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  • The Trust Insurance Presents: Sequence XI: Ethics, Risk Management and Vulnerabilities: Yours, Mine and Ours

 Utah Psychological Association

The Trust Insurance Presents: Sequence XI: Ethics, Risk Management and Vulnerabilities: Yours, Mine and Ours

  • February 10, 2023
  • 8:30 AM - 4:00 PM
  • Livestream event via Zoom – Zoom link will be sent on Wednesday, February 8, 2023

Registration


Registration is closed

6.0 Ethics Continuing Education Credits

15% OFF YOUR Trust Sponsored Professional Liability Policy Premium

(for two consecutive years at policy renewal)

Course Overview:

For close to 30 years, The Trust has been providing continuing education workshops and individual consultations with a focus on improving psychologists’ risk management skills and strategies. These workshops have evolved from basic concepts and strategies, to a more applied, integrated, and strategic approach to help you protect yourself from adverse disciplinary and legal actions and to support competent practice.

For this newest workshop, The Trust Risk Management Consultants have continued to review data from nearly 90,000 consultations provided to date, along with relevant research, to determine the problems practitioners often confront, and potential strategies for addressing them. The topics in this new workshop will include an updated review

of decision science and its implications for bias and vulnerability in clinical, ethical and risk management decision making, strategies for reducing the impact of these vulnerabilities, issues arising in remote services (during and beyond the pandemic), addressing boundaries in advocacy by professionals on behalf of their clients/patients, and the risk- management implications of self-care (or its absence) for psychologists.

Course Objectives:

  • Describe three general challenges to unbiased decision-making
  • Identify three vulnerabilities that can affect clinician decision- making, in particular
  • List four strategies to address decision-making bias and improve ethical and risk management choices
  • Summarize three risk-related aspects to remote service provision
  • Describe three general challenges to unbiased decision-making
  • Identify three vulnerabilities that can affect clinician decision- making, in particular
  • List four strategies to address decision-making bias and improve ethical and risk management choices
  • Summarize three risk-related aspects to remote service provision
  • Differentiate general areas in which professional advocacy is and is not appropriate
  • Identify two issues when psychotherapy patients make quasi- forensic requests
  • Evaluate three methods of engaging in self-care to support better practice and risk-management

Presenter: 

Daniel O. Taube earned his J.D. from Villanova University in 1985 and his Ph.D. in clinical psychology from Hahnemann University in 1987,

as a member of the Hahnemann/ Villanova Joint Psychology and Law Graduate Program. He is Professor Emeritus at the California School of Professional Psychology, San Francisco at Alliant International University, past Psy.D. Program Director, founder and coordinator of the Forensic Family Child.

His areas of professional focus include ethical and legal issues in professional practice, child protection, and addictions. In addition to his teaching and research interests, he has been in private practice since 1990, has served on the APA Ethics Appeals Panel for over 20 years, and taught graduate and professional level courses on ethical and legal issues in professional practice for over 25 years. Dr. Taube regularly consults with a wide range of practitioners and community agencies regarding standards of practice and ethical concerns.

Fees

   UPA Members Non-Members of UPA 
 On or before February 3, 2023  $125  $225
 After February 3, 2023 $150   $250

 UPA Student/Resident Members Non-Member Students /Residents
 No Charge  $15

Location

Live, virtual webinar via Zoom webinar.

Zoom link will be sent two days prior to the event.

Accept Online Payments
address: 5442 South 900 East, Suite 512, Salt Lake City, UT 84117 | phone: (801) 410-0337 | emailutahpsych@gmail.com
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