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Are We OK? Potential Impacts of Telehealth Structural Changes on Clinician Wellness – a Research Update-with Eric Strom JD, Ph.D, LMHC & Doug Shirley Ed.D, LMHC

  • 04/09/2025
  • 10:00 AM - 11:30 AM
  • Live Synchronous Zoom Event
  • 152

Registration

  • You must have the discount code to use this ticket.
  • For Members Only - must be logged in to the website to receive this price.
  • This is for members of other Mental Health Counseling Chapters chartered through AMHCA.
  • For WMHCA Student Members. Must be logged in to website to receive this price.

Register

Description:

Though the era of COVID was not the origin of telehealth, licensed mental health providers across the country were forced to shift to this treatment modality in COVID, regardless of preference or personal beliefs around the efficacy of this modality.  As we continue to progress past the pandemic, we can look back on where we have been, and cast a vision for where we are going as a mental health counseling field.

 

As a multi-clinician research team, we have been investigating what have been the impacts of these structural changes (e.g. transitions to home offices, not sharing physical space with clients, changes in commutes and other lifestyle changes, etc.) on clinician’s reported sense of health and wellbeing.  We have also been investigating how telehealth practice contributes to, or detract from, clinicians’ effective implementation of self-care. We are working to better understand the benefits, and susceptibilities (potential areas for impairment) that clinicians have experienced.

 

Join us as we share where we are in the research process, having coded themes we’ll explore together with you for relevance and applicability to clinical practice.  We will provide background information and research, all the while looking to expose gaps in the literature, especially related to how the structural changes associated with telehealth practice impact and inform clinical practice.

 

Objectives:

Participants will be able to:

  • Apply working knowledge of the relevant literature on clinician health and wellness, self-care, and telehealth to clinical practice,
  • Foster ongoing self-awareness and telehealth-specific practices of self-care and wellness related activity,
  • Dialogue around study findings and the themes that are emerging from the data,
  • Advocate for and participate in increased consultation and collaboration to develop shared nomenclature and understanding of issues.

About the Presenter:

Doug Shirley is associate professor of Counseling Psychology at The Seattle School of Theology & Psychology.  Doug has been teaching and practicing counseling and psychology since 1999.  In and through his private practice, Doug has had the opportunity to walk with any number of helping and healing professionals tending to the fallout that COVID brought to multiple professional realms.  Doug has a passion for supporting the helpers themselves: those whose (early) life training has taught them to put others before themselves.  In his teaching he is also active in guiding the next wave of counseling professionals: those who will usher our field into its future, whatever that might be.

Dr. Eric Ström is an attorney and Licensed Mental Health Counselor in Seattle, Washington. As an attorney, Eric provides legal counsel, consultation, and guidance to behavioral health professionals. Eric’s clinical practice is focused on providing counseling services to combat veterans and those in other high-stress professions.  Eric currently serves on the American Mental Health Counselors Association Ethics Committee, and is the ethics advisor for the Washington Mental Health Counselors Association.  Eric has taught a range of courses in counseling and professional ethics at a variety of graduate and undergraduate programs.  Eric earned a PhD in Counseling at Oregon State University, graduated cum laude from Wayne State University School of Law in Detroit Michigan, earned a Master of Arts Degree in Counseling Psychology from the Northwest School of Professional Psychology at Argosy University Seattle, attended the Hague Academy of International Law in the Hague Netherlands, and received a Bachelor of Arts degree in Linguistics from the University of Michigan.

WMHCA Cancellation Policy: To receive a refund, less a $15 cancellation fee, cancellations must be made by contacting WMHCA at least 48 hours prior to workshop date. There will be no refunds within 48 hours of the workshop date. Please make sure you have the link 24 hours prior to the event starting.  


This course is approved for 1.5 CE's hours for LMHCs, LMFTs, LCSWs, and all  associate-level licensees in Washington State.


Washington Mental Health Association (WMHCA) has been approved by NBCC as an Approved Continuing Education Provider, ACEP No. 2079. Programs that do not qualify for NBCC credit are clearly identified. WMHCA is solely responsible for all aspects of the programs.

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