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The FDA has finally approved the clinical breakthroughs and scientific research after decades of clinical research. Internal Family Systems The effectiveness of the model for healing traumas has been demonstrated.
Dr. Frank Anderson – Treating Complex Trauma with Internal Family Systems
Add additional power to your current clinical approach and make trauma treatment more effective in a short period of time when you incorporate Internal Family Systems You can also use IFS in your practice.
Join Dr. Frank Anderson, psychiatrist, author, and vice chair of the Foundation for Self Leadership — the leading organization dedicated to advancing the IFS model through research and training — in this comprehensive online course where he will give you a step–by–step guide for applying IFS into your clinical practice.
This online course will focus on how to understand the internet. trauma How IFS can be used to improve your brain health Complex trauma and its common co-morbidities can be treated-morbidities, including anxiety, depression, panic, insomnia, obsessive-Compulsive behavior and many other disorders.
Exclusive insight will also be provided How neuroscience can tell you why, how and which IFS techniques are best to maximize clinical outcomes — so you’ll know Just what it says How to help clients get over even the most complex traumas
Learning IFS has never been easier — revolutionize your clinical approach and help your clients heal!
This intensive online course will prepare you to integrate. Internal Family Systems with your current clinical models, plus you’ll Earn 14 CE hours toward your certification IFS Certification
An intensive online course by Dr. Frank Anderson
Most likely, you’ve heard clients describe their conflicting emotions. “a part of me wants to…and then there’s a part of me that doesn’t…” as they grapple with their internal “”Self,” thoughts, and behavior.
The IFS transformative approach makes it possible to see the multiplicity of the mind as a normal concept. Each part of the mind has a good intent, and each part has value. Even for survivors of trauma.
Involving case studies allows you to learn from the best.-Sessions demonstrations and masterfully delivered lectures by Dr. Frank Anderson We will guide you through each step-By-Step 3: How to apply the most efficacious, empirically-validated IFS interventions to help your clients listen to and understand their conflicting parts to master their emotions — so they can discover deep, lasting healing.
- You can accelerate the healing process from complex trauma You can integrate the IFS model into current clinical practice
- Better assessment and treatment planning with Tools that help clients identify, specify and clarify their protective parts with trauma histories
- Protect clients against emotional and psychological pain By offering a different view of symptoms and psychopathology, which shows clients how parts are trying protect them
- Display a non-profit-Pathological perspectives of mental disorders IFS can be demonstrated by showing how it translates common comorbidities in parts language
- Increase your curiosity and compassion When using IFS to get work with Clients with trauma histories
- Clinical outcomes can be improved By learning to differentiate between medical and therapeutic conditions.
- Treat clients’ traumatizing wounds through the IFS internal attachment model.
- Treat extreme trauma symptoms By determining whether they are rooted within parasympathetic withdrawal or sympathetic activation.
- Get quicker access to the traumatic vulnerabilities of your client IFS offers specific therapy techniques to shift withdrawal and arousal.
- Use neuroscience to inform your therapeutic decision–making So you will know which strategy or tool to use to help clients heal.
- Integrate IFS with Current treatment options EMDR, DBT, as well as Sensorimotor Psychotherapy.
Janina Fischer, PhD
- Acute trauma
- PTSD
- Complex Or relational trauma
- Attachment and developmental traumas
- Extreme trauma or dissociative trauma
- The origins, goals & assumptions
- Non-existent-Pathologizing, an accelerated approach, rooted within neuroscience
- IFS differs between phases-oriented treatmentMultiplicity of the mind — we all have parts
- Protective responses are crucial
- Dealing with Headache from emotional overwhelm-On
- Clients who have experienced abuse should be given clinical considerations
- Step 1: Identify the target symptom
- Meditation practices
- Separating the person (self), from the symptom
- Find out more about its purpose
- Step 2: Get Access to Internal Strengths & Resources for Healing
- From defensiveness to curiosity
- The “Self” The therapist-Countertransference redefined
- To heal, you must first access compassion
- Role of empathy in healing — the benefits and the downsides
- Step 3: Identify the Fear and Function of the Symptom
- The fear of the unknown is what we should be focusing on
- The true story behind the symptoms
- Fostering internal relationships
- Step 4: Healing Traumatic Wounds
- Three steps to healing: Observe the pain, get rid of the wounds from the past and let go all thoughts, emotions, and beliefs
- Science behind the healing — memory reconsolidation
- Internal attachment work using IFS
- Attachment styles are parts of the self
- Attachment trauma — the role of the therapist
- Recover from childhood’s relationship wounds
- Client’s “Self” The corrective object
- Work with preverbal trauma
- Depression, panic attacks and substance abuse are all possible. Eating disorders, ADD, OCD, and ADD can also be caused by OCD.
- Non-existent-Pathological approach
- As protective measures against trauma, comorbidities can be used as a means of coping.
- Here are some symptoms “parts of the self”
- Intersection of biology & situation“Real Mind-Body Medicine”)
- Therapist’s role in biology — When to refer and when to work it through
- Psychopharmacology and psychotherapy
- Neuroscience for therapists — what you need to know
- Fear circuitry and the emergence of PTSD
- Extreme reactions, Autonomic Nervous System and Autonomic Nervous System
- Rage to suicide, dissociation to shame
- Talk directly to the symptom
- Introduce the part “Self”
- Dealing with the overwhelm — no need for building resources
- How to remain calm and focused while working with Clients in extreme states
- Top-Down and Bottom-Strategies that are rooted in neuroscience will be a great way to improve your strategies
- When it’s necessary to take over and “be the auxiliary brain” Your client
- When it’s best to slow things down, hand over control and work with The body
- Sensing vs. understanding
- Home strategies
- EMDR, DBT and Sensorimotor/SE are some of the methods.
- Transformation vs. rehabilitation or adaptation
- Experiential therapies go beyond cognitive therapy
- Integrating IFS with Your current clinical approach
- Live demonstrations
- Meditations
- Practice sessions
It’s easy to get shaken and lose confidence in your approach when a client’s trauma response edges into seemingly uncontrollable dynamics of rage, panic, or suicidal desperation.
You’ll be exploring the neurobiological aspects of this bonus session. “whats and whys” Hyperarousal and parasympathetic withdrawl are just a few of the underlying symptoms. You’ll also learn how to use neuroscience to inform you treatment model — so you’ll know exactly how to empower your clients with Strategies that can help produce deep, lasting healing.
Bonus 2:Â PDF Download |Â Internal Family Systems Skills Training Manual Trauma-Informed Treatment for Anxiety, Depression, PTSD & Substance Abuse
This complete manual is available here with Downloadable worksheets and exercises, offers straight–forward explanations to help teach clients a new way to identify with Their “Self” — separating the person from the symptom to gain control over traumatic experiences. You’ll get:
- Step-By-step techniques
- Annotated case examples
- Unique meditations
- Neuroscience applications
- …and many more!
Frank Guastella Anderson, MD, completed his residency and was a clinical instructor in psychiatry at Harvard Medical School. He is a psychiatrist as well as a psychotherapist. He is passionately interested in teaching brain.-Psychotherapy based on neuroscience and integration of current neuroscience knowledge with The IFS model of therapy.
Dr. Anderson Vice Chair of the Foundation for Self Leadership. He is a trainer for the Center for Self Leadership with Richard Schwartz Ph.D. is a long-standing associate with, and trains for, Bessel van der Kolk’s Trauma Center at Justice Resource Center Boston MA.
Dr. Anderson Has lectured extensively about Neurobiology and Dissociation. He also wrote the chapter. “Who’s Taking What” Connecting Neuroscience and Psychopharmacology Internal Family Systems For Trauma In Internal Family Systems Therapy-New Dimensions He co-Authored a chapter “What IFS Brings to Trauma Treatment in Innovations and Elaborations in Internal Family Systems Therapy” Recent co-Authored “Internal Family Systems Skills Training Manual.”
Dr. Anderson She maintains a private practice at Concord, MA and is an Advisor to International Association of Trauma Professionals (IATP).
Here’s What You Will Get from Dr. Frank Anderson – Treating Complex Trauma with Internal Family Systems
Course Features
- Lectures 1
- Quizzes 0
- Duration Lifetime access
- Skill level All levels
- Language English
- Students 1
- Assessments Yes