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
$0.00
The purpose of this talk is to provide the audience with a review of psychotherapy research over the past century. Instead of just presenting a listing of studies, a case will be made that this information needs to be considered within larger contexts. The “need” for psychotherapy research emerged as a confluence of psychology in early adolescence, professional politics, and the health care industry.
  • 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 an overview of the psychotherapeutic phenomena of impasse. Focus will be placed on the contributing factors to the development of impasse, signs in both the patient and therapist that signal an emergent impasse, systems issues related to impasse, and techniques for engaging impasse in the therapeutic dyad.
  • 1.00 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™
  • 1.00 APA
  • 1.00 ASWB-ACE
  • 1.00 Contact Hours/ Participation
$0.00
In psychoanalytic psychotherapy, the frame of the treatment, provides a setting and container that is negotiated at the outset of treatment and is aimed at facilitating therapeutic engagement that is ethical, allows for a treatment process to emerge and be examined, and becomes a site of action and examination for both therapist and patient. In this lecture, the most concrete and basic elements of why a negotiated frame is essential to the work of psychoanalytic psychotherapy and the basic steps to think about in negotiating a flexible therapeutic frame for treatment are reviewed.
  • 1.00 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™
  • 1.00 APA
  • 1.00 ASWB-ACE
  • 1.00 Contact Hours/ Participation
$0.00
Psychodynamic Psychopharmacology is a psychodynamically-informed, patient-centered approach to psychiatric patients that explicitly acknowledges and addresses the central role of meaning and interpersonal factors in pharmacologic treatment.
  • 1.00 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™
  • 1.00 APA
  • 1.00 ASWB-ACE
  • 1.00 Contact Hours/ Participation
$0.00
This is a sixty minute presentation that will include opportunities for questions and discussion in the large group of conference attendees. This presentation addresses the scholarly literature and clinical experience relating to clinicians’ experience of countertransference, particularly in working with patients with complex treatment histories. Many clinicians struggle to understand and manage strong feelings generated in therapeutic work.
  • 1.50 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™
  • 1.50 APA
  • 1.50 ASWB-ACE
  • 1.50 Contact Hours/ Participation
$0.00
Severely disturbed patients often show bodily symptoms relating to unrepresented states. These states result from traumatic breakdown of the patient’s ability to symbolize but also from a traumatic disorganization of the patient’s body-self. The psychoanalytic technique of interpreting the chain of free associations is in danger to overlook these encapsulated body engrams. Somatic narration describes a focused attention on the patient’s proprioception.
  • 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
Part of the 2024 Virtual Roundtable Series, Minding the Gaps: Addressing Mental Health Through the Life Cycle 
  • 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
$0.00
There was a period in the United States during the 1930s and 40s that was marked by a vibrant interest in how the fields of cultural anthropology and psychoanalysis could inform each other. By the 1990s the psychoanalytic landscape had changed considerably, and any interest in cultural psychoanalysis appeared to have all but vanished.

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