- COPD
- Gender Affirming Care
- Motivational Interviewing
- Cultural Competence
- Harm Reduction
- Substance Use Disorder
- Diabetes Management
- Heart Failure
- Trauma-informed care
Video library
Our webinars provide practical tools to address a wide range of clinical care issues. Expand each section to read the session overview and watch the video recording. The most recent webinars appear at the top of the list.
Trauma-informed care and substance use disorders
This session of CareOregon Pharmacy’s MEDS Ed program focuses on the intersection between psychological trauma and substance use disorders. Lydia Bartholow (DNP, PMHNP, CARN-AP) lays out the
scope of the issues, highlights the most effective and lasting forms of engagement and treatment, and provides and in-depth review of the importance of trauma-informed care and patient-centered systems when engaging people experiencing substance
use disorders.
Recorded on December 13, 2019 at CareOregon (Portland, Oregon).
Click here to watch the seminar
Key session takeaways (click the link to view a clip):
- Long-term consequences of cortisol end up becoming the biggest chronic conditions that impact our life expectancy. Part 2 - 25:50
- Much of what we know about the connection between trauma and substance use disorders is based on the ACEs study. Part 3 - 6:07
- A central nervous system that has experienced trauma will look for outside sources to soothe. Part 3 - 13:55
- The brain that has experienced trauma has lower dopamine levels, looking for things to engage with that help overcome perceived threats to survival. Part 3 - 19:07
- Physiological withdrawal symptoms can mirror the neuro-hormonal landscape of revisiting a traumatic experience. Part 3 - 37:41
- Key elements of trauma-informed care are promoting safety and control. Part 4 - 00:28
Trauma-informed care and substance use disorders
This session of CareOregon Pharmacy’s MEDS Ed program focuses on the intersection between psychological trauma and substance use disorders. Lydia Bartholow (DNP, PMHNP, CARN-AP) lays out the
scope of the issues, highlights the most effective and lasting forms of engagement and treatment, and provides and in-depth review of the importance of trauma-informed care and patient-centered systems when engaging people experiencing substance
use disorders.
Recorded on December 13, 2019 at CareOregon (Portland, Oregon).
Click here to watch the seminar
Key session takeaways (click the link to view a clip):
- Long-term consequences of cortisol end up becoming the biggest chronic conditions that impact our life expectancy. Part 2 - 25:50
- Much of what we know about the connection between trauma and substance use disorders is based on the ACEs study. Part 3 - 6:07
- A central nervous system that has experienced trauma will look for outside sources to soothe. Part 3 - 13:55
- The brain that has experienced trauma has lower dopamine levels, looking for things to engage with that help overcome perceived threats to survival. Part 3 - 19:07
- Physiological withdrawal symptoms can mirror the neuro-hormonal landscape of revisiting a traumatic experience. Part 3 - 37:41
- Key elements of trauma-informed care are promoting safety and control. Part 4 - 00:28
Trauma-informed care and substance use disorders
This session of CareOregon Pharmacy’s MEDS Ed program focuses on the intersection between psychological trauma and substance use disorders. Lydia Bartholow (DNP, PMHNP, CARN-AP) lays out the
scope of the issues, highlights the most effective and lasting forms of engagement and treatment, and provides and in-depth review of the importance of trauma-informed care and patient-centered systems when engaging people experiencing substance
use disorders.
Recorded on December 13, 2019 at CareOregon (Portland, Oregon).
Click here to watch the seminar
Key session takeaways (click the link to view a clip):
- Long-term consequences of cortisol end up becoming the biggest chronic conditions that impact our life expectancy. Part 2 - 25:50
- Much of what we know about the connection between trauma and substance use disorders is based on the ACEs study. Part 3 - 6:07
- A central nervous system that has experienced trauma will look for outside sources to soothe. Part 3 - 13:55
- The brain that has experienced trauma has lower dopamine levels, looking for things to engage with that help overcome perceived threats to survival. Part 3 - 19:07
- Physiological withdrawal symptoms can mirror the neuro-hormonal landscape of revisiting a traumatic experience. Part 3 - 37:41
- Key elements of trauma-informed care are promoting safety and control. Part 4 - 00:28