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Clinical Social Work CE Courses for Social Workers Search: 'diagnosis'

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5 courses found


State Approval Information for New York

  • continued.com LLC is recognized by the New York State Education Department’s State Boards for Social Work, Mental Health Practitioners, and Psychology as an approved provider of continuing education for licensed social workers (#SW-0617), licensed mental health counselors (#MHC-0296), licensed psychoanalysts (#P-0067), licensed marriage and family therapists (#MFT-0127), licensed creative arts therapists (#CAT-0119), and licensed psychologists (#PSY-0228).
  • Social workers are required to complete 3 hours of coursework in appropriate professional boundaries in each 3-year registration period. Continued Social Work offers courses that may meet this requirement.
  • For all other professionals, please check with your state board for current requirements.
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Introduction to Body-Focused Repetitive Behaviors
Presented by Mandy Simmons, PsyD
Video
Course: #2380Level: Introductory1 Hour
This course will provide foundational knowledge for the assessment, diagnosis, and treatment of body-focused repetitive behaviors (BFRB), the often overlooked, much stigmatized cousin of Obsessive Compulsive Disorder (OCD). This course will address common misconceptions about BFRBs, as well as support clinicians in enhancing their clinical skills in the diagnosis and treatment of BFRBs by discussing the use of habit reversal training, functional behavioral analysis, and the Comprehensive Behavioral Model (ComB), developed by Charles Mansueto.

Exposure with Response Prevention (ERP) for Obsessive Compulsive Disorder (OCD)
Presented by Mandy Simmons, PsyD
VideoAudio
Course: #2366Level: Introductory1 Hour
For generalists, the ability to effectively recognize OCD and know when to refer when it is outside the scope of what they are able to provide is an essential skill. This course will help clinicians both build confidence in recognizing and diagnosing OCD as well as develop essential tools for understanding evidence-based practice for treating OCD. The training will discuss the ethics of providing different modalities with OCD, as well as support the clinician's capacity for recognizing the symptom presentation. The training will also support clinicians in working functionally rather than becoming entrenched in content, a vital skill for any clinician.

Sexual Dysfunctions: DSM-V Diagnoses and Foundational Knowledge
Presented by Giselle Levin, PsyD
VideoAudio
Course: #2262Level: Intermediate2.07 Hours
This course provides foundational knowledge of DSM-V Sexual Dysfunction diagnoses, including DSM-V criteria, etiology, and assessment. The course encourages critical thinking about diagnostic criteria and describes current research on each diagnosis. Finally, the course provides some foundational therapy techniques for addressing sexual dysfunctions with clients, including identifying when referrals to medical providers or other specialists would be appropriate.

ADHD in Young Children: Development and Diagnosis
Presented by Doug Tynan, PhD, ABPP
Video
Course: #1949Level: Intermediate2.02 Hours
Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) is the most common behavioral diagnostic group in children and adolescents. Signs and symptoms emerge, in most cases, in the second year of life. However, all children are very active and tend to have short attention spans in the preschool years. Diagnosis must be carried out within the context of the range of typical behaviors at each age. Interventions also need to be age-appropriate. While ADHD is often referred to as a mental disorder, it may be far more useful to think of it as a developmental delay with intervention focused on the development of skills rather than the amelioration of a disorder.

Assessment and Diagnosis of Infants and Young Children
Presented by Alison D. Peak, MSW, LCSW, IMH-E
VideoAudio
Course: #1246Level: Introductory1 Hour
This course provides participants with a foundation for understanding the role of observation and assessment in services for infants and young children. The course focuses on clinical and systems implications.

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