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Domestic Violence: The Kentucky Requirement

Because of the number of individuals affected, it is likely that most healthcare professionals will encounter patients in their practice who are victims/survivors of domestic violence.
Behavioral Addictions

This course will provide clinicians with the latest clinical and empirical evidence that addresses behavioral addictions, including phenomenology, epidemiology, comorbidity, neurobiologic mechanisms, genetic contributions, treatment response, and prevention.
Alzheimer Disease

This continuing education course is intended to increase the knowledge and skills of those who are called upon to care for people with Alzheimer disease.
Suicide Assessment, Diagnosis, Prevention and Treatment

Learn the essentials of suicide prevention in a 4-hour course for healthcare workers. Dive deep into risk assessment, diagnosis, and treatment modalities for behavioral health professionals.
Category
- Suicide
Format
- Self-study / Enduring
Credits
- 4.00 ANCC
Cost $21.00
Rural Health, Mental Health, and Social Work

Although there are benefits and necessities to living in rural areas, many living in these areas experience significant health and mental health disparities and challenges in accessing services.
Prescription Opioids: Risk Management and Strategies for Safe Use

This course will extensively cover the various approaches recommended or mandated for use by clinicians who prescribe opioids, in order to reduce risk and improve outcomes.
Pain & Addiction, Best Practices & Proper Prescribing: The Creative Tension of Addiction Treatment and Recovery

The West Virginia Board of Medicine recognizes that this excellent course satisfies the requirements as stipulated in §11CSR6 and therefore, approves this program for its allopathic physicians, podiatric physicians and physician assistants.
Category
- Prescribing
Format
- Self-study / Enduring
Credits
- 3.50 AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™
Cost $55.00
Conducting Culturally Sensitive Psychosocial Research

The reality is that practitioners, including nurses, social workers, counselors, psychologists, and mental health workers, observe and interact with a variety of social problems and generally have questions about: the magnitude of the problem; the psychosocial ramifications on individual