News Article By Cheryl Balian
Scaparrotta / News Correspondent | Metrowest
Daily News July 24, 2004 | 'Clubhouse' theory wins
attentionWeston resident Toni Wolf, executive director of a mental rehabilitation
facility in Marlborough, recently won a prestigious national award in San Diego
for her services in the psychiatric field. "My literal statement on
winning was, 'You're kidding, right?'" Wolf recalled. Apparently,
the application process was lengthy, and a psychiatric research team she had collaborated
with at the UMass Medical Center in Worcester went through a rigorous process
to nominate her. "I was more impressed by them taking time out of
their very busy lives to fill out the application than I was with actually winning
the award," Wolf said. The kudos she earned from the International
Association of Psychosocial Rehabilitation Services (IAPSRS) provides telling
insight into her dedication and leadership at Employment Options Inc., a nonprofit
agency she created in 1989. Employment Options serves about 80 people
with mental illness per day, with an active membership of 250 people. The agency,
which has a progressive outlook, assists clients in gaining employment and offers
support that cultivates their self-sufficiency and personal growth. Wolf,
who has a long career in mental health services, saw the need over the years for
an agency that addressed issues like health care that seemed to fall by the wayside
in other organizations. "I had been working in Boston, but I moved
to Weston and I wanted to find a way to work more locally in the community,"
she said. Through a contact she had at the state level, Wolf realized
there was an opportunity to build a nonprofit agency serving MetroWest, and thus
create a host of services that are usually lacking in the mental health arena.
"I'd worked in urban environments such as Dorchester and Brockton,"
she explained, "and I'd always seen the gaps. I could provide a certain pot
of services, but there were holes. So this was my chance to develop an organization
that addresses mental health as a whole, which is very exciting to me."
Employment Options is based on a "clubhouse" philosophy, which considers
the relationship between patients and staff a partnership. "We're
very much based on focusing on a person's strengths, not their diagnoses,"
she explained. When asked why her particular cause might be any more compelling
than the dozens of other charitable pursuits that constantly compete attention
and funding, Wolf doesn't hesitate in her response. "Consider the
numbers alone -- one out of four people is mentally ill," Wolf said. "And
usually when you read about mental illness in the newspapers, it's merely a story
about someone who has acted out. Then the story quietly fades away."
Wolf continued, "It bothers me that media coverage is always about a problem,
and mental illness isn't portrayed as an issue to discuss or to be educated on."
Anupa Shah, marketing manager at Employment Options, added still more
perspective: "We're interested in assisting people in this community and
area, because many who live in MetroWest towns either have mental health issues
or know of someone else who does, although it's not something that is talked about
very often." Wolf said this lack of a public forum speaks to the
need for such a discussion, "and of the isolation of the mentally ill. Especially
in a town like Weston, people are ashamed of such a subject," she said pointedly.
Wolf said she believes that the more open discussion that takes place
about the condition, the better. "My fantasy is that the barriers
of stigma and isolation will come down," she said firmly. Wolf and
her associates at Employment Options don't simply carry out their current mission;
they know where they would like to go in the future. "Our vision
is to really expand our services. We want to focus on the issue of wellness, not
just mental but physical," she said. "We're in a medical crisis; our
members aren't getting the medical services they need." While the
sheer numbers of those affected by mental illness seem overwhelming, Wolf has
plenty of optimism, and offers up an insider's perspective. "People
with mental illness are good citizens," she concluded. "They are very
courageous, because they focus on their recovery every day. I've learned more
from them than they've learned from me." ( To learn more about Employment
Options, visit www.employmentoptions.org )
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