBP Improving Cognitive and Social Functioning 2014 NAMI National Convention September 3, 2014 Ray Gonzalez, ACSW, LISW-S Center for Cognition.

What is CET?

CET aims to remediate the brain For stable clients who have plateaued but

have not fully recovered Combination of specialized computer

exercises, social cognition groups and individual coaching

Utilizes a coaching methodology 48 once-a-week sessions

80 to 90% attendance rate 80 to 85% graduation rate

Page 11: CET: An EBP Improving Cognitive and Social Functioning 2014 NAMI National Convention September 3, 2014 Ray Gonzalez, ACSW, LISW-S Center for Cognition.

"It's important for the field to recognize that while we've been waiting now for 30 years for a drug that will improve social outcomes, we've been ignoring the results of many studies showing that psychosocial treatment achieves psychosocial results.

And that most of those results are in some ways more meaningful for patients and their families than just the absence of a relapse.”

William McFarlane, MD, Director of the Center for Psychiatric Research at the Maine Medical Center Research Institute, 9/10/10

Page 12: CET: An EBP Improving Cognitive and Social Functioning 2014 NAMI National Convention September 3, 2014 Ray Gonzalez, ACSW, LISW-S Center for Cognition.

History of CET Developed by Gerard Hogarty and Samuel Flesher at the EPICS

Program at the University of Pittsburgh Medical School funded by NIMH grant

121 Subjects CET (N=67) or EST (N=54) and treated for two years, between January 1995 and February 2002

Initial study published in the Archives of General Psychiatry, Sept. 2004 & a study on the Neuroprotective Effects of CET Against Gray Matter Loss in Early Schizophrenia also in the Archives of General Psychiatry, May, 2010

Additional CET studies published on durability 12/06, 11/09; for persons in early psychosis 11/09, in Psychiatry Services; increased and retained employment in Research on Social Work Practice 2011; autism in Journal of Autism and Development Disorders 2013

CET is an Evidence Based Practice

Page 13: CET: An EBP Improving Cognitive and Social Functioning 2014 NAMI National Convention September 3, 2014 Ray Gonzalez, ACSW, LISW-S Center for Cognition.

Cognition in Schizophrenia by permission of S. Eack, Ph.D., Univ

of Pittsburgh

-2-1.8-1.6-1.4-1.2

-1-0.8-0.6-0.4-0.2

00.2

Memory Problem-Solving

IQ Attention Perspective-taking

Social CueRecognition

Effec

t Siz

e (C

ohen

's d

)

Corrigan & Green, 1993; Heinrichs & Zakzanis, 1998; Schneider et al., 2006; Sprong et al., 2007

LL

MM

SS

Page 14: CET: An EBP Improving Cognitive and Social Functioning 2014 NAMI National Convention September 3, 2014 Ray Gonzalez, ACSW, LISW-S Center for Cognition.

Processing Speed

0.0

0.2

0.4

0.6

0.8

1.0

1.2

1.4

1.6

Effect Sizes of CET & EST (Enriched Supportive Therapy) at 12 and 24 Months by Composite Index Hogarty, Flesher--Archives of General Psychiatry, Sept. 2004

CETEST

12 24

Social Cognition

SocialAdjustment

Neurocognition SymptomsCognitiveStyle

Page 15: CET: An EBP Improving Cognitive and Social Functioning 2014 NAMI National Convention September 3, 2014 Ray Gonzalez, ACSW, LISW-S Center for Cognition.

CET For Chronic Schizophrenia:

Lasting Effects (N = 106)

45

50

55

60

65

70

0 1 2 3

CETEST

45

50

55

60

65

70

0 1 2 3

CETEST

YearYear YearYear

Mean

Mean

Processing Processing SpeedSpeed

NeurocognitioNeurocognitionn

Hogarty, Greenwald, & Eack, 2006. Hogarty, Greenwald, & Eack, 2006. Psychiatry Serv.Psychiatry Serv. 57:1751-1757.57:1751-1757.

Page 16: CET: An EBP Improving Cognitive and Social Functioning 2014 NAMI National Convention September 3, 2014 Ray Gonzalez, ACSW, LISW-S Center for Cognition.

Cognitive remediation is based on Neuroplasticity Neuroplasticity refers to the

brain’s ability to re-organize itself through forming new neural connections or by adding cells

Neuroplasticity allows the 100 billion neurons and the100 trillion synapses in the brain to adjust their activity and organization in response to new situations or to changes in the environment

Page 17: CET: An EBP Improving Cognitive and Social Functioning 2014 NAMI National Convention September 3, 2014 Ray Gonzalez, ACSW, LISW-S Center for Cognition.

Plasticity can be a double edged sword

Adaptive plasticity

Maturation, Improved function Aberrant plasticity

Pathology, symptoms

by permission of M. Keshavan, MD

Page 18: CET: An EBP Improving Cognitive and Social Functioning 2014 NAMI National Convention September 3, 2014 Ray Gonzalez, ACSW, LISW-S Center for Cognition.

Environmental enrichment leads to neuronal proliferation

by permission of M. Keshavan, MD

Page 19: CET: An EBP Improving Cognitive and Social Functioning 2014 NAMI National Convention September 3, 2014 Ray Gonzalez, ACSW, LISW-S Center for Cognition.

Goals of CET by permission of S. Eack, Ph.D.,

Univ of Pittsburgh

Foster Higher Thinking By Becoming:Abstract and

Gistfulvs.

Concrete

An Active Thinker

vs.

Passive Receiver of Information

Cognitively Flexible

vs.

Following Rigid Rules

More Spontaneous

vs.

Rehearsed

More of an Initiator

vs.

Doing Nothing

Page 20: CET: An EBP Improving Cognitive and Social Functioning 2014 NAMI National Convention September 3, 2014 Ray Gonzalez, ACSW, LISW-S Center for Cognition.

Typical CET Day

11:00 – 12:00 Computer Exercises

12:00 – 12:30 Break

12:30 – 2:00 Group

Individual coaching session held with each client during the week to work on homework questions

Page 21: CET: An EBP Improving Cognitive and Social Functioning 2014 NAMI National Convention September 3, 2014 Ray Gonzalez, ACSW, LISW-S Center for Cognition.

Computer Work

One hour a week Done in pairs Pairs support each other A chance for socialization Prepares participants for group Continues during the course of the group Progressively more challenging and more

abstract

Page 22: CET: An EBP Improving Cognitive and Social Functioning 2014 NAMI National Convention September 3, 2014 Ray Gonzalez, ACSW, LISW-S Center for Cognition.

Attention, Memory, Problem Solving Attention:

Establish set

Maintain set

Shift set Memory

Recall, recognition, procedural Working Memory is most impaired in mental illness

Problem Solving

Page 23: CET: An EBP Improving Cognitive and Social Functioning 2014 NAMI National Convention September 3, 2014 Ray Gonzalez, ACSW, LISW-S Center for Cognition.

Coaching Methodology

Support

Challenge

Be Permissive

Reward

Page 24: CET: An EBP Improving Cognitive and Social Functioning 2014 NAMI National Convention September 3, 2014 Ray Gonzalez, ACSW, LISW-S Center for Cognition.

Reaction Time(2/19/2014; CCR)

Var*(387.09)

(227.85)

Con*(481.51)

(278.47)

0

100

200

300

400

500

600

700

800

900

Pre Post

Mea

n Ti

me

*Signficant changeVar: Variable (N=93)Con: Constant (N=74)

Results:The total mean score of the variable time significantly decreased from the pre to post (p<.001). 72.0% of the clients decreased their variable time (N=93). The total mean score of the constant time significantly decreased from the pre to post (p<.001). 79.7% of the clients decreased their constant time (N=74).The reaction time for the normative population is 215.

Page 25: CET: An EBP Improving Cognitive and Social Functioning 2014 NAMI National Convention September 3, 2014 Ray Gonzalez, ACSW, LISW-S Center for Cognition.

COGNITIVE ENHANCEMENT THERAPY Tuesday, January 16, 2007 Group #9 Session 20

Welcome Back: Judy

Selection of Chairperson: Review of Homework: a) Describe a recent situation in which you disagreed with another personb) Describe your perspectivec) Describe their perspective

Psycho-Educational Talk: Foresightfulness Speaker: Ray

Exercise: Word SortCoach: JudyParticipants: Sam and JoFeedback: Everyone

Homework:a) Tell about a time when you could have been more foresightful.b) Tell how being foresightful would have made the situation different.

Next Group Meeting is Tuesday January 23, 2007

Page 26: CET: An EBP Improving Cognitive and Social Functioning 2014 NAMI National Convention September 3, 2014 Ray Gonzalez, ACSW, LISW-S Center for Cognition.

Socialization

Children are told what to do

Adults are expected to “get it”

Page 27: CET: An EBP Improving Cognitive and Social Functioning 2014 NAMI National Convention September 3, 2014 Ray Gonzalez, ACSW, LISW-S Center for Cognition.

But…..Suppose your memory is impaired and it’s hard to follow a conversation much less participate in it.

Suppose your thought processing is slowed down and it takes extra effort to process and respond to what is happening around you.

Suppose you can’t trust your judgment.

Then what happens?

Page 28: CET: An EBP Improving Cognitive and Social Functioning 2014 NAMI National Convention September 3, 2014 Ray Gonzalez, ACSW, LISW-S Center for Cognition.

Desocialization

If adults (your clients) don’t “get it” people walk away

When people walk away Socialization stops Learning stops Strange behaviors grows People become desocialized

Page 29: CET: An EBP Improving Cognitive and Social Functioning 2014 NAMI National Convention September 3, 2014 Ray Gonzalez, ACSW, LISW-S Center for Cognition.

Desocialization Dysfunctional roles are established Others begin to reinforce

dysfunctional roles Dysfunctional behavior becomes

familiar if not always comfortable No learning about the generalized

other The best mental exercise is

social interaction

Page 30: CET: An EBP Improving Cognitive and Social Functioning 2014 NAMI National Convention September 3, 2014 Ray Gonzalez, ACSW, LISW-S Center for Cognition.
Page 31: CET: An EBP Improving Cognitive and Social Functioning 2014 NAMI National Convention September 3, 2014 Ray Gonzalez, ACSW, LISW-S Center for Cognition.
Page 32: CET: An EBP Improving Cognitive and Social Functioning 2014 NAMI National Convention September 3, 2014 Ray Gonzalez, ACSW, LISW-S Center for Cognition.

Cognitive Flexibility

Causes of Inflexibility

Benefits of Flexibility

Page 33: CET: An EBP Improving Cognitive and Social Functioning 2014 NAMI National Convention September 3, 2014 Ray Gonzalez, ACSW, LISW-S Center for Cognition.
Page 34: CET: An EBP Improving Cognitive and Social Functioning 2014 NAMI National Convention September 3, 2014 Ray Gonzalez, ACSW, LISW-S Center for Cognition.

Homework on Motivational Account Give an example of the situation in which it

was important to give a motivational account

Tell why was important to give a motivational account

How could you have given a better motivational account?

Page 35: CET: An EBP Improving Cognitive and Social Functioning 2014 NAMI National Convention September 3, 2014 Ray Gonzalez, ACSW, LISW-S Center for Cognition.
Page 36: CET: An EBP Improving Cognitive and Social Functioning 2014 NAMI National Convention September 3, 2014 Ray Gonzalez, ACSW, LISW-S Center for Cognition.

Realism vs. IdealismSo this past winter has been especially brutal for everyone in the Great Lake states.  In February during the lunch hour on a day hovering around zero degrees – I (Randy Wolbert, CET Coach) was walking on the down town pedestrian mall in Kalamazoo. 

I ran into a December 2013 Graduate from CET, sitting, drinking coffee, and chatting with a friend.  When he saw me he said: 

“Ideally it would be 75 degrees and we would be walking around in shorts and t shirts – realistically it is near zero and I am glad that I have a warm coat and gloves”. We both broke up laughing.

Page 37: CET: An EBP Improving Cognitive and Social Functioning 2014 NAMI National Convention September 3, 2014 Ray Gonzalez, ACSW, LISW-S Center for Cognition.

FEED BACK

Page 38: CET: An EBP Improving Cognitive and Social Functioning 2014 NAMI National Convention September 3, 2014 Ray Gonzalez, ACSW, LISW-S Center for Cognition.

Accurate and Diplomatic Feedback

Intellectual

Emotional

Teamwork

Response to Coach

Page 39: CET: An EBP Improving Cognitive and Social Functioning 2014 NAMI National Convention September 3, 2014 Ray Gonzalez, ACSW, LISW-S Center for Cognition.

Social Cognition Exercise: Condensed Message The Facts: an art dealer went to Paris on one of his frequent trips and took up

residence at a hotel where he used to stay whenever he was in the city. He was just about to conclude a series of promising deals with some art galleries when he came down with the flu and developed a high temperature.

Since he was such a good customer of the hotel, he received excellent medical care and plenty of attention from the staff. He was quite comfortable, but his business mission was about to fail if help did not arrive within two days at the most. His wife, who currently held another job, had been his able and trusted business partner in previous years.

The art dealer decided to inform his wife of his condition, without alarming her, and ask her to come and help out with the business. Unable to reach her by phone or fax, he arranged to send his wife an e-mail which she would receive early the next morning when she went to work.

The Circumstances: the e-mail server at the hotel limits outgoing e-mails to 12 words or less.

Assumptions: The wife could get away from her job at a moment’s notice. The couple had an excellent relationship. They communicate with each other in

direct and precise language. What would the twelve word (or less) e-mail be?

______ ______ ______ ______ ______ ______ ______ ______ ______ ______ ______ ______

FEED BACK

Page 40: CET: An EBP Improving Cognitive and Social Functioning 2014 NAMI National Convention September 3, 2014 Ray Gonzalez, ACSW, LISW-S Center for Cognition.

Accurate and Diplomatic Feedback

Intellectual

Emotional

Teamwork

Response to Coach

Page 41: CET: An EBP Improving Cognitive and Social Functioning 2014 NAMI National Convention September 3, 2014 Ray Gonzalez, ACSW, LISW-S Center for Cognition.

CET Attendance &Graduation Rates Average attendance and graduation

rates are 80-85% across all sites

Much of the attendance success can be attributed to how much participants value the program.

“I like coming to CET because they treat me like I have a brain”

“We feel that we got our son back after he went through CET.” Marty and Gerry Conway, parents of PLAN Member Neil.

“CET was invaluable, I learned to laugh again and it brought out the happy side of me”

Page 42: CET: An EBP Improving Cognitive and Social Functioning 2014 NAMI National Convention September 3, 2014 Ray Gonzalez, ACSW, LISW-S Center for Cognition.

Dissemination Lessons Learned CET works best with clients who:

Are stable but not fully recovered Have major cognitive deficits Are recovering from schizophrenia or have major

social cognition disabilities Are able to read at a fifth grade level or higher Have had some prior vocational or educational

successes Are at least marginally interested in recovery

although CET is designed to work on amotivation

Page 43: CET: An EBP Improving Cognitive and Social Functioning 2014 NAMI National Convention September 3, 2014 Ray Gonzalez, ACSW, LISW-S Center for Cognition.

CET Effects on Early Schizophrenia(N = 58)

% I

mpr

ovem

ent

% I

mpr

ovem

ent

CETCETESTEST

1yr. 2yr.1yr. 2yr.

Processing Processing SpeedSpeed

Social Social CognitionCognition

SocialSocialAdjustmentAdjustment

NeurocognitionNeurocognition SymptomsSymptomsCognitiveCognitiveStyleStyle

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

Eack et al., 2009. Eack et al., 2009. Psychiatry Serv.Psychiatry Serv. 60:1468-1476. 60:1468-1476.

Page 44: CET: An EBP Improving Cognitive and Social Functioning 2014 NAMI National Convention September 3, 2014 Ray Gonzalez, ACSW, LISW-S Center for Cognition.

Increased Social and Vocational Capacity

Improved Processing Speed and Increased Working Memory enables Clients to process information in Real Time

Clients learn how society works Clients are taught that there are others’

perspectives, that there are cultural norms in vocational settings and how to deal with them

Clients learn how to interact wisely with others A major goal of CET is to enable Clients not only

to get jobs but be able to keep their jobs long term

Page 45: CET: An EBP Improving Cognitive and Social Functioning 2014 NAMI National Convention September 3, 2014 Ray Gonzalez, ACSW, LISW-S Center for Cognition.

Effects of CET on Employment Outcomes in Early Schizophrenia; Eack, et al

VOCATIONAL VIDEO CLIP

Page 46: CET: An EBP Improving Cognitive and Social Functioning 2014 NAMI National Convention September 3, 2014 Ray Gonzalez, ACSW, LISW-S Center for Cognition.

Reduces need for urgent, high demand servicesInterAct Michigan at Kalamazoo MIReduction of 156 hospital bed days for the 17 CET Graduates from the year prior to CET (7 clients)to 10 bed days for the CET treatment year (1 client)to 2 bed days for the 6 months after graduation, (1 client, data as of 5/21/14)

Bridgehaven MHS in Louisville KKYReduction of 104 hospital bed days for the 13 CET Graduates from the year prior to CET (5 clients)to 0 bed days for the CET treatment yearto 28 bed days for the 6 months after graduation, (1 client, data as of 4/1/14)

Page 47: CET: An EBP Improving Cognitive and Social Functioning 2014 NAMI National Convention September 3, 2014 Ray Gonzalez, ACSW, LISW-S Center for Cognition.

Agencies that have trained staffCenter for Cognition and Recovery,

Cleveland OH

Mercy Behavioral Health, Pittsburgh

Community Support Services, Akron

Jewish Family Services (JFSA)Beachwood, OH

PLAN of Southwest Ohio, Cincinnati OH

Northcoast Behavioral Healthcare, Northfield Ohio (ODMHAS)

PLAN of North Texas, Dallas Texas

West Virginia University Hospitals, Morgantown W VA

JEVS, Philadelphia PA

City Mission of Washington, PA

JF&CS of St. Louis MO

Bridgehaven MHS, Louisville KY

LACDMH, Los Angeles, CA

Tri City MHS, Pomona, CA

InterAct Michigan, Kalamazoo, MI

Spindletop Center, Beaumont TX

Lake Shore BHS, Buffalo NY

Horizon House, Newark DE

Didi Hirsch, Los Angeles CA

Veterans Affairs, Cleveland OH

Page 48: CET: An EBP Improving Cognitive and Social Functioning 2014 NAMI National Convention September 3, 2014 Ray Gonzalez, ACSW, LISW-S Center for Cognition.

154 CET groups completed as of July-2014 with 1,250 CET Graduates

47 CET groups currently running

Current Disseminations: Connections, Wilmington, DE 3/13; 5/13; Lakes Regional Center, Terrill TX, 8/13; The Mental Health Coop, Houston TX 8/13; Gulf Coast Center, Galveston, TX 10/13; Harbor CMHC, 4/14,

Unison Behavioral Health, 3/14, Zepf Center, 4/14, A Renewed Mind, 2/14, all in Toledo OH ; Easter Seals of MI, Auburn Hill MI 3/14; Region Ten CSB, Charlottesville VA 8/14; Beech Brook, Pepper Pike OH

8/14;

12 new CET sites in development in CA, NJ,

IN, KS, MI, OH, OK, OR, PA, VA, WA

Page 49: CET: An EBP Improving Cognitive and Social Functioning 2014 NAMI National Convention September 3, 2014 Ray Gonzalez, ACSW, LISW-S Center for Cognition.
Page 50: CET: An EBP Improving Cognitive and Social Functioning 2014 NAMI National Convention September 3, 2014 Ray Gonzalez, ACSW, LISW-S Center for Cognition.

How NAMI has made a difference Advocating for Active Treatment vs. the same

old, same old maintenance services Recovery is the norm, CET speeds

it up and strengthens it Christina Vera of NAMI of Pomona CA Jim Stengle of NAMI of Toledo OH Foster Jennings of NAMI of Richmond VA Bridgette Wetherby of NAMI of Louisville KY

Page 51: CET: An EBP Improving Cognitive and Social Functioning 2014 NAMI National Convention September 3, 2014 Ray Gonzalez, ACSW, LISW-S Center for Cognition.

Brigette Wetherby

NAMI Louisville KY

Mother of a CET Graduate

Page 52: CET: An EBP Improving Cognitive and Social Functioning 2014 NAMI National Convention September 3, 2014 Ray Gonzalez, ACSW, LISW-S Center for Cognition.

Center for Cognition and Recovery

2011 SAMSHA

Science and Service AwardTreatment of Mental Illness and Recovery Support Services

Page 53: CET: An EBP Improving Cognitive and Social Functioning 2014 NAMI National Convention September 3, 2014 Ray Gonzalez, ACSW, LISW-S Center for Cognition.

Center for Cognition and Recovery, LLC 2011 SAMHSA Science

& Service Award RecipientRay Gonzalez, ACSW,LISW-S Executive Director3659 S. Green Road, Suite 308Cleveland, OH 44122216-504-6428

email: [email protected]

website: www.cetcleveland.orgCETCLEVELAND®