Description
- Faculty:
- Joy R. Samuels
- Duration:
- 11 Hours 36 Minutes
- Format:
- Audio and Video
- Copyright:
- Jan 25, 2018
- Family life cycle
- Identifying effective communication patterns to promote healthy boundaries
- Impact of illness trajectory
- Grief styles
- Epigenetics-do we inherit our grief reactions from our grandparents?
- Personality
- Temperament
- Normative grief responses
- Impact of type of loss
- Family systems theory
- Gender issues
- Assessment of risk factors for complicated/prolonged grief
- Determining appropriateness of specific interventions
- Case Studies
- Developmental considerations and milestones related to loss reactions
- Children
- Adolescents
- Early Adulthood
- Middle Adulthood
- Later Adulthood
- Parental Loss
- Child Loss
- Widowhood
- Grief counseling throughout the lifespan
- Grief therapy interventions related to lifespan
- Loss, Grief, and Mourning
- Factors affecting experience of and expression of grief
- Impact on mourning practices
- Death anxiety
- Assessing and intervening with cultural competence
- Advanced care planning
- Communication
- Meaning of death
- Current assessment models
- Current therapeutic strategies
- Controversy about efficacy of interventions
- Complicated grief
- Gender considerations
- Pathologizing of grief
- Empirical research on current theories
- Research on effectiveness of assessments and interventions
- Practical resources for clinicians
- Which assessments are within your scope of practice?
- Communication
- Professional liability and limitations
- Determining appropriate interventions in concert with evidence and client characteristics
- Professional responsibilities
Joy R. Samuels – 2-Day Intensive Thanatology Conference: Assessments & Interventions for Grief, Loss, & Mourning
Description
Join Dr. Joy Samuels, DMin, LPC-MHSP, NCC, and Fellow in Thanatology, for this intensive and practical recording that will further prepare you to intervene with clients who are experiencing loss in its many forms. Dr. Samuels will utilize specific case studies to bring grief, loss, and mourning theory to the practical level of daily practice. She will specifically look at the intersection of personality, temperament, and grief responses from an individual and family systems perspective.
In the second half of the recording, grief reactions are addressed, and practical assessment and intervention strategies are identified to assist the person who is grieving cope with the loss. What constitutes ‘persistent complex bereavement disorder’ will be reviewed, as well as cultural responses and rituals in regard to the grieving process. Participants will increase their own self-awareness as to their loss experiences and grieving mechanisms and will further define the boundaries of their professional roles. Participants will leave with specific client- and family-centered interventions that can be used in practice.
Handouts
Presentation (2.34 MB) | Available after Purchase |
Outline
GRIEF, LOSS, AND MOURNING
IT’S ALL ABOUT THE FAMILY! HOW FAMILY SYSTEMS IMPACT GRIEF REACTIONS AND WHY IT MATTERS IN CLINICAL PRACTICE
LIFE SPAN
CULTURAL/SOCIALIZATION
EXCHANGE OF IDEAS LED BY DR. SAMUELS:
Network with other professionals to share interventions and assessments that have proven effective (and not effective) with clients who are dealing with a loss.
ASSESSMENTS, DIAGNOSIS, TREATMENT PLANNING, AND INTERVENTIONS
CONTEMPORARY PERSPECTIVES ON ASSESSMENTS AND INTERVENTIONS
RESOURCES AND RESEARCH
PROFESSIONAL ISSUES
Faculty
Joy R. Samuels, D.MIN., LPC-MHSP, NCC Related seminars and products: 4
JOY R. SAMUELS, D.MIN., LPC-MHSP, NCC, has over 25 years’ experience as a licensed professional counselor, Fellow in Thanatology, chaplain, and ordained minister. She teaches in the graduate clinical mental health psychology department at Lipscomb University and at Candler School of Theology at Emory University in the United Methodist Church Course of Studies. She maintains a private counseling practice and supervises those seeking licensure as a LPC-MHSP.
Dr. Samuels holds D. MIN. and MDIV. degrees from Wesley Theological Seminary, Washington, DC. Additionally, she holds an M.S. degree in counseling psychology from California State University, Northridge, CA, and a counseling certificate in substance abuse from the Northern Virginia Community College, Annadale, VA. Among her areas of expertise are individual, couples and family counseling, trauma and bereavement, and post-masters supervision.
Speaker Disclosures:
Financial: Joy Samuels is in private practice. She is an adjunct faculty at Lipscomb University. Dr. Samuels receives a speaking honorarium from PESI, Inc.
Non-financial: Joy Samuels is a Fellow in Thanatology.
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