Helping Students Cope with Trauma that May Surface During Their Clinical Experience

Registration


Participation in this on-demand course is free. It is estimated to take 45 minutes to complete

Before enrolling in this educational activity, you must log in or create an account. 

Once you register for the course, you will have 30 days from the enrollment date to complete it. The date your access expires will be indicated in the Course Summary box on this webpage.
 

Purpose

A clinical instructor is an experienced practitioner who provides supervision during clinical practice and facilitates the application of theory to practice for students and staff learners. They assist the learner by setting expectations, providing effective feedback about their performance, and providing appropriate opportunities to meet their learning objectives.

Des Moines University Medicine and Health Sciences support healthcare providers who actively participate in our student's education by offering excellent clinical training opportunities. Clinical instructors transmit skills and serve as mentors who convey the core values important to Des Moines University Medicine and Health Sciences: accountability, collaboration, honesty, inclusiveness, and wellness. 

Clinical instructors do what no textbook or classroom can accomplish. As a result, the students benefit from the community-based experience, while preceptors benefit from integrating new ideas and techniques into their practices currently taught in academic health sciences institutions.

Description

Many students have past traumas that continue to impact them in various ways. As important as it is to validate and honor the feelings associated with these traumatic experiences, it is also necessary for students to still be able to learn and effectively demonstrate skills in a clinical setting. Preceptors can have a tremendous impact on students by creating a learning environment that feels safe for those students who might struggle due to past trauma. The goal of this webinar is to help preceptors identify some possible signs of trauma and provide a safe and effective learning environment for those students who are still carrying this trauma with them.  

Learning Objectives

  1. Validate student’s past trauma experiences. 
  2. Learn strategies to help support students who might be triggered by past trauma and provide a safe and effective learning environment. 

Speaker

Matthew Hiveley, PhD, LMHC
Staff Counselor, Student Counseling Center, Des Moines University Medicine and Health Sciences

Dr. Hiveley earned a Bachelor’s of Psychology and Sociology, a Master’s of Counselor Education (agency track), and a PhD in Human Development and Family Studies, specializing in couple and family therapy. He is a Licensed Mental Health Counselor with over 20 years of experience working in various mental health settings with children, adolescents, college students, adults, couples, and families. Dr. Hiveley specializes in the areas of relationships, communication, parenting, adolescent concerns, foster parent/adoption issues, separation/divorce, grief/loss, self-esteem, anger management, stress management, mood difficulties, depression, anxiety, panic, phobias, obsessive-compulsive behaviors, and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder. 


Terms of Use and Privacy Policy

Recording date: October 22, 2024
Date of original release: October 23, 2024
Most recent review/update: October 23, 2024
Termination date: October 22, 2026

Course summary
Available credit: 
  • 0.75 CE Contact Hour(s)
Course opens: 
10/23/2024
Course expires: 
10/22/2026
Cost:
$0.00
Rating: 
0

Available Credit

  • 0.75 CE Contact Hour(s)

Price

Cost:
$0.00
Please login or Create an Account to take this course.