Addressing Moral Injury in Clinical Practice: Summary of Emerging Evidence and Approaches

Venue

This is a virtual event, accessible online and over the phone. Access instructions will be provided after registration.

Description

Whether focusing on military service members or veterans, first responders, survivors of abuse, or other human-perpetrated events, trauma often features moral dimensions that might violate one’s beliefs that provide a sense of identity, self-worth and guide his or her thoughts and behavior in an unavoidably social world. In turn, depending on the context of the trauma, survivors might be profoundly harmed by their own transgressive actions and/or suffer as a result of others’ moral wrongdoing. The purpose of this workshop is to summarize the state of the evidence on moral injury and to describe promising approaches to addressing this condition in clinical practice. Original webinar date: April 14, 2021. CC

Learning Objectives

1. Summarize recent empirical and clinical advances on moral injury.

2. Describe intervention strategies for addressing psychological and spiritual dimensions of moral injury.

Presenter

Joseph Currier, PhD

Joseph Currier, PhD

Dr. Currier serves as Associate Professor at the University of South Alabama. His research focuses on trauma and moral injury, spiritually integrated approaches to mental health care, and other topics related to applied psychology of religion and spirituality. He has published over 100 peer-reviewed articles in support of these lines of research and has co-authored two books with American Psychological Association Press, entitled Trauma, Meaning, and Spirituality: Translating Research into Clinical Practice and Addressing Moral Injury in Clinical Practice.

Continuing Education

Credits:
1.5 CE
Level:
Any
Production Date:
04/14/2021

Options

Price: $50.00

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