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Live Webinar

Introducing Advanced Integrative Therapy (AIT): A Modern Somatic Approach to Trauma & Emotional Healing

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Information

Date & Time

Description

Advanced Integrative Therapy is a combined cognitive and somatic trauma therapy that has been compared to EMDR and Emotional Freedom Techniques (aka "Tapping"). The growing body of research is showing that AIT is effective in desensitizing and reprocessing the emotional disturbance that our clients experience as a result of traumatic or challenging life events. Quick AIT Protocol is a tool that therapists can learn, use in session with clients, and also teach clients to do at home when they need to self-regulate or self-soothe.

This workshop is for mental health clinicians who are interested in somatic trauma treatment, and are interested in adding practical and applicable tools that their clients can utilize in between sessions when they are in distress. There will be an experiential portion for attendees to be able to receive the intervention, which research shows is helpful for learning and dissemination of knowledge.

Learning Objectives

Participants will be able to:

  • Identify at least 2 proposed mechanisms of action that allow AIT to desensitize and reprocess difficult emotions.

  • Describe in plain language how their clients can utilize Quick AIT at home when experiencing emotional disturbance or distress.

  • Evaluate the current body of research on Advanced Integrative Therapy's effectiveness in the treatment of emotional distress

Educational Goal

The educational goal of this workshop is to expand clinician's competence in utilizing a somatic treatment modality (Quick AIT) that can help their clients desensitize an activated nervous system. Attendees will also be able to describe the mechanisms of action for this intervention to their clients with confidence.

Target Audience

  • Addiction Professional
  • Counselor
  • Marriage & Family Therapist
  • Social Worker

Presenters

Elizabeth Pace is a trauma therapist and educator in private practice in New Orleans, Louisiana who specializes in cultural historical and intergenerational trauma effects in the body and nervous system. In Beth's practice, substance and process addictions are treated as symptoms of trauma and limbic system injury, not as stand alone pathology. Beth approaches addictions treatment as trauma and dissociation treatment, with an emphasis on healing root traumas in order to decrease the need to self-medicate for pain. She believes that treating gestational, intergenerational, and early childhood trauma can lead to greater self-awareness, and that desensitizing the body's threat response creates the internal safety to respond to situations in a healthier way. Beth is an adjunct professor of counseling theories and counselor ethics at Loyola University of New Orleans, where she incorporates the cultural historical model of trauma into both classes. She is currently conducting a pilot study on a novel cognitive and somatic therapy: Advanced Integrative Therapy (AIT), which is her primary modality in her clinical practice. Her passion is to help healthcare professionals increase their confidence in treating addictions, complex trauma, and the auto-immune effects of toxic stress in the body.

Financially Sponsored By

  • TPN.health