By Rich Simon As therapists, many of us practice in two different worlds. In the first, we see polite, well-behaved, articulate clients with solid values. They engage fully in therapy, talk cogently about their problems, listen attentively to our responses, make reasonably good-faith efforts to follow our suggestions, and sooner or later get better. No wonder we genuinely like these people!
Monday, November 14or Watch Anytime On-Demand
Mary Jo Barrett • Find out the best ways to handle the most common ethical quandaries that today’s therapists face, many of which are the product of the sudden changes in cultural norms and the ambiguous situations never envisioned by our clinician instructors, with veteran therapist Mary Jo Barrett.
Sometime over the past two decades, society's response to survivors of sexual abuse changed from "You're deluded" to "You're damaged"...
CE Credits: 2 • Price: $29
The ethical guidelines for therapists were once governed by simple, direct, utterly unambiguous rules...
CE Credits: 3 • Price: $39
Monday, November 7or Watch Anytime On-Demand
Mary Jo Barrett • Explore our evolving understanding of PTSD, particularly the difference between a reaction to a single event and complex trauma--a more pervasive condition rooted in a history of abuse and neglect.