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Online Learning

The Chronic Pain Tool Box: Effective Interventions for Treating Complex Chronic Pain


Credit Available - See CEUs tab below.

Categories:
ACT/Acceptance and Commitment Therapy |  Cognitive Behavioral Therapies |  Mindfulness
Faculty:
Dr. Bruce Singer, PsyD
Duration:
6 Hours 11 Minutes
Format:
Audio and Video
Original Program Date:
Apr 12, 2018
SKU:
POS053560
Media Type:
Online Learning


Description

  • Chronic Pain Syndrome is not Chronic Pain… and knowing the difference makes a difference
  • Wellness-based tools to help clients un-attach emotional suffering from physical pain
  • Facilitate effective coping skills to help your clients
  • 8 essential CBT, mindfulness and ACT interventions for chronic pain you can use beginning tomorrow

Years ago, I sat down to evaluate a potential client with chronic pain. A minute hadn’t passed before she broke down in tears while describing a 5-year-old injury that left her with excruciating neck pain. Despite 3 back surgeries and countless procedures, her back was still “killing” her and she placed her pain at 15/10. She couldn’t sleep, she had gained weight and couldn’t exercise. She had stopped working, was in a lawsuit over the injury, and was afraid to leave the house. Her doctor had placed her on high doses of an opiate pain killer plus an anti-anxiety medication and she admitted that sometimes she took more than she was prescribed. She admitted to having suicidal thoughts because she had lost hope that she might ever get her life back.

Now imagine yourself in my place. How would you conduct an effective assessment? Do you know the difference between chronic pain and a chronic pain syndrome? What might be the best approach to treat pain and a co-occurring disorder? Are you confident you have enough evidence-based skills in your toolbox to help clients help themselves?

This is a challenging time to treat complex chronic pain. Over 100 million Americans experience some form of chronic pain and the country is struggling with a tragic opiate epidemic that has cost tens of thousands of lives and is ripping society apart. As a clinician, you are in unique position to provide effective pain management to your chronic pain clients… but only if you fill your invisible toolbox with the evidence-based skills that work.

In this interactive and creative seminar, we will focus on the assessment and treatment of complex chronic pain. You will learn how to evaluate it and how to discern and manage co-occurring disorders. You will increase your confidence in your ability to transform your knowledge of CBT, mindfulness, and ACT into the “silver bullet” skills that can facilitate “inside-out” pain management that empowers your clients. You will leave this seminar with 8 practical interventions you can begin to use tomorrow to motivate your clients to commit to the changes they want and to assist their families in finding the resources they need.

CEUs


General Credits

This course is available for 6.25 total CPDs

The HPCSA has declared that any on-line courses CPD/CEU credited by a certified US board, is automatically CPD/CEU credited in South Africa. 

As there are different boards for different disciplines, we at Acacia suggest that you use the Counselling CPD/CEU credits. These correspond to South African credits of one CPD/CEU per 60 minutes. If you choose to use your discipline's credits, please do so at your discretion.


Florida Social Workers

PESI, Inc. is an approved provider with the Florida Board of Clinical Social Work, Marriage and Family Therapy and Mental Health Counseling. Provider Number 50-399. This self-study course qualifies for 6.25 continuing education credits. 



Handouts

Faculty

Dr. Bruce Singer, PsyD Related seminars and products

Treatment Rehab Professionals LLC


Additional Info

Program Information

Access for Self-Study (Non-Interactive)

Access never expires for this product.


Outline

  • The Chronic Pain Dilemma
    • Pain and its impact on society
      • Neurophysiology and psychology of pain
      • Benefits and the risks of opioids
      • Pain and the family
    • Complex Chronic Pain
      • The progression from acute to chronic pain (physical and emotional factors)
      • Chronic pain syndrome and its constellation of symptoms
      • Conventional treatments and why they fail
    • Pain vs suffering: What are we really treating?
      • The 5 big “negative” emotions that magnify pain
      • The number one rule in pain management
      • Strategies to un-attach pain from suffering
    • Assessment
      • The Interview
        • Validation and the therapeutic alliance
        • Collect a biopsychosocial history
        • Co-occurring disorders and other risk factors
      • The Battery
        • Useful self-report measures
        • Interpretation of results for case conceptualization
        • Effective treatment planning
    • The Chronic Pain Toolbox
      • Best Practice Guidelines and treatment options
        • APA Division 12 recommendations
        • CDC and government recommendations
        • Empathy and the power of the therapeutic alliance
      • Cognitive Behavioral Therapy
        • Unleash “black ducks” to eat up ANTs
        • Harness the power of client’s own words
        • Recalibrate Pain: a cognitive approach
        • Mindfulness
        • Why mindfulness is essential for the treatment of chronic pain
        • 4 creative interventions to help clients see “What is NOT wrong with me”
        • The FAR approach and how it resonates with clients
        • Limitations of the psychotherapeutic approach
      • Acceptance and Commitment Therapy
        • Cognitive defusion and how to use it with clients
        • The Values Compass and how to help clients find their True North
        • Develop motivation and commitment
        • Limitations of the psychotherapeutic approach
      • Gratefulness
        • The hidden power of gratefulness and its evidence for chronic pain
        • 3 gratitude interventions that directly impact the pain experience
      • More Tools You Can Use
        • Include the family in treatment
        • Effective sleep hygiene
        • Multidisciplinary treatments: when and how to use them
        • The T.E.M.P.L.E.S.S hand-out you can share with clients
        • Patient advocate resources
        • Recovery resources

Objectives

  1. Specify the difference between chronic pain and a complex chronic pain syndrome and how conventional treatments (including MAT, procedures, and surgery) often “make it worse.”
  2. Delineate the difference between physical pain and emotional suffering and how the 5 Big Negative Emotions magnify the pain experience as it relates to clinical practice.
  3. Establish the ability to conduct an effective biopsychosocial assessment of chronic pain and use pain scales to recalibrate pain levels and increase wellness in a clinical setting.
  4. Utilize cognitive restructuring to assist clients in creating “black duck moments” in session that will change their perspective on their pain experiences and motivate them to live more active and purposeful lives.
  5. Practice 3 ACT interventions to defuse the impact of chronic pain and increase client commitment to positive behavioral change for symptom management.
  6. Implement 4 mindfulness-based interventions to empower clients to manage their pain by going FAR.
  7. Integrate the power of gratitude into your practice to decrease pain and increase wellness to improve treatment outcomes.
  8. Develop the competency to guide a multidisciplinary approach to pain management that connects pain clients and families to resources beyond therapy to improve client level of functioning.

Target Audience

Social Workers, Psychologists, Counselors, Addiction Counselors, Psychotherapists, Occupational Therapists, Case Managers, Marriage and Family Therapists, Physical Therapists, Physical Therapist Assistants, Nurse Practitioners, Nurses, Other Helping Professionals

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