As a clinician, it can be intimidating when clients start asking you for guidance on how to use nutrition to improve their well-being. Suddenly you find yourself thinking, “I’m not a nutritional therapist, I’m not trained for that!” And, “What am I allowed to do, ethically?”

...but it doesn’t have to be hard or complicated.

That’s why I created this exclusive, online training designed to be your practical guide through the complex relationship between what we eat and the way we think, feel, and interact with the world.

Join Dr. Leslie Korn, renowned integrative medicine clinician and educator, today she’ll provide you safe, effective, and affordable evidence-based holistic approaches that will help your clients achieve optimal health and wellness while preventing and treating common mental health problems. 

From anxiety and depression to schizophrenia and PTSD, you’ll discover how nutritional and integrative medicine can work alongside and even replace medications to alleviate symptoms and support mental health.

Over three days, this online training will be both content rich and experiential. Each day she’ll you through a demo to get you out of your chair - get ready for yoga, cooking in the kitchen, relaxation exercises and more!

You’ll end this training fully prepared to start providing your clients personalized care from an array of scientific disciplines proven to improve their mood and mental health as a Certified Integrative Mental Health Professional (CIMHP).

Objectives
  1. Evaluate the scientific research that links diet and nutrition to mental illness and its implications for treatment. 
  2. Specify how certain micronutrients and macro nutrients affect mood and behavior in clients. 
  3. Present the psychobiology and psychophysiology of mind and body interactions with reference to six DSM™ categories. 
  4. Incorporate ethical and scope of practice considerations relative to integrated and nutritional medicine with respect to your own professional discipline.  
  5. Communicate integrative and nutritional methods as they relate to client psycho-education.  
  6. Apply mindfulness methods in the treatment of eating disorders.  
  7. Discriminate between the clinical presentation of mental illness as compared to nutritional and/or hormonal imbalance.  
  8. Present six nutritional methods for treating clients who present with mood lability.  
  9. Correlate gluten and casein sensitivity with the presentation of depression, psychosis and ASD in clients.  
  10. Present evidence-based protocols for nutritional and herbal approaches for six DSM-5™ categories.  
  11. Demonstrate the use of a food mood assessment to evaluate client eating patterns and how those patterns may influence their mental health.  
  12. Appraise the epidemiological research underlying the benefits of the Mediterranean diet and its specific application for client mental health.  
  13. Interview clients using the DSM-5™ Cultural Formulation tool to explore about health and healing in order to inform the treatment planning process.  
  14. Evaluate drug-nutrient-herbal interactions for clients in order to prevent side effects of polymedicine use.  
  15. Present stage-specific anaerobic and aerobic exercise and self-care methods to decrease dissociative symptoms in clients.  
  16. Demonstrate breathing techniques to reduce hyperventilation and improve focus among clients with anxiety disorders, as related to clinical treatment.  
  17. Present adaptations of complementary and alternative methods for children and teens with behavioral and mental health disorders such as ADHD and ODD.  
  18. Assess contraindications of the use of psychotropic medications and herbal medicines and nutrients.  
  19. Analyze the evidence for the use of essential fatty acids for anxiety and depression.  
  20. Investigate the science for the “second brain”; the gut-brain axis communication system of neurotransmitters.  
  21. Comment on the science of circadian rhythm as it contributes to depression, PTSD and bipolar disorder.  
  22. Analyze the differences between mental illness versus nutritional and hormonal imbalances.  
  23. Evaluate the impact of blood sugar and genetic variations on mental health disorders and effective treatment. 

Outline CLINICAL APPLICATION AND EVIDENCE-BASED RESEARCH  Assessments  THE PSYCHOLOGY OF CHANGE USING INTEGRATIVE APPROACHES  The Complex Relationships between Mental and Physical Health  Beyond Pharmaceutical Management  Nutrition, Diet and Culinary Medicine  Herbal Medicine  Special Issues Across the Lifespan  Somatic Therapies, Acupuncture and New Approaches  Comprehensive Non-Pharmaceutical Treatment Plans and Protocols for Treating the DSM-5™ Disorders:  Develop a Niche Practice 
Target Audience