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Graduate
Certificate in Family Systems Health Care
The Graduate Certificate
in Family Systems Health Care offers students the fundamentals of
the application of systemic family theories and applications in
health care settings. The Graduate Certificate in Family Systems
Health Care is appropriate for professionals who have already earned
a graduate degree in their professional field and who would benefit
from academic study of applications of family systems in health
care settings. It is also intended to meet the needs of those individuals
who have completed graduate studies in family systems or related
fields and seek introductory training in systems thinking and how
to utilize this training in various health care settings.
The Graduate Certificate
in Family Systems Health Care focuses on the relationships between
psychosocial medicine and biomedicine in the treatment and prevention
of illness and disease. This program prepares professionals to offer
systemic thinking in a variety of settings, including private practices,
hospitals, community clinics, primary care/specialists' offices,
health care and managed care agencies and organizations.
Specific areas of study
include adjustment patterns of patients and their families to chronic
and acute illnesses; models of integration and collaboration among
medical systems and other health care professionals; the role of
the family health care provider in the continuum of services; the
politics and economics of health care; understanding human systems
in health care; and brief interventions and systemic assessments
useful in the treatment and care of patients, their families, and
interactions within the health care milieu.
The Graduate Certificate
in Family Systems Health Care consists of eight courses (24 credits),
which include biopsychosocial and systemic theories, relationship
skills, professional issues, and health care systems. The program
is offered in an online format, and some courses may also be available
in a residential format. This flexible format allows mid career
working adults, and those unable to attend on-campus programs, to
study in a creative, rigorous, and structured fashion. Students
enrolled in the online program will be invited to participate in
Residential Institutes on the Fort Lauderdale campus two times per
year as part of their practical experience. Residential students
will take Practicum I and II to further apply their clinical and
relational skills at a health care internship site.
Students may enroll full
or part time, taking three to nine credit hours per trimester. Students
who attend full-time can expect to complete the program in one year.
Students who complete Graduate Certificate courses online must attend
the Residential Institutes.
Degree
Plans
Below is a sample of a degree plan for a full time student who begins
studies in the Fall trimester. Degree plans will be modified based
on a student’s enrollment date and pace of study. To complete
the requirements for the Graduate Certificate in Family Systems
Health Care, students must take 3 courses with prefix SFTM and 5
courses with prefix FSHC.
Degree Plan:
24 credit hours
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Fall
(September) |
Winter
(January) |
Summer
(April) |
Year
1 |
SFTM 5310: Introduction
to Systems Theory
FSHC 5300: Integration
and Collaboration Among Health Care Systems
FSHC 6400: Understanding
Human Systems in Health Care Settings |
SFTM 5321: Theories
of Marital & Family Therapy
FSHC 5000: Family
Systems Health Care I
FSHC 5500: Politics
and Economics of Health Care Systems |
FSHC 5010: Family
Systems Health Care II
SFTM 6320: Assessment
in Marital & Family Therapy
Graduation
and Celebration |
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