The National Register has partnered with The Trust to provide risk management resources to educators and licensed psychologists—including specific resources for doctoral students and early career psychologists. Our partnership also provides psychologists with an ongoing series of risk management webinars featuring members of the Trust Risk Management Team. Access our collection of resources and archived webinars below.
Students and Early Career Psychologists
These archived webinars are available for viewing through the links below (Note: You cannot earn continuing education for viewing these videos. Archived webinars for continuing education are available on CE.NationalRegister.org). The National Register also has ongoing clinical webinars that cover clinical and ethical topics.
Self-care is a sine qua non of good clinical work, sound risk management, and the long-term sustainability of psychology service delivery. Now it is even more important as the unique pressures of our current national emergency unfold and we are grappling with unprecedented change in our practices, intensified stress in our clients, and disruptions in everyone’s homelife. This webinar focuses on what self-care is, the ethical and legal obligations that make it essential, the risks of not attending to it, and strategies for living self-care and self-sustainability as a daily practice rather than another item on the ‘To Do’ list.
Presented in collaboration with The Trust
Leisl M. Bryant, Ph.D., ABPP is a licensed New Hampshire and Massachusetts-based clinical and forensic psychologist, with board certification in Forensic Psychology. Dr. Bryant frequently consults and lectures on forensic, clinical, ethical, and risk management issues and has maintained a private practice for nearly two decades. She is a Fellow with the American Academy of Forensic Psychology, and formerly served as President and Executive Director of the New Hampshire Psychological Association (NHPA). She also served on the NHPA Ethics Committee for over ten years, received the Margaret M. Riggs Award for Distinguished Contribution to Psychology, and was later awarded the Karl F. Heiser APA Presidential Award for Advocacy for her work related to the NH psychology licensing board.