SPS 203.01(3)(c)(c) Court ordered mental health, behavioral health, or substance use disorder treatments. SPS 203.01(3)(d)(d) State and county facilities that house individuals with mental illness, mental health, or substance use disorder diagnoses. SPS 203.01(3)(e)(e) Legal settings involving mental health, behavioral health, or substance use disorder concerns. SPS 203.01(3)(g)(g) Evaluation, diagnosis, or treatment of minors or those under guardianship relating to mental health, behavioral health, and substance use disorder concerns. SPS 203.01(4)(4) “Legal setting” means any interpretation situation involving consultation with an attorney, law enforcement related setting, or during any immigration related proceedings, for the purposes of obtaining legal advice, any interpretation situation involving a negotiation or meeting in which one of the parties is represented by an attorney, or any interpretation situation taking place within a law enforcement setting, immigration proceeding or courts of the state of Wisconsin or United States. SPS 203.01(5)(5) “Team interpreting” means the practice of using two or more interpreters who work together to provide interpretation for an individual, either due to a speech impairment, hearing loss, deafness, deaf-blindness, or other disability, so that the individual can adequately hear, understand, or communicate effectively in English. SPS 203.01(6)(6) “Video Relay Services” means the practice of individuals who use sign language to use video equipment to communicate with other individuals who are using a voice telephone. SPS 203.01(7)(7) “Video Remote Interpreting” means the practice of providing interpreting services through video technology, and the interpreter is offsite or remote while providing services to the client. SPS 203.01 HistoryHistory: CR 22-001: cr. Register July 2023 No. 811, eff. 8-1-23. SPS 203.02SPS 203.02 Provision of services in a medical setting. Only individuals who meet one of the following criteria may provide sign language interpretation services in a medical setting: SPS 203.02(1)(1) Hold a sign language interpreter - intermediate hearing license under s. 440.032 (3) (c), Stats., and is team interpreting with an individual who is licensed either as a sign language interpreter - advanced hearing license under s. 440.032 (3) (d), Stats., or licensed as a sign language interpreter – advanced deaf license under s. 440.032 (3) (f), Stats. SPS 203.02 HistoryHistory: CR 22-001: cr. Register July 2023 No. 811, eff. 8-1-23; corrections in (1) to (4) made under s. 35.17, Stats., Register July 2023 No. 811. SPS 203.03SPS 203.03 Provision of services in a mental health treatment setting. This section only applies to applications for licensure received on or after September 1, 2023. SPS 203.03(1)(1) Individuals who hold an active qualified equivalency from the Alabama Department of Deaf Services may provide sign language interpretation services in a mental health treatment setting. SPS 203.03(2)(2) Individuals who do not hold the qualified equivalency must meet the following alternative pathway criteria to provide sign language interpretation services in a mental health treatment setting: SPS 203.03(2)(b)(b) Submit documentation, satisfactory to the department that they have completed a minimum of 40 clock hours of training within the previous 2-year license cycle including the following topics: SPS 203.03(2)(b)1.a.a. Interpreting methods and appropriate use of simultaneous, consecutive, and narrative interpreting. SPS 203.03(2)(b)1.b.b. Knowledge of the difference between interpreting and communication assistance or language intervention. SPS 203.03(2)(b)1.c.c. Identifying care providers, identifying mental health disciplines, and familiarity with milieus and settings. SPS 203.03(2)(b)1.f.f. Confidentiality and privilege, including abuse reporting, the duty to warn, and protections specific to Wisconsin statutes. SPS 203.03(2)(b)2.b.b. Specialized vocabulary used in psychiatric settings in both the source and the target languages. SPS 203.03(2)(b)2.c.c. Psychopathologies, including knowledge of the names of the major mental illnesses treated in both the target and source languages. SPS 203.03(2)(b)2.d.d. Symptomology of major mental illnesses experienced by the patients as presented within the psycholinguistic context of the target language group. SPS 203.03(2)(b)2.e.e. Assessment methods and understanding of the impact of interpretation when doing an assessment. SPS 203.03(2)(b)3.c.c. Inpatient settings and the various staff that will be working in those settings and how interpreting and cultural differences can influence therapeutic relationships in those settings. SPS 203.03(2)(b)3.d.d. Outpatient settings, self-help and support groups and the specialized vocabulary used in those groups. SPS 203.03(2)(b)3.e.e. Influence of interpreting and cultural differences on therapeutic relationships in both inpatient and outpatient settings. SPS 203.03(2)(b)3.f.f. Cultural views of mental illness, mental health, behavioral health, and substance abuse specific to the populations the interpreter works with. SPS 203.03(2)(b)3.g.g. Constructs of deafness and hearing loss relative to majority/minority cultures and pathological models. SPS 203.03(2)(b)3.h.h. Sociological impact of cross-cultural mental health service provision and the impact of an interpreter on the therapeutic dyad. SPS 203.03(2)(b)4.a.a. Specialized vocabulary used in substance use disorder treatment in both the source and the target languages. SPS 203.03(2)(b)5.5. ‘Disability knowledge.’ Issues involving developmental disability and any additional disabilities and the role culture and language plays in providing services to people with developmental disabilities or additional disabilities. SPS 203.03(2)(b)6.a.a. Personal safety issues, including an understanding of at-risk conduct and personal boundaries as it applies to mental health interpreting work and an awareness of de-escalation techniques and universal precautions. SPS 203.03(2)(b)6.f.f. Linguistic dysfluency or marked changes in linguistic fluency within a psycholinguistic context. SPS 203.03(2)(b)6.g.g. Conveying information without alteration, emotional language without escalation, and ambiguous or emotionless language. SPS 203.03(2)(b)6.i.i. Reading client case documentation and recording appropriate documentation of linguistic significance. SPS 203.03(2)(b)6.j.j. Personal mental health issues and maintaining the personal mental health of the interpreter. SPS 203.03(2)(b)6.L.L. Awareness of countertransference in the interpreter and familiarity with transference to the clinician or to the interpreter. SPS 203.03(2)(c)(c) Submit documentation to the department indicating that they have completed a 40-clock-hour supervised practicum within one year meeting all the following requirements: SPS 203.03(2)(c)3.3. The work must be direct interpreting and may not be social in nature. SPS 203.03(2)(d)(d) Submit documentation to the department indicating that they have passed an examination approved by the department on the topics covered in par. (b). SPS 203.03 HistoryHistory: CR 22-001: cr. Register July 2023 No. 811, eff. 8-1-23; correction in (2) (a), (b) (intro.), 1. f., (c) (intro.), (d) made under s. 35.17, Stats., Register July 2023 No. 811. SPS 203.04SPS 203.04 Provision of services via video relay services or video remote interpreting. SPS 203.04(1)(1) A Wisconsin interpreter licensee is required to provide interpreting services via video remote interpreting under all circumstances where the licensee or the client resides in the state. SPS 203.04(2)(2) Video relay services are regulated by the Federal Communications Commission. Wisconsin licensed interpreters should follow federal regulations under all circumstances where video relay services are used. SPS 203.04 NoteNote: Federal Communications Commission regulations on video relay services can be found under 47 CFR 64 at http://www.ecfr.gov. SPS 203.04 HistoryHistory: CR 22-001: cr. Register July 2023 No. 811, eff. 8-1-23. SPS 203.05SPS 203.05 Maintenance of qualified mental health interpreter status. This section only applies to renewal applications for licensure received on or after September 1, 2023. An individual recognized as an interpreter qualified to provide services within a mental health treatment setting by the department under s. SPS 203.03 must submit documentation indicating completion of one of the following requirements to the department as part of the application for renewal of the individual’s sign language interpreter – advanced deaf license issued under s. 440.032 (3) (f), Stats., or sign language interpreter – advanced hearing license under s. 440.032 (3) (d), Stats.: SPS 203.05(1)(1) At least 40 clock hours of actual interpretation work in a mental health or substance abuse setting annually. This requirement includes 20 clock hours of actual interpreting and 20 clock hours of health-related training. SPS 203.05(2)(2) Attending 40 clock hours of mental health related training annually. SPS 203.05(3)(3) Any combination of the above equaling 80 hours during the two-year license cycle. SPS 203.05 HistoryHistory: CR 22-001: cr. Register July 2023 No. 811, eff. 8-1-23; correction in (intro.) made under s. 35.17, Stats., Register July 2023 No. 811.
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administrativecode
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Department of Safety and Professional Services (SPS)
Chs. SPS 1-299; Professional Services
administrativecode/SPS 203.03(2)(b)2.a.
administrativecode/SPS 203.03(2)(b)2.a.
section
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