Full Course Description


Module 1: Understanding the Complexities of Diagnosing Bipolar Disorder: Spectrum and DSM approaches

Program Information

Objectives

  • Contrast categorical (DSM-5) and dimensional (spectrum) approaches to unipolar and bipolar disorders, and mixed states. Synthesize these views in assessment of patients’ mood symptoms.
  • Utilize up-to-date instruments for identifying bipolarity, including the Bipolar Spectrum Diagnostic Scale, Bipolarity Index, and MoodCheck.
  • Compare criteria for PTSD, GAD, and personality disorders with bipolar disorder; and develop a system for managing ambiguous cases, including co-occurrence of two or more of these diagnoses.
  • Validate patients’ symptoms using recent literature on causes of bipolar disorder: explaining that while bipolar disorders are highly genetic, there is no biological diagnostic test on the horizon. Why?
  • Integrate elements from 5 bipolar-specific psychotherapies, including sleep rhythm regulation, chronotherapies, light and dark management, online CBT programs, and psychoeducation.
  • Contrast medications for bipolar depression in terms of their benefits and risks, their value in long-term mood stabilization, and other health effects.
  • Interpret guidelines regarding use of antidepressants in bipolar disorder, relative to psychotherapeutic and pharmacologic alternatives.

Outline

  • Diagnosis
    • Spectrum and DSM approaches
    • What is hypomania?
      • From obvious to subtle to normal human experiences.
      • Using categorical and dimensional approaches simultaneously.
    • Non-manic bipolar markers:  “How bipolar are you?”
    • Family history, age of onset, course of illness, response to treatments.
    • Routine assessment to prevent diagnostic confusion  
    • Efficient screening
      • Beyond the MDQ (Mood Disorders Questionnaire)
      • Bipolar Spectrum Diagnostic Scale, Bipolarity Index, MoodCheck
    •   Making assessment routine in clinical practice
    • Bipolar or similar?
      • Anxiety is a bipolar symptom? Mixed States
        • Review from the International Society for Bipolar Disorders
      • Evolution of Mixed states: DSM-3 to DSM-5
        • From non-existence to remote occurrence to high prevalence
      • Differential diagnosis: PTSD, borderline, Generalized Anxiety Disorder
        • Extensive overlap of DSM criteria with Mixed States
        • Anxious depression with trauma history: PTSD or bipolar?
        • How to manage when diagnosis is ambiguous
    • What causes bipolar disorder? 
      • Helping patients reframe their illness
      • Genetics; gut inflammation; circadian stress; hormonal effects
      • Does trauma cause bipolar disorder?
  • Treatment
    • Psychotherapy for bipolar disorders
      • Common elements of 5 research-tested therapies
      • Chronotherapy: focus on sleep
        • Using light boxes and dawn simulators
        • Dark therapy: simple ways to decrease light exposure
        • Social Rhythm Therapy and bipolar CBT-I
    • Pills
      • Treating bipolar depression without antidepressants
        • 3 generics with international agreement
        • Newer medications – expensive, more unknown 
      • Anti-cycling/anti-manics that are not antipsychotics
      •  Antipsychotics: grouping by efficacy and risk
    • Tapering antidepressants
      • The best treatment for bipolar depression?
        • Stop the cycling, stop the depressions
      • Antidepressants can promote cycling (and mixed states)
    • Why slow tapers are essential
      • Sample taper schedules for different antidepressants
      • Careful patient education
    • Implementing what you’ve learned
      • Immediate steps to change your practice
      • Routine screening
      • Routine patient education
      • Managing diagnostic ambiguity
      • Maximizing non-medication approaches
        • Social Rhythm Therapy, bipolar CBT-I, Dark Therapy
        • Dawn simulators and light boxes
        • Bipolar patient education
    • Delivering your help where it’s needed
      • Reaching out to primary care providers
        • A systematic connection? 

Target Audience

  • Counselors
  • Psychotherapists
  • Social Workers
  • Nurses
  • Psychologists
  • Case Managers
  • Addiction Counselors
  • Therapists
  • Marriage & Family Therapists
  • Other Mental Health Professionals

Copyright : 07/16/2019

Module 2: What Causes Bipolar Disorder and An Overview of Treatment Options

Copyright : 07/16/2019

Module 3: Medication Options and Implementing Bipolar Disorder Treatment

Copyright : 07/16/2019

Module 1: Understanding the Sources and Symptoms of Depression

Depression comes in various guises. Some people present with symptoms of mental and physical lethargy, while others have high energy – outrunning depressive rumination and distraction with their over-activity or over-work. The varied presentations of depression stem from different underlying causes - some determined by neurobiology alone and others stemming from situational stressors, trauma, or childhood neglect. Understanding the origins of depression leads to proper interventions that lifts energy or turns cognitions toward more positive thoughts and actions.

Learn from internationally-known trainer and author, Dr. Margaret Wehrenberg, in this must have recording on addressing depression in your clients. You will learn how to quickly identify the origins of your client’s depression and provide both immediate and long-term interventions for successful treatment outcomes.

  • Enhance motivation and mobilize the clients with depression
  • Change the negative focus of cognition
  • Identify and stop the damage of chronic stress
  • Stop the plunge to despair and interrupt self-destructive coping styles

Purchase today and make positive, lasting changes in the lives of your clients living with depression!

Program Information

Objectives

  1. Utilize the DSM-5® for diagnosing depression, co-morbid disorders, and determine their treatment implications.
  2. Differentiate the neurobiological factors of depression in relation to assessment and treatment planning.
  3. Analyze the role of medications and its relationship with psychotherapeutic interventions for treating depression and co-morbid disorders.
  4. Employ strategies to enhance motivation and mobilize clients with lethargy and low sense of reward.
  5. Apply interventions that stop the damage of chronic stress, workaholism, and burnout.
  6. Construct a model to stop the despair common to the depression of trauma survivors and interrupt self-destructive coping styles.
  7. Use the healing impact of positivity to minimize perfectionism and pessimism by strengthening networks for positive cognition.
  8. Prepare an approach that changes negatively biased attention, mood, cognition and hopeless/helpless style depressed thinking.

Outline

The Diagnosis of Depression, Including DSM-5® Symptoms and Co-morbid Diagnosis

  • The frequent comorbidity with anxiety disorders
  • The contribution of personality disorders to complex diagnosis and treatment
  • Differentiate grief and loss from depression and explore the interaction between them

The Neurobiological Basis of Depression 

  • Endogenous depression
  • The effects of adult trauma, early childhood adversity, and chronic stress
  • Physiological problems such as vitamin deficiencies, diabetes, and sleep disorders
  • The impact of hormones including thyroid, testosterone, estrogen, and progesterone
  • The principles of neural networking that keep depression in place

Immediate Interventions

  • The role of lifestyle in causing and treating depression
  • Sleep
  • Exercise
  • Nutrition

The Role of Psychoeducation in Compliance with Treatment 

  • The role of medication as interactive with psychotherapy
  • Burnout and establishing healthy boundaries

Treatment Goals Overview

  • Pragmatic view of methods to begin recovery or to manage depression
  • Clarify the 4 aspects of imbalance that undermine true wellbeing
  • Apply methods that create balance in the areas of attention, goals, cognition, and affect

CBT Goals

  • Alter imbalance in attention and change cognitions
  • Address meta-cognitions
  • Interrupt rumination 

Behavioral Activation Goals

  • Break out of depression-reinforcing isolation 
  • Shifting attention to positive experience
  • Utilizing habit formation and the psychology of compounding habits to increase compliance with other interventions

Positive Psychology Goals

  • Creating access to positive affect
  • Utilizing realistic hope in balancing affect
  • Gratitude Practice

Target Audience

  • Social Workers
  • Psychologists
  • Counselors
  • Marriage and Family Therapist
  • Case Managers
  • Addiction Counselors
  • Therapists
  • Nurses
  • Other Mental Health Professionals

Copyright : 10/14/2019

Module 2: Helping Your Clients Participate in Their Own Healing

Copyright : 10/14/2019

Module 3: How to Help Your Clients Balance Their Lives

Copyright : 10/14/2019

Module 4: Increasing Emotional Flexibility to Allow for More Positivity

Copyright : 10/14/2019

Module 1: Laying the Groundwork for Understanding Suicide

What would you do?

“I woke up this morning and decided I didn’t have anything to live for. I told my dad that he would find me dead when he came home,” said Michelle, a 13-year-old girl sitting in a hospital bed. Her father reacted to his daughter’s declaration by bringing her to the hospital. I was asked to assess Michelle.

After some introductions and an explanation as to why I was there, Michelle agreed to speak with me by herself.

“So, was today the first time you’d had thoughts of killing yourself?” I asked.

“Yes,” she replied, “I woke up tired of feeling this way, you know, depressed.”

“Have you thought about how you might try to kill yourself?”

"Not really; I figured I’d look around the house to see what I could use,” she stated.

What would you do next? Is this a person who needs to be hospitalized? How would you handle this situation differently if you were seeing Michelle in your office instead of a hospital?

Suicidal behaviors and suicidal ideation represent some of the most challenging things we deal with as clinicians.

Watch this recording to learn how to help your most vulnerable clients with the real-life skills and knowledge they don’t teach in graduate school.

Program Information

Objectives

  1. Conduct a thorough suicide assessment that includes both risk and protective factors.
  2. Implement clinical techniques to support clients’ ability to self-regulate, problem solve, and communicate their needs.
  3. Develop and monitor realistic safety plans that clients will participate in.
  4. Create accurate and comprehensive documentation of clinical crises to protect all parties involved and minimize liability risks.

Outline

Assessment: Your Comprehensive Guide to Identify Suicidal Risk

  • Suicide, ideation, plan, means and intent
  • Why do people kill themselves?
  • Risk and protective factors
  • How to identify implicit suicidal intent
  • Strategies for asking direct questions (even when it’s uncomfortable)
  • How to engage shut down, withdrawn or resistant clients
Suicide Intervention Strategies: Supporting Clients From “Passive” Ideation to Full-Blown Crisis
  • Psychological interventions
  • Problem solving
  • Emotional regulation
  • Communication
  • Pharmacology: Short and long term interventions
  • Why “no harm” contracts are a dangerous idea (and what to do instead)
  • When to break client confidentiality
  • How and when to involve loved ones/caregivers
  • Hospitalization: Why, when, how
    • Clinicians inside the ER: When to admit/planning for home
    • After the ER: Limiting the risk
  • Documentation: Protect your client, protect your license
Other Clinical Considerations
  • Non-suicidal self-injury (NSSI)
  • Relationship between suicide, mental illness and trauma
  • Tips for managing clinician anxiety around suicidality

Target Audience

  • Social Workers
  • Psychologists
  • Counselors
  • Teachers
  • School Administrators
  • Marriage & Family Therapists
  • Case Managers
  • Addiction Counselors
  • Therapists
  • Nurses
  • Other Mental Health Professionals

Copyright : 09/27/2019

Module 2: Creating a Solid Suicide Assessment System

Copyright : 09/27/2019

Module 3: Suicide Intervention Strategies

Copyright : 09/27/2019

Module 4: The Connections Between Suicide, Mental Illness and Trauma

Copyright : 09/27/2019

Module 5: Tips for Managing Our Anxiety as Clinicians

Copyright : 09/27/2019

15 Must-Have Mindfulness Techniques for Clinicians: Skills to Transform Your Treatment Plans for Stress, Depression, Anxiety, Anger, Trauma, Guilt and Shame

From depression and anxiety to stress and trauma, mindfulness has demonstrated its ability to help reduce suffering. With all its benefits, mindfulness is now widely used in clinical practice. There are literally hundreds of mindfulness interventions available to clinicians. But with so many to choose from, how do you know which to use? How do you decide on your “go-to” techniques?

Terry Fralich has studied extensively with His Holiness the Dalai Lama and with some of the American pioneers in the mindfulness field. With more than 20 years teaching mindfulness and using mindfulness techniques in his clinical practice, Terry has distilled the sea of available techniques into the essential hands-on mindfulness skills and exercises you need to treat your clients.

Join Terry, and learn to effectively use 15 mindfulness practices you can incorporate into your treatment plans for depression, anxiety, stress, and trauma. Terry will guide you through the specific exercises that he’s found most capable in shifting clients away from stress responses, intervening in the downward spiral of depression and anxiety, and cultivating safety and groundedness in traumatized clients. In addition, he’ll give you detailed instruction on his top mindfulness interventions to help your clients properly deal with guilt and shame and empower them to manage their anger and toxic emotions.

As an additional benefit, you’ll have the opportunity to practice the application of what you’ve learned under Terry’s expert supervision.

Enhance your clinical practice with mindfulness skills that work!

Program Information

Objectives

  1. Assess the neurological processes and how mindfulness can to increase client’s motivation.
  2. Determine how mindfulness practices can be used to shift clients to a relaxation response. 
  3. Integrate mindfulness interventions into your treatment plans to counter automatic patterns of negative thoughts. 
  4. Demonstrate how mindfulness and breathing techniques can be practiced in-session to increase emotion regulation. 
  5. Analyze the neurobiology of the traumatized brain and implement grounding techniques and breathing exercises. 
  6. Appraise the clinical utility of mindfulness-based therapies in regulating shame and guilt.

Outline

Reduce Stress with Mindful Coping Skills

  • Educate the client about the impact of stress
  • Practice makes perfect – transform the stress response
  • Exercises
    • Strengthen awareness of the stress response
    • Shifting to relaxation response: cultivate a foundation of groundedness, settledness, and ease
    • Mindful transitions
  • Treatment limitations, risks and research
Manage Depression and Anxiety with Mindfulness Techniques That Work
  • The downward spiral and the brain’s default mode
  • Cultivate motivation and action
  • Witness the anxious mind
  • Get unstuck from anxious rumination
  • Exercise:
    • Self-regulation practices for anxiety
Mindfulness as the Antidote to Anger
  • Understand the sources of anger
  • The body’s anger response
  • Identify early signs of the anger forest fire
  • Clarify the practice: What am I trying to remember?
  • Exercise:
    • Rehearsal of the Stop-Breathe-Reflect-Choose practice
Calm the Traumatized Brain
  • Proceed with caution – avoid retriggering and retraumatizing
  • Retrain the dysregulated nervous system
  • Cultivate safety
  • Exercises:
    • Grounding techniques
    • Breathing techniques
    • Positive visualization
Transform the Inner Critic: Mindfully Deal with Guilt and Shame
  • Identifying primary core negative belief
  • Cultivating a healthy and true vision of self
  • Exercises:
    • The protective quality of mantras
    • Exercises that promote self-forgiveness

Target Audience

Counselors, Social Workers, Psychologists, Marriage and Family Therapists, Occupational Therapists, Addiction Counselors, Case Managers, Therapists, Nurses, Other Mental Health Professionals

Copyright : 07/24/2018