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Harris Center Psychology Workshops

How to be a DBT-Friendly Therapist (3 CE)

Contact:
Harris Psychological Services Center
harrispsc@gmail.com
(859) 257-6853

Register Online

Workshop Details:
Dialectical behavior therapy (DBT) is an evidence-based treatment for borderline personality disorder that integrates cognitive-behavioral methods with mindfulness and acceptance strategies. In its standard outpatient form, it includes weekly individual therapy sessions and weekly group meetings for skills training.

The Harris Psychological Services Center at the University of Kentucky offers a DBT program for adults with borderline personality disorder or borderline traits. Some clients attend our weekly skills training group while receiving their individual therapy from clinicians in the community. This arrangement can be very successful. We’ve found that it works best when the individual therapist is DBT-friendly.

The purpose of this workshop is to help clinicians learn some of the basics of DBT without having to make the huge commitment necessary to become a DBT therapist. If you ever refer your clients to a DBT skills group, or if you might want to in the future, this workshop will help you learn how to help your clients make the most of their experience in the group.

Workshop objectives:

  1. Participants will develop an understanding of the basic assumptions and principles that govern how DBT therapists understand, relate to, and work with their clients.
  2. Participants will become familiar with the four skills modules taught in a DBT skills group: mindfulness, interpersonal effectiveness, emotion regulation, and distress tolerance.
  3. Participants will learn practical skills for how to help their clients maximize the benefits of participating in a DBT skills group. 

About the Presenters:
Ruth Baer is a Professor of Psychology at the University of Kentucky and a licensed clinical psychologist. She completed intensive training in DBT in 1997 and has been teaching and supervising DBT in UK’s doctoral program in clinical psychology since then. Her research focuses primarily on mindfulness and on related psychological processes important in borderline personality disorder, including rumination, suppression and avoidance, and other maladaptive forms of emotion regulation. In addition to DBT, she teaches and supervises several other mindfulness-based interventions.

Heather Davis is a 4th-year doctoral student in clinical psychology at the University of Kentucky. Her clinical interests include impulsive behaviors and eating disorders. She currently works individually with DBT clients, leads DBT skills group for adults, and facilitates short-term DBT work with adolescents. Her current research interests focus on understanding mechanisms for the comorbidity between eating disorders and transdiagnostic dysfunction, including depression, anxiety, non-suicidal self-injury and problematic substance use.
 

Elizabeth Riley is a doctoral student in clinical psychology at the University of Kentucky. Her clinical interests include trauma recovery and PTSD, as well as impulsive behaviors, particularly substance use and abuse. She has led DBT group for adults and has conducted individual DBT therapy with adult clients in outpatient and residential settings. Her current research interests focus on understanding mechanisms of personality change and the downstream effects of intentional personality change as a result of therapeutic intervention, including substance use, disordered eating behavior, non-suicidal self-injury, and risky sexual behavior.

Audience:
This workshop is appropriate for Psychologists, Social Workers, Professional Counselors, and other Mental Health Professionals

Psychologists: This program will provide 3 CE credits. The University of Kentucky is an approved sponsor for CE credits by the Kentucky Board of Examiners of Psychology.

Registrant Type Early-bird Registration
(Ends March 21)
Pre Registration Onsite Registration
UK Faculty/Staff $90 $110 $160
General Community $140 $160 $210
Student
(No CE Credit)
$15 $20 $35

Register Online

Date:
-
Location:
Keeneland Room, St. Joseph Hospital | 1 Saint Joseph Drive | Lexington, KY 40504

Beyond Advice Giving: Motivational Interviewing for Health Promotion and Health Behavior Change (3 CE)

Contact:
Harris Psychological Services Center
harrispsc@gmail.com
(859) 257-6853

Register Online

Workshop Details:
All health care providers encounter patients who are at least somewhat resistant to change. This training workshop will help behavioral health clinicians develop a deeper appreciation for the theory and practice of health behavior change. Motivational Interviewing (MI, Miller & Rollnick, 2013) is a well-established, evidence-based, goal-oriented, patient-centered, behavioral counseling strategy that works on eliciting behavior change by helping patients/clients explore and resolve ambivalence and engage intrinsic motivation for behavior change. MI has been used with adolescents and adults to address a wide range of problem behaviors (addictive behaviors, sedentary behavior, diet). This workshop will focus on clinical scenarios for health behavior change in the context of collaborative medical care with particularly attention to promoting smoking cessation in the context of cancer treatment. Starting with review of the empirical evidence for use of MI, the presenter will review the key elements of MI and then facilitate structured role play exercises for participants to gain practice in building MI skills. Using a tell-show-try learning sequence, this training is designed to increase clinician skill and confidence in the integration of MI theory and clinical strategies for promoting health behavior change.

Workshop objectives:

  1. To identify the rationale, opportunities and challenges of health promotion and health behavior change (smoking, obesity, sun protection) with an emphasis on cancer survivors.
  2. To present and discuss recent research providing an empirical basis for use of Motivational Interviewing strategies to promote health behavior change.
  3. To demonstrate and role play evidence-based strategies from Motivational Interviewing that can be used to promote patient engagement in health behavior change.

About the Presenters:
Dr. Jamie Ostroff is a Clinical Health Psychologist and Chief of the Behavioral Sciences Service in the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center (MSK) and Attending Psychologist in the Department of Psychiatry at Weill Medicine Cornell in New York City. She is Director of MSK's Tobacco Treatment Program. Dr. Ostroff's research has focused on addressing the psychological and behavioral aspects of tobacco-related cancer prevention and control with specific expertise in disseminating and implementing tobacco treatment in cancer care and lung cancer screening settings. Dr. Ostroff is a licensed clinical psychologist in New York trained in cognitive behavioral therapies (CBTs). Her clinical practice targets cancer patients/survivors and she has a keen interest in use of motivational interviewing and acceptance and commitment-based therapeutic approaches for health behavior change. She provides tobacco education and training to community-based health care providers working with low income and other vulnerable populations.

Audience:
This workshop is appropriate for Psychologists, Social Workers, Professional Counselors, and other Mental Health Professionals.

Psychologists: This program will provide 3 CE credits. The University of Kentucky is an approved sponsor for CE credits by the Kentucky Board of Examiners of Psychology.

Registrant Type Early-bird Registration
(Ends March 31)
Pre Registration Onsite Registration
UK Faculty/Staff $90 $110 $160
General Community $140 $160 $210
Student
(No CE Credit)
$15 $20 $35

Register Online

Date:
-
Location:
Fayette County Cooperative Extension | 1140 Harry Sykes Way, Lexington, KY 40504
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