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Looking to improve your therapy approach? How often do you review your appointment calendar and start wondering how you’re going to, finally, help a regular client ... morewho seems to progress for a while – and 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 the therapeutic relationship.
Join ACT expert, trainer and co-author with Steven Hayes of ACT in Practice, Daniel J. Moran, Ph.D., BCBA-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 Disorder 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: Tuesday, 28 Jan, 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... more memories get stored in the 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, esensitizing tools. Do not miss this opportunity to learn evidence-based techniques you can use immediately with your clients and improve treatment outcomes.
Objectives
1) Explain the origin and efficacy of the Emotional Freedom Techniques (EFT) including peer reviewed, published research. 2) Implement self-applied, light touch or tapping on acupoints to calm and rebalance the body system while thinking about disturbing upsets to create a desensitized state as measured by continuous dropping of the SUDS level. 3) Distinguish that EFT is a mind-body treatment that desensitizes unwanted thoughts, emotions and physical discomfort. 4) List exploratory questions to elicit the first or worst defining event and how to treat it in all manifestations in the past, present and future. 5) Demonstrate EFT techniques for stress, phobias, generalized anxiety disorder, panic and traumatic events. 6) Describe how EFT can greatly diminish frustrating OCD compulsions and unwanted habits. 7) Utilize a two-prong approach to treating social anxiety: EFT and social skill building. 8) Describe why EFT works in conjunction with and beyond talk therapy and how it often cuts quickly through resistant problems. 9) Explore working with pain reduction using acupoints and psychological constructs of metaphors and emotions. 10) State the ethical concerns of not working outside knowledge base and obtaining ongoing “permission” to use these methods.
Date: Tuesday, 28 Jan, 2020
Join child/adolescent behavioral expert, Sophia Ansari, LPCC, and learn how to best manage the students at your school diagnosed with Oppositional Defiant Disorder (ODD), Attention ... moreDeficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD), Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD), mood disorders, anxiety and depression. You will walk away with concrete, yet practical, strategies to successfully intervene with their serious behavioral issues, such as:
Anger and outbursts • Meltdowns and tantrums • Cutting and self-injury • Obsessive compulsive • Defiance Truancy • Impulsivity • Rigidity • Sensory issues • Electronic addiction
Through case studies, video clips and dynamic class discussion you will learn:
30 second teacher strategies to manage challenging and disruptive behaviors
New ways to reduce the costs of out-of-district placements
How to engage students in class, increase productivity and reduce truancy
Behavioral assessments and strategies for the IEP team
Side-effects of common psychotropic medications
How skill deficits from mental health conditions create behavioral difficulties
Characteristics of at-risk students’ mental health problems
Strategies to gain collaboration with clinicians
Leave the day with the “magic dust” you have been looking for to expedite rapid and effective changes in these children and adolescents!
Date: Tuesday, 28 Jan, 2020
Ethical issues pose some of the most challenging questions mental health professionals face every day; and the questions change with each advancement in technology ... moreand each new piece of legislation — bringing a constant barrage of vexing ethical dilemmas.
This seminar will help you sort out facts from fiction, ethical issues from legal issues, and their application in your practice. You will gain an understanding and an appreciation for the purpose and practice of ethical standards, and learn how to decrease your risk of being drawn into an ethical or legal issue.
The core realities of value-based and value-laden approaches to mental health care pivot on ethics. The personal values, principles, and standards of clinicians define their practices. The approaches, clinician orientations, and philosophies of clinicians must remain within ethical boundaries.
Date: Tuesday, 28 Jan, 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: Tuesday, 28 Jan, 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: Wednesday, 29 Jan, 2020
Suicidality is one of the scariest scenarios we work with. Your job literally becomes a life-ordeath situation…one in which you hold a great deal of responsibility. ... moreSuicidal clients under extreme distress can leave you feeling overwhelmed and questioning your next move, and revelations of self-harm have you searching for answers they didn’t teach you in school.
How do I differentiate self-injurious behavior from suicidal behavior? Can self-harming lead to suicidal behavior? How do I protect my license and livelihood when working with suicidal clients? What do I do when crises situations arise? When, and how, do I hospitalize clients?
Given the high probability of encountering a client considering suicide or engaging in self-harming behavior at some point in your career, the preparation of graduate programs is not enough. With so much at stake you need to be ready to skillfully assess and manage suicide risks and self-harming behavior!
Attend this candid one-day seminar and leave feeling fully equipped to address the intricacies that affect your clients’ choices to live or die. Beneficial to both seasoned and fledgling mental health practitioners, our experienced instructor will provide you with comprehensive approaches to effectively work with clients who present with suicidal and self-destructive behaviors. Key Benefits of Attending:
Risk assessment strategies that protect not only clients, but you as the clinician. Front line strategies derived from the evidence-based efficacy of CBT and DBT. Answers to difficult questions on suicide and self-harm that clinicians often struggle with. Effective treatment techniques, applicable across various populations and therapeutic settings. Tips on decision making that provide you with guideposts for determining when crisis intervention is needed in contrast to long-term treatment.
Go beyond grad school curriculum and get the practical real-world strategies and advice you need to confidently and capably treat suicidal and self-harming clients!
Date: Wednesday, 29 Jan, 2020
Boundary issues present some of the largest challenges you’ll face as a clinician. How you communicate and interact can be interpreted differently by each client. ... moreYour professional liability is at risk by not following clear guidelines and best practices when it comes to boundaries.
This seminar will provide you with answers to the top challenges you face. You’ll get guidance on the following ethical boundary pitfalls:
Social Media Email & Text Self-Disclosure Gifts & Receiving Gifts Contact Outside of Session Dual Relationships Financial & Business Boundaries
Sign up today and avoid ethical entanglements that risk your professional liability!
Date: Wednesday, 29 Jan, 2020
Boundary issues present some of the largest challenges you’ll face as a clinician. How you communicate and interact can be interpreted differently by each client. ... moreYour professional liability is at risk by not following clear guidelines and best practices when it comes to boundaries.
This seminar will provide you with answers to the top challenges you face. You’ll get guidance on the following ethical boundary pitfalls:
Social Media Email & Text Self-Disclosure Gifts & Receiving Gifts Contact Outside of Session Dual Relationships Financial & Business Boundaries
Sign up today and avoid ethical entanglements that risk your professional liability!
Date: Wednesday, 29 Jan, 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... more memories get stored in the 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.
Objectives 1) Explain the origin and efficacy of the Emotional Freedom Techniques (EFT) including peer reviewed, published research. 2) Implement self-applied, light touch or tapping on acupoints to calm and rebalance the body system while thinking about disturbing upsets to create a desensitized state as measured by continuous dropping of the SUDS level. 3) Distinguish that EFT is a mind-body treatment that desensitizes unwanted thoughts, emotions and physical discomfort. 4) List exploratory questions to elicit the first or worst defining event and how to treat it in all manifestations in the past, present and future. 5) Demonstrate EFT techniques for stress, phobias, generalized anxiety disorder, panic and traumatic events. 6) Describe how EFT can greatly diminish frustrating OCD compulsions and unwanted habits. 7) Utilize a two-prong approach to treating social anxiety: EFT and social skill building. 8) Describe why EFT works in conjunction with and beyond talk therapy and how it often cuts quickly through resistant problems. 9) Explore working with pain reduction using acupoints and psychological constructs of metaphors and emotions. 10) State the ethical concerns of not working outside knowledge base and obtaining ongoing “permission” to use these methods.
Date: Wednesday, 29 Jan, 2020
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