Title
Category
Credits
Event date
Cost
  • Psychoanalysis
  • 1.00 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™
  • 1.00 APA
  • 1.00 ASWB-ACE
  • 1.00 Contact Hours/ Participation
$0.00
This presentation will provide a theoretical framework that integrates cultural competence as a core emphasis of psychoanalytic psychotherapy. A historical overview of both psychoanalytic neglect and contributions to understandings of sociocultural context, and specific contemporary psychoanalytic approaches to culturally informed practice, such as the recognition of social oppression and the complexity of cultural identifications, will be discussed.
  • Biopsychosocial
  • 1.00 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™
  • 1.00 APA
  • 1.00 ASWB-ACE
  • 1.00 Contact Hours/ Participation
  • 1.00 Nursing
$0.00
This presentation, entitled “Recovering a Self in Psychosis,” is based on the findings of over 30 years of qualitative studies involving persons with serious mental illnesses who have described the rediscovery and reconstruction of a sense of the self as an effective social agent in the world as integral to their recovery from psychosis. This program of research has its foundation in the consistent finding of over a century of clinical observation, dating back to Kraepelin and Bleuler, that psychosis is marked by a pronounced loss of a sense of self as an agent.
  • Diversity, Equity and Inclusion
  • 1.00 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™
  • 1.00 APA
  • 1.00 ASWB-ACE
  • 1.00 Contact Hours/ Participation
$0.00
In the last two decades gender has exploded as a concept—new gender identifications have proliferated, as have new forms of embodiment and possible technological interventions. This rapid change demands new ways of thinking both in and out of the consulting room. How do we understand something that can be at once fluid and yet powerfully fixed, socially inscribed and yet profoundly personal?
  • Biopsychosocial
  • 1.00 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™
  • 1.00 APA
  • 1.00 ASWB-ACE
  • 1.00 Contact Hours/ Participation
$0.00
The impact of reduced social contact on mental health during the COVID-19 pandemic has been identified as a major public health concern. While personality factors such as attachment style have been associated with psychological distress during the pandemic, the longitudinal relevance of these factors and the role of daily social contact in mitigating distress remains poorly understood.
  • Diversity, Equity and Inclusion
  • 1.00 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™
  • 1.00 APA
  • 1.00 ASWB-ACE
  • 1.00 Contact Hours/ Participation
$0.00
This lecture will focus on the seldom-addressed therapeutic dyad in which social privilege favors the patient. Through her matrix of relative privilege, Malin Fors will discuss how social power issues are inevitably negotiated in the therapeutic setting and how this process plays out in transference, countertransference, and resistance.
  • Psychoanalysis
  • 1.00 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™
  • 1.00 APA
  • 1.00 ASWB-ACE
  • 1.00 Contact Hours/ Participation
$0.00
In this talk, Mitchell Wilson, MD, considers the concept and economic fact of property in relation to the training and practice of psychoanalysts. The principle of ownership, and the legal system that has been built up around it ("private property") has broad influences, from the physical places in which we practice to the words we utter in conversation with patients. Through the lens of property, issues of race and class as they relate to psychoanalytic work can be more easily discerned.
  • Psychoanalysis
  • 1.00 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™
  • 1.00 APA
  • 1.00 ASWB-ACE
  • 1.00 Contact Hours/ Participation
$0.00
David Levit, PhD, ABPP, SEP, speaks about interweaving principles and approaches from a somatically based trauma therapy, Somatic Experiencing (SE), into psychoanalytic treatment. He focuses on patients with severe early traumas who are chronically vulnerable to states of catastrophic dissociative dissolution.
  • Diversity, Equity and Inclusion
  • 1.00 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™
  • 1.00 APA
  • 1.00 ASWB-ACE
  • 1.00 Contact Hours/ Participation
$0.00
In this lecture Neil Altman, PhD, will look at race and the critical role it plays in society and in clinical practice. Much of the effort going into racial consciousness-raising for people who identify as white rests on the notion of unearned “white privilege.” Altman looks deeply into this idea, along with associated concepts of guilt, power, and identity. He suggests that there are embedded assumptions therein that perpetuate the very racially prejudicial ways of thinking that are purportedly being dismantled. 
  • Diversity, Equity and Inclusion
  • 1.00 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™
  • 1.00 APA
  • 1.00 ASWB-ACE
  • 1.00 Contact Hours/ Participation
$0.00
This presentation will identify a series of common, clinical training dilemmas associated with race-based bias, discrimination, hatred, and prejudice.
  • Diversity, Equity and Inclusion
  • 1.00 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™
  • 1.00 APA
  • 1.00 ASWB-ACE
  • 1.00 Contact Hours/ Participation
$0.00
Race as a lens through which we achieve psychoanalytic understanding is not universally valued or adopted in institutional psychoanalysis. There is either -or-ism-either we are psychoanalysts who stay true to our traditions, or we threaten, weaken, dilute, or confuse the identity by errantly venturing into the social realm. Because of this persistent bifurcation, there is no widely accepted set of standards regarding race in psychoanalysis: for study in institutes, for professional practice, for scholarly inquiry, for admission and retention, or for career progression.

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