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Understanding and Treating Chronic Pain In Military Personnel (CBT-CP) via Zoom


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Not yet rated
Categories:
Chronic Pain |  Psychotherapy
Faculty:
Dr. Diana Dolan, PsyD |  Sharon Birman, Psy.D.
Course Levels:
Intermediate
Media Type:
Classroom
License:
Access for 5 month(s) after purchase.



Description

Course Description:

This intensive two-day module provides training in the assessment, management and cognitive-behavioral treatment of chronic pain.  The module lays the foundation for working with military connected individuals suffering from chronic pain by reviewing the rates and mechanisms of chronic pain in civilian and military populations, including the role of military culture. Furthermore, theories of chronic pain will be introduced with a focus on biological, psychological and social factors impacting chronic pain. Participants will develop case conceptualization skills grounded by the clinical interview and empirically based assessment tools.  Participants will learn and have the opportunity to practice key intervention strategies.  In addition to learning CBT skills/techniques for working with chronic pain patients, participants will explore the role of motivational interviewing practices in CBT for chronic pain.  The workshop also discusses common challenges to psychological service for pain management and ways to overcome those barriers.  The module is designed for behavioral health providers working with Service Members, Veterans and their families who are seeking in-depth training in empirically supported treatment options they can immediately incorporate into their clinical practice.  Participants are expected to actively engage in class activities and attend both days.

Attendees must attend the entire workshop to earn credit.

Attendees must participate using a separate computer rather than joining a group of people viewing via one machine to acquire credit for attendance.

Platform information:

This course will be held online through Zoom. If you are unfamiliar with Zoom, we HIGHLY recommend testing your computer and network with the following link: https://zoom.us/test. Zoom may not be permitted on networks or internet connections belonging to US military bases or the US Department of Veterans Affairs. Some workplace internet connections will also not permit Zoom. In these instances, we encourage participants to use a home internet connection.

A functioning microphone is MANDATORY to attend, in order to hear the presenters and participate in the role-play sessions. Headphones are HIGHLY RECOMMENDED to reduce audio feedback and echoing effects.

 

Learning Objectives:

  1. Specify prevalence rates of chronic pain in military and civilian populations.
  2. Formulate treatment considerations specific to a military population when utilizing CBT-CP.
  3. Integrate common co-morbid mental health conditions into treatment planning for military-connected patients.
  4. Evaluate the contribution of opioid medication to a patient’s experience of chronic pain.
  5. Apply the biopsychosocial model to the process of clinical case conceptualization.
  6. Perform differential diagnosis using DSM-5 diagnoses relevant to the chronic pain population.
  7. Demonstrate a psychological chronic pain-focused clinical interview including biological, physical, and social domains.
  8. Score and interpret relevant, subjective assessment measures for pain.
  9. Develop treatment goals for pain management using the SMART model.
  10. Apply targeted relaxation practice as pain coping strategy.
  11. Develop behavioral interventions to target under- and/or over-activity patterns that exacerbate chronic pain.
  12. Modify pleasurable activities given realistic pain limitations to increase behavioral activation.
  13. Apply cognitive strategies to modify unhelpful pain-related cognitions.
  14. Design a plan to address common challenges in implementing CBT-CP with patients.

 

Agenda:

Day One

 

Check-in

 

 

10:45am – 11:00am

 

 

Introduction & Course Overview

 

 

11:00am – 11:15am

 

Pain: Definitions, Epidemiology, & Related Military Factors

 

11:15am – 12:30pm

 

Comorbid Psychological Conditions

 

12:30 pm - 1:15pm

 

Break

 

1:15pm - 1:30pm

Theories & Models of Pain

 

1:30pm - 2:00pm

Pain Diagnoses

2:00pm - 2:15pm

 

Evidence Base for CBT-CP & Treatment Structure

 

 

2:15pm – 2:45pm

 

Lunch Break

 

2:45pm – 3:45pm

 

Initial Phase of Treatment: Assessment, Case Conceptualization, Goal-Setting, Psychoeducation, Self-Monitoring

 

 

3:45pm – 7:30pm

*Inc 15 min Break

 

Day Two

 

Check-in

 

 

10:45am – 11:00am

 

Middle Phase of Treatment: Relaxation, Activity Pacing, Behavioral Activation

 

11:00am – 1:45pm

*Inc 15 min Break

 

Middle Phase of Treatment: Cognitive Strategies

 

 

1:45pm – 3:15pm

 

Lunch Break

 

3:15pm – 4:15pm

 

Middle Phase of Treatment: Sleep

 

4:15pm – 4:30pm

Later Phase of Treatment

 

4:30pm – 5:00pm

 

Special Considerations & Role of Motivational Interviewing

 

5:00pm – 6:30pm

*Inc 15 min Break

 

Case Conceptualization Exercise

 

 

6:30pm – 7:30pm

One hour for lunch and two 15-minute breaks each day.

1100  - 1930 ET, minus 1.5 hours  = 7 hours per day

** This agenda is approximate and subject to change.

 

This activity is approved for 14 continuing education credits (CEs).

 

The Center for Deployment Psychology is approved by the American Psychological Association to sponsor continuing education for psychologists. The Center for Deployment Psychology maintains responsibility for this program and its content.

Credits



Handouts

Faculty

Dr. Diana Dolan, PsyD Related Seminars and Products

Center for Deployment Psychology


Diana C. Dolan, Ph.D., CBSM is a clinical psychologist serving as an evidence-based (EBP) psychotherapy trainer with the Center for Deployment Psychology at the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences in Bethesda, Maryland. In this capacity, she develops and presents trainings on a variety of EBPs and deployment-related topics, and provides consultation services.  Dr. Dolan is a veteran of the U.S. Air Force. As an active duty psychologist, she served as chief, Primary Care Psychology at Lackland AFB, Texas, overseeing integrated behavioral health services in primary care. She was also responsible for overseeing the base post-deployment health reassessment program. Having been raised in an active duty Air Force family, she has long-term experience in military life and the impact of deployment on families.

Dr. Dolan graduated from the University of North Texas with a bachelor’s degree in psychology and earned her doctorate in clinical health psychology and behavioral medicine from the University of North Texas. She completed a clinical psychology internship at Wilford Hall Ambulatory Surgical Center in San Antonio, Texas.  Prior to her current position, she was a deployment behavioral health psychologist with  CDP and the associate training director for the clinical psychology internship at Wilford Hall.

Dr. Dolan’s professional interests include behavioral treatment of health conditions, in particular sleep disorders and within brief-natured primary care settings, clinical psychology training and program evaluation, and military psychology.

Speaker Disclosures:

Financial: Diana Dolan has no relevant financial relationship to disclose

Nonfinancial: Diana Dolan is a member of the Association of Behavioral and Cognitive Therapies (ABCT) and Society of Behavioral Sleep Medicine (SBSM)


Sharon Birman, Psy.D.'s Profile

Sharon Birman, Psy.D. Related Seminars and Products

Senior Military Behavioral Health Psychologist

Center for Deployment Psychology


Sharon Birman, Psy.D., is a CBT trainer working with the Military Training Programs at the Center for Deployment Psychology (CDP) at the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences in Bethesda, Maryland.  She joined the CDP in 2014 after completing her postdoctoral fellowship at Harbor-UCLA Medical Center, where she was actively involved in CBT and DBT intervention, supervision and education.  She completed her predoctoral internship at Didi Hirsch Mental Health Center, focusing her training suicide prevention and evidence-based interventions for the treatment of individuals with severe, chronic mental illness. 

Dr. Birman received her bachelor’s degree in psychology from the University of Southern California and her master’s and doctorate degrees in clinical psychology from Pepperdine University.

Her professional interests are in the areas of intervention and treatment planning for severe and chronic mental illness, suicide prevention, social justice, multicultural and diversity issues in therapy.  She has received intensive training in CBT and DBT in a variety of contexts, including hospital setting, community mental health centers, Veterans Affairs and within an applied research lab.  She has also received training in Prolonged Exposure Therapy (PE), Cognitive Processing Therapy (CPT), Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT), Cognitive Behavioral Analysis System of Psychotherapy (CBASP), among other therapeutic modalities. She is certified in Interpersonal Psychotherapy (IPT), Applied Suicide Intervention Skills (ASIST), and Brief Response to Crisis (BRC). 


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