Crisis lines subject of study By Jon Ellison 0#gon f menUd Andrea is a menially ill woman living in the community She want* to break up with her lover, hut is having a hard time keeping herself from him. She calls the crisis center for help. "What usually helps you when you're feeling like this?," the counselor on the other end says "Well, going out for a walk or sitting to watch TV." Andrea replies. "It would help if I knew that I could call track later." There is a significant pause. "You t an call hock if you had an emergency." said the counselor. "1 can't. I won't watch TV. so it would really ' help if I could call bock later." Andrea said. The counselor went on to discourage Andrea from calling back if it wasn't an emergency and tried to help Andrea come up with something else she could do besides call back. Andrea hung up on the counselor. Mentally ill women living in the community, outside of institutions, are trying to lend normal lives One of their major sources of support is a la bour crisis line they can call in emergencies. However, more clients of crisis centers around the country are becoming increasingly unhappy with the services they receive from the counselors. To help find the cause of the dissatisfaction of the clients. University Assistant Professor Marilyn Whalen took an 18-month post-doctorate fellow ship in a Midwestern town, whore she worked at a crisis line for the mentally ill. Supported by the National Institute for Mental Health. Whalen recorded 33 hours of conversations between clients and counselors. Whalen received the $4,000 Junior Professorship Development Award from the College of Arts and Sciences to research why clients are unhappy and what can let done to better the crisis line services Whalen will use the award to hire a research assistant this summer to help her analyze these calls for the root of the conflict*. Whalen and her assistant will analyze the tran scripts of 20 call* where conflict arose to discover the communication problems and offer solutions to keep conflict from arising. "It is possible that the conflict is rooted in the little inter-actional events." Whalen said. The conversations are broken into four parts — Marilyn Whalen the opening, prob lem presentation, problem solving and the closing. The majority of the conflicts are taking place in the problem solving and closing stages. Whalen said “The client feels the most comfortable talking about the problem, but the counselor wants to work out the solu tion.'' Whalen said "Then the counselor wants to get off the phone while the client still wants to talk There is mis* oniimmu ration and the client feels rejected. Whalen said. In Andrea’s i ase. Whalen believes Andrea was looking for a chance to call Imm k and get better sup port from someone else The counselor didn't understand and kept discouraging Andrea from what she thought was a solution Whalen is the first person hi the nation to study the conflicts between clients and counselors on a crisis line, she said Her goal is to better the ser vices of crisis tines to clients by identifying what causes conflict and teaching counselors how to avoid those behaviors Pick up your free copy of the bulletin at the Summer Session Office, 333 Oregon Hall, or call (503) 346-3475. All students pay in-state tuition in summer. Duck Call summer session registration, starts Tuesday, June 1. 1993 UO Summer Session Bulletins with schedule of classes are now available! MOVIELANP CHEAP SEATS! BRING THIS AD IN TOR $1.50 ADMISSION FOR ONE •'.000 MAliNtl SMO* OKI* MON tMi K »>(! .000 ?MHt ■ '• . ittJOfNTMOKV* •sjttczsr Mounl Coupon* TIGHTWAD TUESDAY 13.00 DcmvicuuMunnTt «U*€«1 C«.t.MMMO«MraMMnON SVEER MARIO BROS ( t 30 ISO 530)730 *30 TW« MADE IN AMERICA ( 1 lO 3 20 S 40 ) 7 50 1005 DRAGON (208 4 30)700 *30 mamnofosAL (too 315 530)800 tO 15 HOT SHOW HIT DEll I] ( 1:t5 3 15 515)7 15 B: 15 HOTSHOTS! TAKTKVX (?00 400)8 00 8 00 tooo SHOWTIMES IN EFFECT FRIDAY 5 28 THRU THURSDAY 6 3 We ship your stuff home! 1 to 1000 pounds, computers, stereos. TV's Insured, custom packing Boxes for sale UPS. Emery, Motor Freight 2705 Willamette Street • 344-3106 (convenient parking) 9t\ *1ime, to R&ftit&i... Beyond AIDS 101 What can you do to make a difference? TOPICS: • Navigating Your Way to a Healthy Relationship • Living with HIV I AIDS • Safer Sex: What’s Practical, What’s Not • Grief and Imss • and more! Friday, Nov. 19,1993 6:00 - 9:00 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 20,1992 9:00 ajn. * 5:00 p.m. Gerlinger Lounge EDPM 407 and EDPM 507 CRN 15996 and 15997 I credit P/NPonly * T H LIMITED ENROLLMENT Conference fee - SJ0.M payable the day of workshop Catered lunch provided on Saturday UO Student Health Center fr-“y rum*4l** Hfaith Education Program U *10 He** Wr>«r. Ommfy