Integrating Harm Reduction into the Clinical Setting

Therapy Wisdom

Integrating Harm Reduction into the Clinical Setting

Maintaining Connection When Working with Addiction

With Kimberly May, LPC-S, LMFT 

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Hello,

Ready for some sobering statistics?
In 2021, 43 million people had severe substance use disorder.
A mere 6% received treatment.
But the problems with substance use don’t end with bleak statistics. 

The stigma of addiction is also staggering.

From the prohibition or taxation of marijuana, opium, and alcohol in the early 1900, to the War on Drugs in the 1970s, to today’s opioid crisis, the American public is constantly warned of the dangers of drugs and the people who use them.

The American public is constantly warned of the dangers of drugs and the people who use them: the prohibition or taxation of marijuana, opium, and alcohol in the early 1900, the War on Drugs in the 1970s, today’s opioid crisis tell us to “Just say no” to compassion, connection, and anything but abstinence for drug users.

So it’s no wonder therapists are afraid or reluctant to work with clients who are substance users, further limiting access to treatment.

Kimberly May,  LPC-S, LMFT, aims to change all that.

Kim loves the process of empowering people to set their own goals. When she started using a harm reduction mode in her practice, her understanding of addiction and her connection to clients skyrocketed.

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Now, Kim wants to create an army of therapists who are equipped and eager to work with substance use disorders.
Kim is going to teach you everything she learned — from the history of drug stigmatization in America to addiction theory, to harm reduction strategies you can use in your clinical setting — in this new course, Integrating Harm Reduction into the Clinical Setting: Maintaining Connection When Working with Addiction.

Get ready to:

dig up the roots of stigma within addiction

develop the knowledge and tools to approach addiction in a more nuanced, person-centered, and strengths-based way

apply a harm reduction framework into your clinical work

If you want to serve clients with a wide range of concerns related to substance use from a place of compassion….

If you are ready to connect with your clients more deeply…

Join us for Integrating Harm Reduction into the Clinical Setting: Maintaining Connection When Working with Addiction.

Expand your ideas about addiction

Avoid judgments, one-size-fits-all solutions, and power struggles.

Be the therapist your clients can approach about their substance use. This is how you save lives.

Warmly,

Kimberly May, LPC-S, LMFT &

Academy of Therapy Wisdom

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“The opposite of addiction is not sobriety, it’s connection.”

— Johann Hari

After completing this course, you wil

Get ready to:

Approach addiction in a more nuanced, person-centered, and strengths-based way so you have more than one treatment option to offer

Understand the complexity of addiction so you can view each client as an individual who has multiple issues beyond just substance use

Apply the harm reduction framework into your clinical work so you have tools and knowledge to connect with your clients more deeply.

Serve clients from a place of compassion and understanding so you can develop more successful treatment options with them

Here’s what you’ll learn in Integrating Harm Reduction into the Clinical Setting:

Module 1:

What is Addiction?

Understanding the historical impact of the war on drugs helps highlight the depth of the stigma faced in addiction. A review of the prevailing models of addiction helps you conceptualize addiction in a more realistic way, as well as see how various models and beliefs have contributed to both internal and external stigmas surrounding addiction.

You will explore:

The War on People: how the war on drugs has become in many respects a war on people

What is Addiction? How to begin to look deeper & challenge misconceptions

Choices & Personality: debunking bad choice theory and the myth of the “addictive personality”

The Role of Genetics: exploring the role of genetics in addiction

The Disease Model: what it means, Modern Criticisms, and the Insufficiency of the Disease Model

Helplessness & Learning: learning the role of helplessness and seeing addiction as a learning disorder

What is Addiction
Deepening Our View of Addiction

Module 2:

Deepening Our View of Addiction

In this module, Kim will introduce addiction as a human problem rather than a drug problem. Understanding the research behind drug, set, and setting and how drug use may be considered adaptive from a biopsychosocial perspective.

You will learn:

Addiction is a human problem: a look a drug use in the absence of addiction

Drug, Set, and Setting: Delving into Zinberg’s research and how the learner can use the drug, set, and setting as a framework for assessment

Rituals and Sanctions: how having meaningful and practical rituals and sanctions help prevent addiction

Rat Park: what we got wrong about rats and addiction

Drug Use as an Adaptation: utilizing the biopsychosocial model for assessment, understanding, and connection

Compassion is Part of the Cure: how to broaden your views and leverage your humanity to deepen connection and develop compassion

Module 3:

Integrating Harm Reduction into the Clinical Setting

Kim introduces you to harm reduction and the foundations of applying it in the clinical setting. Learn the therapeutic stance in harm reduction and non-binary approaches to change so you can implement a range of tools to serve clients wherever they are on the continuum of use.

You will learn about:

What is harm reduction? Key components of harm reduction, examples, and the basics needed to apply in work with clients.

The Harm Reduction Therapeutic Stance: clinician neutrality and the role of ambivalence

Blinded by Compliance: Explore how to work with people in active addiction when abstinence is not the goal

Navigating Change: A non-binary approach to change

Safety & Control: Exploring client change through safety and control options

Moderation & Abstinence: Exploring client change through moderation and abstinence

Reframing Failure: Reconceptualizing failure and the role of diagnostic overshadowing 

Integrating Harm Reduction into the Clinical Setting2
Deepening Harm Reduction Therapy

Module 4:

Deepening Harm Reduction Therapy

Helpful modalities and tools to bolster your work in addiction, as well as tools to assist clients in sustaining change.

You will learn about:

Stages of Change, part 1: Introduction to the transtheoretical model of change and how to use it with clients

Stages of Change, part 2: Continuation of how to use the transtheoretical model of change with clients

Motivational Interviewing: Key concepts from motivational interviewing

CBT part 1: ABCs, 2 Systems, and helping clients identify their thoughts, and feelings, and increase body awareness

CBT part 2: Common cognitive distortions and Socratic Questioning

Sustaining change, part 1: Time and the body

Sustaining Change, part 2: The mind and connection

Module 5:

Maintaining Connection

In order to meaningfully be able to work with addiction, this module shares common traps to avoid so you can ensure you are using best practices. You’ll learn how to work with dual diagnosis, how to understand the nuance in substance use, and to work meaningfully to reduce stigmas. Additionally, key concepts like compassion fatigue, burnout, and helplessness are addressed.

You will learn about:

It Might Get Weird: an acknowledgment of unusual circumstances that can occur in working with addiction

6 Common Traps to Avoid: Common pitfalls to avoid so you can best serve the population and maintain connection and compassion

Essential Treatment Considerations: Looking at dual diagnoses and how to find the nuance in addiction

Active Destigmatization: Using language and reframing when working with clients to destigmatize, and an exploration of common themes in clients with addiction

Client Success and Compassion Fatigue: Non-traditional success stories and helping the learner navigate compassion fatigue

Combating Clinician Burnout and Helplessness: Supporting yourself with new ways to conceptualize and reframe your work to avoid burnout and feelings of helplessness

Maintaining Connection2

Through each weekly training, you'll gain skills and confidence to integrate attachment-based approaches into your therapeutic practice. The transformation will be swift, tangible, and long-lasting.

Enroll now

Get this Exclusive 5.5 Hour training for:

$197

Integrating Harm Reduction into the Clinical Setting:
Maintaining Connection When Working with Addiction

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If you are a BIPOC helping professional,

please accept our discounted enrollment price for this course by clicking here.

We are glad to have you with us!

Guaranteed

100% Risk-Free Money-Back Guarantee

We are confident you will learn new skills in this online training. However, if 7 days after the first live call (or 7 days after purchase, whichever is later), you don't believe you will learn anything to apply with your clients, please contact our support team at support@therapywisdom.com and we will give you a full refund, no questions asked.

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About Your Instructor

Kimberly May, LPC-S, LMFT

Kimberly May,

LPC-S, LMFT

Kimberly May, LPC-S, LMFT, is a therapist and the founder of Substance Use Therapy in Austin, TX.  Kimberly specializes in serving individuals, couples, and families whose lives have been impacted by substance use.  She works from a harm reduction model to support people wherever they are on the continuum of use.

Kimberly has worked in harm reduction and community mental health programs since 2009.  Her passion is empowering people to make changes on their terms and works to foster this through compassion, pragmatism, and collaboration.

In addition to her clinical work, Kimberly has provided training to clinicians, physicians, paraprofessionals, and law enforcement, all with the goal of enhancing our capacity to do our most important work—helping people be well.

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Hear What Folks Who Have Learned From Kim's Have To Say…

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“Kim is a true thought leader in her field.”

“[Kim’s] alternative approach to abstinence and the 12-Step Program provided our group with additional options to best serve our focal population. In my opinion, this alternative approach will facilitate and maximize overall safety…

[Her] presentation style was authentic, engaging, and encouraging and she appropriately integrated humor in a meaningful way to increase learning by participants. I highly recommend [her] approach to harm reduction with alcohol and her presentation would be a useful tool for other organizations to address issues of alcohol misuse and abuse.”

— Dr. Mirenda Farrell
Lead Designated Psychologist
Contractor for the Medical Program
Office of Secure Transportation
National Nuclear Security Administration
Department of Energy

 

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“Her harm reduction ethos is refreshing in an [in the] substance use treatment field.”

“Her harm reduction ethos is refreshing in an often narrowly focused substance use treatment field. Many who espouse “harm reduction” still ultimately default to some degree of absolutism around substance use. Kim truly travels a path of self-direction and boundary testing with her clients. She is a real-time and real-world motivational interviewer who always allows the client to reach their own conclusions and supports them on that journey.”

— David Walsh, MSN, RN, PMHNP-BC, Psychiatric nurse practitioner specializing in substance use disorder

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[S]he expertly weaves in pertinent data, therapeutic techniques, humor, and compassion for the clients we serve.”

“Kim’s work in harm reduction and specifically what she has accomplished in this [course] is truly exciting for me as a practitioner. Kim’s presentations are consistently engaging, unique, thoughtful, and educational. Her presentations will aid you in understanding harm reduction and substance use therapy in general from multiple angles and she expertly weaves in pertinent data, therapeutic techniques, humor, and compassion for the clients we serve.”

— Ben Johnson, LCSW

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“Kim’s passion for her field shines through in every word she speaks.”

“Kim’s passion for her field shines through in every word she speaks. Her presentations are meticulously put together, displaying her thoughtfulness and dedication. Kim is an expert in her craft and it’s a joy to learn from her.”

— Sheila Maglaris, MA, LPC

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