Trauma Treatment Without Retraumatization: Ethical Considerations
- Avoid retraumatisation in therapy
- Become confident in treatment of trauma
- Help prevent client dropout
Treatment is necessary for someone to navigate the recovery journey from trauma. But treatment can also be a trigger for re-traumatisation, because clients may be asked to explore their feelings and memories as they work to heal them. People who have experienced intense trauma in the past can get caught up in a loop of reliving the terrible distress. Even in therapy, retraumatisation is possible and can impede the recovery process. A client can lose trust in their counsellor and the treatment journey unless retraumatisation can be redirected by an experienced therapist and an empowering treatment environment.
Many therapists feel hesitant about engaging in trauma-focused work with clients due to the possibility of retraumatisation. Retraumatisation can severely limit client progress, slow down healing and undermine the therapist’s confidence.
Not only is re-traumatisation in therapy terribly distressing for a client, but it can also set them back on their treatment journey and inspire fear and doubt about trusting the recovery process at large. This can be a major setback for people who really need to discover the light on the journey ahead, a reliable support system, and their own self-compassion.
In this online seminar you will learn practical strategies and techniques to ensure you “do no harm” – strategies that help clients remain stable and on the path towards healing, even when processing the most terrifying traumas. These concrete, easy-to-implement techniques can be integrated into the therapy modalities you’re already using, including EMDR, Schema- Focused Therapy, Prolonged Exposure or CBT. Dr Sweeton will provide you with crucial knowledge about the “safety plug-ins” you can include in the therapy and counselling process in order to ensure that your client is constantly on a steady pathway to recovery; your clients will move faster towards healing, and you will be able to prevent your client from going two steps forward and one step backwards.
Learning Objectives:
This training will provide participants clinical knowledge and tools to:
- Name at least one ethical consideration when treating trauma.
- Describe at least three techniques that help clients process trauma without becoming retraumatised.
- State the three main components of memory reconsolidation.
Target Audience:
The target audience for this event includes psychologists, social workers, counsellors, and other clinical mental health professionals.
CPD Information For Mental Health Professionals
Enjoy complete flexibility with 100% self-paced learning you can access anytime, anywhere, and on any device. Pay once for lifetime access.
Course Duration: 3 learning hours
Certificate and CPD hours: On completion you’ll receive a Certificate of Completion to support your CPD records.
Assessment: Complete a short quiz at the end (80% pass mark), which you can resit as many times as needed.
Lifetime Access: Your access to the course does not expire, so you can revisit key concepts anytime you want a refresher for practice.
CPD Eligibility: This program may be suitable for CPD for professionals such as:
- Psychologists
- Counsellors and Psychotherapists
- Social Workers
- Community Workers
- Mental Health Nurses
- General Practitioners (GPs)
- Occupational Therapists
CPD requirements vary between professional bodies, so please check with your association or credentialing body to confirm you can claim CPD hours/OPD points for this program and what evidence they require.
Course Content
Meet Your Instructor
Feedback & Reviews
This course includes:
- Lessons 3
- Topics 0
- Duration 3 hours
- Quizzes 1
- Language English
