Healthcare Training Institute - Quality Education since 1979CE for Psychologist, Social Worker, Counselor, & MFT!!

Introduction
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Introduction
Welcome to the Home Study Course sponsored by the Healthcare Training
Institute. This course is entitled, Therapist Self-Care for Domestic Violence
Burn-Out.
Our primary intent for this home study course is to provide
quality education to foster your professional growth.
The Institute
has provided quality education since 1979.
Hi. My name is Tracy Catherine Appleton.
I will be the narrator of this CD. We appreciate that you have chosen us as a
vehicle for you to earn your Continuing Education Credit.
The purpose
of the course is to assist you in increasing your knowledge regarding self-care
measures to avoid burn-out when working with domestic violence clients. As each
case study is given, if the concepts seem to be applicable to your situation,
I encourage you to turn your CD player off and make a few notes regarding the
application of the principle to your setting. However, these notes are for your
purposes only and are not to be sent to the Institute. Also each section is very
content dense. So feel free to replay the section to review the content.
At the end of each CD section, a question will be asked. The question at the end
of each section corresponds with the questions in your Test. Merely write
the correct letter on the corresponding blank line in your Test. Each
answer is only used once. Keep in mind there is nothing tricky or hard about these
questions. They are merely intended to verify the playing of this CD.
Each of the questions that are included on this CD is also reprinted in your Test. These questions are sequential and deal with the section of content that
preceded it. For this reason, to facilitate the answering of each question, you
might read the question from the Test prior to listening to that CD
section. By knowing what the question is ahead of time, you will then know the content
to listen for that contains the answer. So just a hint, after you write down the
answer to a question in your Answer Test, read on to the next question in order
to give you a "heads up" to listen for the content that contains the
answer to the next question.
For the purpose of brevity, most generally
I will use the term "therapists" or "mental health professional."
However, don't let these terms deter you from applying the concepts to your situations.
When you hear the word "therapists," if your job title is social worker,
psychologist, marriage and family therapist, mental health counselor, professional
counselor, resident director, program assistant, etc. merely substitute the appropriate
term that is the most meaningful to you. In short, don't let my use of the term
"therapists" cognitively set you off track from hearing the content
because your job title is school counselor, for example. I will also use the term
"client" for the purposes of brevity. However, if you deal with patients,
residents, students, consumers, etc., transpose "client" for the term
that is the most meaningful to you in your work setting.
On this CD we
will discuss such topics as: Secondary Traumatic Stress Disorder, the Therapist's
Shield, Client Resistance, Therapist Arrogance, Thurman and Watson's Fight for
Legal Justice, Hidden Risks, Strategic Use of Self, and Perceived Inadequacies.
Now, let's get started...
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