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page 23 out of 26
We have all had clients who come into the office in a depressed or anxious state, and yet they cannot identify just what is bothering them. Children are brought in ... morewith symptoms of ADHD, clients with addictions struggle to gain control of themselves, and others suffer with physical complaints in addition to mental health issues. It’s frustrating when traditional talk therapy is not quite enough to break through and it feels like something else is needed to meet your treatment goals.
That missing piece you’re looking for? It’s here - the mind-body connection.
Kristen Allott is a naturopathic physician specializing in alternative and nutritional approaches to mental health disorders, and she is here to help you bring this missing piece to your clients.
Imagine an increase in your clients’ energy and mental clarity, allowing them to be more engaged in the therapeutic process. Simplify sessions when you readily have dozens of effective, simple strategies at your fingertips that enhance and complement your current treatment interventions. Feel your confidence improve when you identify nutritional deficiencies that contribute to anxiety, anger, depression, PTSD or ADHD.
Don’t risk missing out on this key piece of treatment - sign up today to improve outcomes for your clients!
Date: Wednesday, 12 Feb, 2020
How often do you review your appointment calendar and start wondering how you’re going to, finally, help a regular client who seems to progress for a while – ... moreand then regress?
Each time he/she arrives, you use the same tools and techniques you’ve used for so long – and mostly successfully – but this one client is testing your skills. Now, you can begin to integrate Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) into your practice – and see improved outcomes.
Researched and developed by world-renowned researcher, speaker and author Steven Hayes, Ph.D., ACT is fast becoming the treatment approach that gets to the heart of therapeutic relationship.
Join ACT expert, Adria Pearson-Mauro, Ph.D., for this workshop where you will develop highly practical, evidence-based skills, case conceptualization techniques and powerful strategies that will improve outcomes for the following:
Anxiety Issues Post-Traumatic Stress Disorde Mood Disorders Substance Abuse Anger Management Eating Disorders Trauma Personality Disorders
Attend this intensive, engaging and transformative workshop and start a new path for healing you can use with your most difficult clients.
Date: Thursday, 13 Feb, 2020
"Were you taught to use medication, CBT, exposure and other traditional therapy approaches to treat trauma? Did you know that these approaches are limited when it... more comes to healing trauma at the deeper, emotional level of the brain? Also, do you know that memory reconsolidation is a recent neuroscience breakthrough that revealed the brain's own rules for healing traumatic memories and allows you to clear trauma at its roots? During this seminar, I'll provide you with step-by-step instructions and techniques you can use in each phase of trauma treatment. This is the only trauma training that specifically gives you skills in the phenomena of memory reconsolidation. Let me show you why memory reconsolidation is necessary for permanently transforming your trauma work with clients. I will give you a simple protocol to use to reconsolidate a traumatic memory in as little as one session! Don't get the impression that you have to get lengthy, expensive training and certification in certain modalities in order to be able to successfully treat trauma. My workshop will let you walk away knowing exactly what to do to help your clients reclaim their lives after trauma!"
Date: Thursday, 13 Feb, 2020
After decades of clinical innovation and recent scientific research, the empirically validated Internal Family Systems (IFS) model has been shown to be effective at improving clients’ ... moregeneral functioning and well-being. This effective model provides clinicians with procedures for helping clients with the most challenging mental health profiles to heal the wounded, burdened, and traumatized parts of their systems.
The IFS model provides a compassionate, respectful, non-pathologizing approach to understanding the organization and functioning of the human psyche. The transformative IFS approach embraces and celebrates the natural multiplicity of the mind. Its assumption is that every part of the system has good intention and valuable resources allows clinicians to approach even the most troubling of “symptoms” with compassion and respect. IFS offers therapists a powerful and effective set of tools for empowering clients with a wide range of clinical profiles to heal the wounded and burdened parts of their internal systems, resulting in:
a way to enter clients’ inner ecology without the overemphasis on containment and stabilization
symptom reduction and improved functioning for clients
deep self-healing within even the most troubled clients
IFS is a powerful treatment modality. Once you experience it, you will want to incorporate it into your practice. Through instruction, video demonstration, and experiential exercises, Alexia D. Rothman, Ph.D., Certified IFS therapist and colleague of Dr. Richard Schwartz (founder of IFS) will show you step-by-step how to apply the most effective, empirically validated IFS interventions to help your clients connect with and understand their conflicting parts to facilitate deep, lasting healing.
Date: Thursday, 13 Feb, 2020
What do you do with anxiety and trauma clients who do not improve? The anxiety spectrum exemplifies the disorders where emotions override thought. Fragmented memories get stored in ... morethe body. The Emotional Freedom Techniques (EFT) collapse this uncomfortable emotional and physical reactivity, therefore freeing a path for spontaneous insights and clearer thinking.
Emotional Freedom Technique (EFT) is a comprehensive mind-body treatment that desensitizes three areas: unwanted thoughts, emotions and physical reactions. EFT combines physical interventions derived from restorative (self-applied) acupressure theory with cognitive interventions.
EFT is an evidence-based practice with over 100 published studies. One published study demonstrated a 24% decrease in cortisol (stress hormone) level in the EFT group (Energypsych.org). EFT is an effective brief therapy and belongs in every therapist’s tool box.
Transform your clinical excellence; bring EFT into your practice and treat resistant problems that other methods failed.
This seminar focuses on cutting-edge techniques of EFT to treat the anxiety spectrum disorders including:
Phobias Generalized Anxiety Social Anxiety Disorder Panic OCD Acute Traumatic Stress Reactions
These mind-body methods are emerging into mainstream mental health, trauma treatment, coaching, employee assistance programs and sport psychology arenas as rapid, effective, non-invasive, calming, desensitizing tools. Do not miss this opportunity to learn evidence-based techniques you can use immediately with your clients and improve treatment outcomes.
Date: Thursday, 13 Feb, 2020
Chronic anxiety disorders all involve a “threat” that doesn’t occur. Panic attacks don’t kill, obsessive doubts about the stove don’t ... morecause fires, social anxiety doesn’t lead to disgrace and isolation, worry doesn’t lead to insanity. The feared outcomes recede into the future the way an optical illusion recedes into the horizon.
Why are anxiety disorders so powerfully chronic? It’s because chronically anxious clients get tricked by their own efforts to avoid, distract from, and protect against the perceived dangers. When the dangers don’t come to pass, they believe they had a narrow escape from a terrible calamity, and feel more vulnerable going forward rather than less. They become increasingly afraid of more and more improbable events. What we call the “anxiety disorders” could be more accurately termed “the disorders of excessive self-protection”, because that’s how they function!
How can you help them recover? By teaching them how to disengage from the self-protective behaviors that trick them. Attend this workshop and learn how to help your anxious clients find the evidence of this in their own lives, so you can help them approach and accept, rather than avoid and resist, the experience of anxiety.
This workshop will teach you to empower your anxious clients to see themselves as good, capable people who have been fooled by anxiety, rather than defective people who need protection. Discover how to motivate your clients to seek out, rather than avoid, the corrective experiences they need for recovery. Take home effective strategies from Acceptance and Commitment Therapy, Paradoxical Therapy, Metacognitive Therapy, and traditional CBT to help your clients rediscover the hopes and dreams they had for life before they were derailed by their struggle against anxiety. You, and your clients, will be glad you did!
Date: Thursday, 13 Feb, 2020
Trends and Innovations in Adolescent and Family Substance Abuse Treatment Date/Time: Thursday, February 13th, 2020 - 9:00 - 4:30... more Location: Windjammer, South Burlington, Vermont Trainers: Mitchell Barron and Danielle Jatlow
Trainer Biography: Mitch Barron has been the Executive Director of Centerpoint, Vermont’s largest provider of “integrated adolescent and family treatment.” In this role, he is responsible for insuring the highest-quality services and supports to meet the mental health, substance abuse, and special education needs of Vermont teens, young adults, and their families. Mitch is a Principal with the Vermont Youth Treatment Enhancement Program and National Treatment Faculty with Reclaiming Futures, a public health and juvenile justice reform organization based at Portland State University, Oregon. Mitch has provided tenured leadership with the Vermont Alcohol and Drug Abuse Council and the Vermont Association of Addiction Treatment Providers. He serves on the Boards of two regional youth development, health promotion, and substance abuse prevention coalitions. Mitch is a Principal in Centerpoint’s Consultation, Training, and Technical Assistance Services, with a focus on systems and practice improvement, and including advisory roles within child protection services and the judiciary. Through his career, Mitch has been a practicing clinician, clinical supervisor, program director, educator, and administrator. He teaches, trains, and consults regionally and nationally on a variety of topics related to adolescent and family mental health, addiction, resiliency, and well-being
Trainer Biography: Danielle Jatlow, LICSW LADC is the Director of Community Health Initiatives/SAMH Services at Centerpoint. Danielle provides clinical and operational leadership to Centerpoint’s integrated treatment and support for youth, young adults, parents, and families impacted by a broad range of social, emotional, mental health and substance abuse issues. She also plays a key leadership role in Centerpoint’s community partnerships and program development, including school-based and host-site SAMH programs. Danielle is Adjunct Faculty in the University of Vermont’s Department of Social Work and is a Principal in Centerpoint’s Consultation, Training, and Technical Assistance Services. Prior to settling in Vermont, Danielle worked with homeless youth in San Francisco and was a Coro Community Fellow with a focus on ethical, effective public sector leadership. Danielle’s work at The Family Center in New York City included working with youth and families impacted by HIV and other medical health issues. At Family Justice (Vera Institute of Justice), she developed a family-to-family mentoring program for incarcerated adults returning to their community. Danielle received her MSW from Columbia University School of Social Work with Post-Master’s training at the Ackerman Institute for the Family.
Course Description: This training explores current trends and dynamic practices within adolescent and family treatment and support. This includes a developmentally-matched, family-focused and interdisciplinary framework that capitalizes on youth and family motivation and resilience, uses creative engagement strategies, and increases access to treatment services to promote the health and wellness of youth and families. With examples from this Multidimensional and Multimodal Model (MDMM)©of Support for Parents, Families, and Caregivers, this training also identifies guiding principles and practices that can be applied within any service environment to ensure high quality, client-driven, and partnered services with youth and families. This training day draws from the institute model, including a morning presentation/exploration of principles, practices, and strategies - followed by an afternoon of 'real-life' application within participants’ practice settings. Participants will receive – and should come prepared to discuss – an article and supporting materials that will be provided prior to the training day
Maximum enrollment is 35; Cut off date for registrations is Feb. 1st, 2020
Morning coffee provided; Lunch on your own.
6 Credits: NAADAC CU's are approved; Social Worker CEU's and Allied MH CEU's pending. VAPA Members- $50.00; Non-Members - $100.00/ Students - $50.00
Register at https://www.eventbrite.com/e/trends-and-innovations-in-adolescent-and-family-substance-abuse-treatment-tickets-69346979683 https://www.eventbrite.com/e/trends-and-innovations-in-adolescent-and-family-substance-abuse-treatment-tickets-69346979683
Date: Thursday, 13 Feb, 2020
Don’t be weak, don’t ask for help, don’t cry, don’t show emotion. These damaging expectations of masculinity are ruining your sessions, causing ... moremany male clients to bottle up the shame of past traumas, struggle to be vulnerable and open in therapy, and labor to leave emotion numbing drugs behind.
It can make therapeutic progress seem impossible and leave you frustrated, questioning your
competence, and feeling powerless when nothing you try seems to work.
Treat male clients with trauma and addiction issues more effectively than ever before!
No matter your own gender, this essential program will give you exactly what you need to:
Keep male clients from leaving treatment
Experience more productive sessions with men who struggle with “talk” therapy
Create greater openness in sessions with tips to overcome male shame and stigma
Add value to the clinical techniques you already use for trauma and addiction work
Sign up today and experience new levels of therapeutic success with the guidance and tailored approaches you need to meet the needs of men in therapy!
Date: Thursday, 13 Feb, 2020
Even as a grief expert, David was unprepared for the sudden death of his son, who died at age 21. People asked him, “What’s it like for the grief expert ... moreto lose his son?” He would answer, “The grief expert did not lose his son, the father did.” Everything he knew about grief turned out to be true. David had to go through the five stages of grief but found himself wanting more from the experience – he wanted to find meaning in his life after such a terrible loss. He learned that broken heart syndrome is real and he realized he would either die of it or live with it, and that healing occurs not when grief gets smaller, but when life gets bigger. This led to the discovery of the 6th stage of grief – finding meaning.
Based on David Kessler’s new book, Finding Meaning: The Sixth Stage of Grief, this seminar is designed to help professionals guide people through life’s worst moments to find meaning after loss. All types of loss will be covered, including betrayal, loss of a parent or family member, and loss due to addiction, mental illness and suicide.
After attending this seminar, you will be able to enhance your work with those who have dealt with any kind of loss. It will fill you with new insight, tools, strategies, and inspiring information, leaving you looking forward to the next day… so you can immediately begin to use all you have learned!
Don’t miss this opportunity to learn from one of the world’s leading grief experts - sign up today!
Date: Thursday, 13 Feb, 2020
Coalesce Research Group likes to welcome all the Directors, Heads, Deans, Professors, Scientists, Researchers, Doctors and students of Psychiatry for “International ... moreConference on Addiction, Psychiatry and Mental Health”, October 24-25, 2019 at Rome, Italy with the theme of “ Novel approaches and Developments in Addiction Research and Psychiatry”
Date: Thursday, 13 Feb, 2020
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