Title
Category
Credits
Event date
Cost
  • 1.00 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™
  • 1.00 APA
  • 1.00 ASWB-ACE
  • 1.00 Contact Hours/ Participation
  • 1.00 Risk Management Study
$0.00
Clinical suicide risk assessment is often conducted using standardized assessment measures that fail to integrate contemporary theories and empirical findings, especially those pertaining the importance of analyzing the timing and contextual factors affecting suicide risk. This presentation supports a more nuanced understanding of patient-centered, ecologically valid methods of assessing risk for suicide in clinical populations, enabling attendees to develop greater precision and sensitivity in their risk assessment and intervention approaches.
  • 1.50 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™
  • 1.50 APA
  • 1.50 ASWB-ACE
  • 1.50 Contact Hours/ Participation
$0.00
In these last few years we have witnessed unprecedented upheaval in the areas of politics, social justice, the natural world, and public health. To help our patients and to support our practices, communities and the field as a whole, it is vitally important to understand what people are looking for in mental health treatment, and how they think and feel about the therapies we offer. It’s also crucial that public awareness and appreciation of therapies of depth, insight, and relationship improve.
  • 1.00 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™
  • 1.00 APA
  • 1.00 ASWB-ACE
  • 1.00 Contact Hours/ Participation
$0.00
In the last 25 years suicide has increased by 30% in the US, while a growing crisis in mental health is recognized in the post-pandemic world. Broadening training of clinicians to treat suicidal patients is an appropriate response. Although several manualized behavioral and psychodynamic therapies have been found to be efficacious in treatment of suicidal and self-destructive borderline patients, few clinicians achieve proficiency in even one of these.
  • 1.00 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™
  • 1.00 APA
  • 1.00 ASWB-ACE
  • 1.00 Contact Hours/ Participation
$0.00
Serious mental health struggles among college students are rising in the nation, increasing the need for access to treatment that can help them remain in school. College is a time of developmental transition as students work to establish themselves as adults in the world. This presentation highlights a novel remote access IOP that goes beyond mere crisis stabilization to help students grasp the meaning and achieve mastery of their struggles to lead more self-directed lives.
  • 1.00 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™
  • 1.00 APA
  • 1.00 ASWB-ACE
  • 1.00 Contact Hours/ Participation
$0.00
Daniel Shaw, LCSW, presents a way of understanding the traumatic impact of narcissism as it is engendered developmentally, and as it is enacted relationally. Focusing on the dynamics of narcissism in interpersonal relations, Shaw describes the relational system of what he terms the 'traumatizing narcissist' as a system of subjugation–the objectification of one person in a relationship as the means of enforcing the dominance of the subjectivity of the other.
  • 1.50 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™
  • 1.50 APA
  • 1.50 ASWB-ACE
  • 1.50 Contact Hours/ Participation
$0.00
Dr. Daniel Pick reflects on psychoanalytic thought about paranoia and considers its relevance to the exploration of mass phenomena, past and present. He draws on past work by a range of writers, including Freud, Tausk, Erikson, Klein, and Bion. He also returns to the work of historians and philosophers, including Hofstadter and Arendt, whose work is useful for exploring conspiracy theory and 'the paranoid style.' The talk concludes by engaging with various contemporary explorations of the crisis of democracy, the AI revolution, and the so-called ‘deep state’. 
  • 1.50 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™
  • 1.50 APA
  • 1.50 ASWB-ACE
  • 1.50 Contact Hours/ Participation
$0.00
Part of the 2024 Virtual Roundtable Series, Minding the Gaps: Addressing Mental Health Through the Life Cycle 
  • 1.50 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™
  • 1.50 APA
  • 1.50 ASWB-ACE
  • 1.50 Contact Hours/ Participation
$0.00
Psychoanalysts and psychotherapists are currently showing considerable interest in, and concern over, the relevance of different forms of racism to psychological suffering and to the development of the field of psychoanalysis itself. This presentation aims to address gaps in current practice and clinical knowledge by reviewing recent approaches to the question of psychoanalysis and race.
  • Friday Night Guest Lecture Series
  • 1.50 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™
  • 1.50 APA
  • 1.50 ASWB-ACE
  • 1.50 Contact Hours/ Participation
$0.00
What does it mean to be both a social critic and a practicing psychotherapist? In view of the social and political crises we face, this is surely one of our profession’s most pressing challenges. This talk draws on the early work of Erich Fromm, one of the twentieth century’s best known public intellectuals and least understood psychoanalysts. Fromm escaped Nazi Germany and was one of very few psychoanalysts to speak publicly about the dangers of fascism.
  • 1.00 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™
  • 1.00 APA
  • 1.00 ASWB-ACE
  • 1.00 Contact Hours/ Participation
$0.00
The purpose of this talk is to explore how to effectively integrate Measurement-Based Care (MBC) into psychodynamic practice settings, focusing on how it can impact treatment outcomes and enhance patient authority over their treatment. The presentation emphasizes the importance of preserving the depth of patient experiences while incorporating measurable outcome assessments, and how MBC can support a nuanced understanding of treatment when implemented within a psychodynamic framework.

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