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
This forum uses Thomas Kohut’s recent book, Empathy and the Historical Understanding of the Human Past (Routledge, 2020), as a springboard for an interdisciplinary discussion of empathy and its role in understanding people in the past and in the present. 
  • Ethics
  • 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
The tendency to avoid issues around professional ethics is common and multi-determined.  Codes of ethics are uniquely boring and hard to remember. Unconsciously, most of us carry shame about clinical situations in which we know we may have crossed a boundary, prioritized our own needs above the patient's or fallen short of our high expectations of professional practice. We have all faced dilemmas in which there is no clear path and the risk of an ethical breach feels inevitable.
  • Biopsychosocial
  • Systems of Care
  • 1.00 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™
  • 1.00 APA
  • 1.00 ASWB-ACE
  • 1.00 Contact Hours/ Participation
  • 1.00 Nursing
$0.00
Researchers have studied online groups and communities since the 1990s. However, it was the start of the COVID-19 global pandemic that caused many organizations and their employees to widely adopt virtual communication for the typical employee. Many organizations, like hospitals and nursing centers, cannot work remotely, but still may be more widely adopting video interactions to support virtual teams. 
  • Biopsychosocial
  • 1.00 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™
  • 1.00 APA
  • 1.00 ASWB-ACE
  • 1.00 Contact Hours/ Participation
$0.00
In this talk, Paul Hewitt, PhD, presents the conceptualization and some of the research and clinical work that he and his colleagues have undertaken over the past 30 years in an attempt to gain an understanding of perfectionism, a relational personality vulnerability factor that underlies myriad psychological, physical, relational, and achievement problems.
  • Biopsychosocial
  • 1.00 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™
  • 1.00 APA
  • 1.00 ASWB-ACE
  • 1.00 Contact Hours/ Participation
$0.00
The psychological and emotional impact of the COVID-19 pandemic has been highlighted as a major public health concern, with early epidemiological evidence suggesting increased rates of psychiatric disturbance as well as overall stress, loneliness, and uncertainty. While a range of psychosocial factors have been found to contribute to poor mental health outcomes over the past year, a growing number of studies have also evaluated potential protective factors for mitigating emotional distress during the pandemic.
  • Systems of Care
  • 1.00 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™
  • 1.00 APA
  • 1.00 ASWB-ACE
  • 1.00 Contact Hours/ Participation
$0.00
This talk explores the history of distance psychotherapy and psychoanalysis from Freud to the present.  Distance, separation, connection, and the virtual space are all reviewed. Given the COVID19 crisis and the shift to teletherapy, this talk explains the controversies in psychoanalysis and beyond about the risks and benefits of teletherapy, including issues of confidentiality and privacy.
  • 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 talk, Lisa Barksdale-Shaw, JD, PhD, confronts how the examination of early modern English renaissance characters in a sixteenth century drama recovers, remembers, and recovers race in a way that belies the well-crafted narrative in Christopher Marlowe’s The Jew of Malta. Removing him from the margins of this tragedy, Barksdale-Shaw centers Ithadore, a captured and enslaved Turk, who serves as the figure through which she studies the legal repercussions of the violence that surrounds him.

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