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Digital Seminar

Medical Trauma: Clinical Tools for Treating PTSD, Anxiety, and Depression Following a Health Crisis


Speaker:
Sacha McBain, PhD
Duration:
6 Hours 19 Minutes
Language:
Presented in EN, subtitles in EN, ES, DE, IT, and FR, handouts in EN, ES, DE, FR, and IT
Copyright:
22 Nov, 2024
Product Code:
POS058772
Media Type:
Digital Seminar


Description

Your clients with medical trauma know that a health crisis can upend life at any moment.

And they know that crisis doesn’t end when the physical body is stabilized.

The impacts of medical trauma are as broad as they are misunderstood. Many mental health problems can arise from experiences like heart attack, stroke, intubation and mechanical ventilation, emergency Caesarean section, allergic reaction, seizure, accident-related amputation, cancer diagnosis, and more.

While some clients may have entered your practice with the unique presentation of PTSD that results from medical trauma, many more have likely come to you for help with other clinical issues that could be fueled by a past health crisis. Think of the client with depression who also has a history of heart failure. Or the client with social anxiety whose irritable bowel disease is listed on your intake form but never gets discussed. Or the client with dependency issues in their relationships who harbors a deeply entrenched sense of fragility related to a congenital illness.

Watch medical trauma expert Dr. Sacha McBain for this training that will help you understand the interconnectedness of the mind and body. You will learn to:

  • conduct assessments that elucidate the mental health impacts of your clients’ health histories
  • develop trauma-informed case formulations that integrate health and rehabilitation psychology principles into evidence-based treatments
  • support your clients’ mental and physical health by giving them the skills they need to maintain treatment adherence and engage in effective medical self-advocacy

Your clients with medical trauma have associated treatment with danger. Purchase today to provide them with a trauma-informed approach to promote physical and psychological recovery!

Credit


Self-Study Credit

This self-study program consists of 6.5 clock hours of continuing education instruction. Credit requirements and approvals vary by country and local regulatory bodies. Please save the course outline, the certificate of completion you receive from the activity and contact your local regulatory organization to determine specific eligibility and requirements. 



Handouts

Speaker

Sacha McBain, PhD's Profile

Sacha McBain, PhD Related seminars and products


Sacha McBain, PhD, is a clinical psychologist and assistant professor at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) in Little Rock, AR, where she serves as the associate director of the Center for Trauma Prevention, Recovery and Innovation and leads the Trauma Psychology Consult Service. Dr. McBain provides training and consultation to medical services regarding implementation of trauma-informed care practices and health care worker wellness initiatives designed to prevent posttraumatic stress disorder. She has trained in community health and prevention research and implementation science in order to identify and put into place organizational practices within healthcare systems designed to increase access to mental health care following a traumatic event. She serves as an expert panel member on the American College of Surgeons Mental Health and Substance Use Disorder Best Practice Guidelines Work Group and is an active member of the International Society for Traumatic Stress Studies.

 

Speaker Disclosures:
Financial: Dr. Sacha McBain has an employment relationship with Rush University Medical Center. She receives grants from NIH/NIMHD and NIH/NIDA. Dr. McBain receives a speaking honorarium and recording royalties from PESI, Inc. She has no relevant financial relationships with ineligible organizations.
Non-financial: Dr. Sacha McBain is a member of the International Society for Traumatic Stress Studies.


Additional Info

Program Information

Access for Self-Study (Non-Interactive)

Access never expires for this product.

For a more detailed outline that includes times or durations of time, if needed, please contact cepesi@pesi.com.


Objectives

  1. Employ evidence-based assessments to identify mental health symptoms stemming from traumatic medical events to inform clinical treatment interventions.
  2. Utilize the ecological model of medical trauma to develop a trauma-informed case formulation.
  3. Practice at least two strategies for communicating effectively with clients about the mind-body connection for the purposes of improving treatment engagement.
  4. Utilize cognitive restructuring on clients’ unhelpful core beliefs and automatic thoughts centered on worth, ability, or control.
  5. Construct behavioral experiments designed to assist clients with decreasing reactivity to medical-trauma related cues.
  6. Integrate at least two health and rehabilitation psychology strategies into trauma treatment.

Outline

Assess Medical Traumatic Stress:
How medical trauma differs from other types of trauma
  • How to get the full story:
    • trauma interview
    • health-related anxiety
    • distress thermometer
    • comprehensive health history
  • Recognize clinical disorders and biopsychospiritual crises
The Layered Narrative of Medical Trauma:
Case conceptualization and treatment preparation
  • Experience with initial injury/illness treatment experiences
  • Issues in short- and long-term recovery
  • “Disenfranchised” nature of medical trauma: how to have conversations with clients about the mind-body connection
  • Recalibrate relationships: naming stigma, ableism, and toxic positivity
  • Ecological model of medical trauma
Treatment of Medical Trauma:
Integrative approach to treat clients’ unique needs
  • Identify medical trauma-related core beliefs and cognitions
  • Engage behavioral strategies
  • Address social constraints and systemic invalidation
  • Integrate health and rehabilitation psychology principles
    • Illness/injury psychoeducation
    • Meaning making
    • Coping with somatic trauma cues
    • Strategies for managing insomnia and chronic pain
    • Adjustment to illness or injury
    • Expectation management
    • Cognitive rehabilitation
    • Support medical advocacy and avoiding retraumatization
  • Limitations of the research and potential risks
Case Studies:
  • PTSD and COVID-19: 36-year-old woman
  • Social anxiety and irritable bowel disease: 20-year-old man
  • Dependent personality disorder and congenital heart condition: 45-year-old woman

Target Audience

  • Counselors
  • Social Workers
  • Psychologists
  • Psychiatrists
  • Art Therapists
  • Marriage & Family Therapists
  • Addiction Counselors
  • Other Mental Health Professionals
  • Physicians
  • Physician Assistants
  • Nurse Practitioners
  • Nurses

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