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Interprofessional Education CE Courses for Psychologists

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3 courses found


Sound Healing in Clinical Practice: Evidence-Based Tools for Ethical Integration and Regulation
Presented by Gabrielle Juliano-Villani, MSW, LCSW
Live WebinarThu, Jul 9, 2026 at 3:00 pm EDT
Course: #2344Level: Intermediate1 Hour
Sound can regulate the nervous system, support trauma healing, and create access to emotional states that talk therapy alone can’t reach. This training explores the clinical application of sound healing techniques, from vocal toning to tuning forks, and how to ethically and effectively integrate them into behavioral health settings. This course was designed for an interprofessional audience.

Ethical Integrity in Mental Health: A Framework for Proactive Decision-Making
Presented by Rachel Singer, PhD
VideoAudio
Course: #2303Level: Intermediate2 Hours
This course emphasizes the use of structured ethical decision-making models to reduce ambiguity and strengthen clinical judgment. Participants will explore strategies for preventing ethical errors, applying a comprehensive decision-making framework, understanding the interplay between legal and ethical considerations, and effectively managing threats to confidentiality. The training highlights practical, clinically relevant applications across individual, family, couples, and group therapy contexts. Clinicians will leave with enhanced tools for navigating complex ethical challenges in diverse treatment settings. This course was designed for an interprofessional audience.

Medical Cannabis in Integrated Care: Patient-Informed Strategies for Emotional Regulation and Therapeutic Dialogue
Presented by Paulette Smith, DSW, MS, LCSW-C
Live WebinarThu, Aug 27, 2026 at 12:00 pm EDT
Course: #2347Level: Intermediate1 Hour
This course presents initial findings from an IRB-approved qualitative study exploring how medical cannabis patients incorporate mindfulness practices to support emotional regulation and self-awareness. The course examines patient-informed insights on intentional use, autonomy, and communication with clinicians, providing interdisciplinary professionals with practical guidance for engaging in cannabis-related conversations within integrated, holistic care settings. Emphasis is on trauma-informed, harm-reduction–focused dialogue that fosters ethical, collaborative practice across disciplines. This course reflects preliminary, evolving qualitative insights intended to inform clinical dialogue and interdisciplinary approaches and does not represent definitive or broadly applicable research findings. This course was designed for an interprofessional audience.