How can therapy help to restore a sense of self after trauma?

Ruth Lanius, MD, PhD, describes her 6-part course about the major brain networks and therapeutic strategies to help recover from trauma.

 

$260 -- 6 hours

Recorded in six sessions, this webinar course brings to life the work on trauma and the brain from ground-breaking clinician, researcher, and author Ruth Lanius.

This six-part webinar explores critical brain systems that are affected frequently by trauma and how altered functioning of each brain system can be associated with certain trauma-related symptoms.

The effects of a variety of present- and past centered therapies, including mindfulness training, body-oriented approaches, neurofeedback, heart rate variability training, brain stimulation, EMDR, CBT/prolonged exposure, will be then be discussed to illustrate how trauma treatment can lead to the restoration of critical brain networks and contribute to the healing from traumatic stress.


Get access to watch the recording as often as you like for 90 days.

If completed in its entirety, 6 APA Continuing Education credit hours are available for this recorded course. To qualify, you will need to answer the quiz after each session (with a 75%), and also complete the course evaluation when you've watched the lectures.

Ruth Lanius Course On Trauma, Development, and Neuroplasticity



Ruth Lanius, MD, PhD is one of the leading clinical neuroscience researchers in the study of the traumatized brain and one of the few who has focused her research on the importance of neurofeedback in treatment of trauma. She is the co-author of Healing the Traumatized Self: Consciousness; Neuroscience; Treatment written with Paul Frewen, PhD and co-editor of The Impact of Early Life Trauma on Health and Disease: The Hidden Epidemic, with Eric Vermetten and Clare Pain. She has published over 150 research articles.