Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Psychiatric Rehabilitation Association

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Abbreviation
  
PRA

Legal status
  
Nonprofit

Founded at
  
Pennsylvania

Formation
  
1974; 43 years ago (1974)

Founders
  
Jerry Dincin Lois Evey Samuel Grob Julius Lanoil Chris MacFadden Marshall Rubin Irv Rutman James Schmidt David Shiel Donald Springer Florence Strindberg Henry Tanaka Marvin Weinstein

Headquarters
  
7918 Jones Branch Drive, Suite 300, McLean, VA

The Psychiatric Rehabilitation Association (PRA) is a professional association for practitioners of psychiatric rehabilitation who serve persons and families living with psychiatric disorders. As of 2016, Colleen Eubanks is Chief Executive Officer.

Contents

History

PRA was incorporated in 1974 as the International Association of Psychosocial Rehabilitation Services. It was founded by the directors of the original 13 psychosocial rehabilitation centers in the United States, PRA promotes evidence-based recovery from mental illness practice and works with government agencies, universities and other institutions. In 2004, the name changed to United States Psychiatric Rehabilitation Association. In 2013, it removed the national designation from its name and became the Psychiatric Rehabilitation Association.

Publications

In 1982, PRA partnered with the Center for Psychiatric Rehabilitation at Boston University to publish the Psychiatric Rehabilitation Journal. The journal is now published quarterly in collaboration with the American Psychological Association. PRA also publishes two newsletters: Recovery Update (weekly) and PsyR Connections (quarterly).

Professional certification

The PRA issues the Certified Psychiatric Rehabilitation Practitioner, a professional certification designation recognized in 13 states in the U.S. as a qualification for mental health practitioners (with an additional 4 states pending): Arizona, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Idaho, Illinois, Iowa, Louisiana, Maine, Maryland, Minnesota, New York, New Jersey, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania and Virginia.

References

Psychiatric Rehabilitation Association Wikipedia