Overview

What do we know about grief that involves trauma? Is this kind of grief a “deeper shade of blue”? When a loss is sudden, violent, or stigmatized, the nature of grief is radically different from that which follows deaths that are anticipated, natural, and come at the end of a long life.

Over the last three decades, we’ve learned a great deal about grief and trauma from research that has elaborated and refined critical concepts. Prolonged Grief Disorder (PGD) describes the disruptive persistence of sadness and longing after a death, which often occurs after traumatic loss. But PGD doesn’t include symptoms of trauma in its diagnostic criteria. It focuses instead on the disruptive persistence of sadness and longing after a death, which certainly may occur after traumatic loss. Traumatic Grief (TG), in contrast, has been described as the experience in which horror combines with sadness and longing for the person who has died. While TG is not a formal diagnosis, the concept points to important areas of understanding and intervention. What people experience after a normative vs. traumatic loss may be no more equivalent than the colors blue and purple. These hues are related, but the added red pigment creates a whole new palette of experience, just as added elements of trauma create new dimensions of feeling to grief.

In this series, clinicians will learn about grief in ways that enhance their clinical care with people who have experienced traumatic loss. Presentations will address traumatic grief as a clinical concept, review tools for assessment, and identify interventions for loss after suicide, homicide, and overdose—all of which are particularly urgent mental health issues. Faculty will explore psychotherapeutic interventions that address prolonged grief, trauma and the healing effects of community. Participants will increase their confidence and skills to effectively address traumatic grief in their patients.

Learning Objectives

Upon completion of this activity, participants will be able to:

  • Describe traumatic grief as a clinical concept

  • Identify elements of grief common to loss after suicide, homicide, and overdose

  • Discuss risk and resilience factors that reduce and protect health after traumatic loss

  • Describe clinical, social and community interventions to address persistence distress after traumatic loss

  • Formulate effective communication strategies to support patients through grief

Curriculum

  1. Introduction

  2. 1. Traumatic Grief: Concepts, Research, and Clinical Applications

  3. 2. Grief after Suicide: Research Findings and the Experiences of Suicide Loss Survivors

  4. 3. Opioid Overdose Bereavement: A Hidden Epidemic of Traumatic Grief

  5. 4. Homicide: Impact on Survivors, Communities and Clinicians

  6. Conclusion

About this course

  • $120.00
  • 6 hours of video content

Faculty

Patricia Harney, PhD (Course Director)
Co-Interim Chief of Psychology and Director of Psychology Internship Training, Cambridge Health Alliance; Assistant Professor of Psychology in Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School

Holly Aldrich, MSW, LICSW
Founding Director, Center for Homicide Bereavement, Cambridge Health Alliance; Therapist in private practice, Cambridge MA

Fanta Atkinson, PhD, LMHC
Director, Center for Homicide Bereavement, Cambridge Health Alliance

Joseph Rosanksy, PhD
Postdoctoral Research Fellow, CHA Center for Mindfulness and Compassion; Staff Psychologist, Cambridge Health Alliance

Jane Tillman, PhD, ABPP
Evelyn Stefansson Nef Director of the Erikson Institute for Education and Research, Austen Riggs Center; Clinical psychologist and psychoanalyst at the Austen Riggs Center

Continuing Education

Psychologists: Cambridge Health Alliance, Division of Continuing Education in Psychiatry is approved by the American Psychological Association to sponsor continuing education for psychologists. Cambridge Health Alliance, Division of Continuing Education in Psychiatry maintains responsibility for this program and its content. This course offers 6.25 continuing education credits.

Social Workers: Cambridge Health Alliance, Division of Continuing Education in Psychiatry is recognized by the New York State Education Department's State Board for Social Work as an Approved Provider #0038 of continuing education for licensed social workers. This course offers 6.25 contact hours. Social workers from other states should check with their individual board to confirm credit reciprocity with NY.

Counselors: Cambridge Health Alliance, Division of Continuing Education in Psychiatry has been approved by NBCC as an Approved Continuing Education Provider, ACEP No. 5444. Programs that do not qualify for NBCC credit are clearly identified. Cambridge Health Alliance, Division of Continuing Education in Psychiatry is solely responsible for all aspects of the program. This course meets the requirements for 6.25 continuing education hours.

More Details

  • Level

    This course is appropriate for post-graduate clinicians in the healthcare professions

  • Format

    Self-paced online enduring material

  • Contact Us

    CHA Division of Continuing Education in Psychiatry

    1035 Cambridge St., Suite 26

    Cambridge, MA 02141

    [email protected]

    +1-617-806-8770

Explore the complexities of traumatic grief

Enhance your confidence and effectiveness with clients