Elizabeth Louis
Currently Banking Credentials
The National Register hosts ongoing live webinars that cover clinical and ethical topics. Recent presentations explored intimate partner violence, culturally responsive treatment for American Indian and Alaska Native clients with suicidality, caring for transgender youth, supporting Black men’s mental health, suicide risk assessment in primary care settings, and more. The National Register occasionally hosts supplemental or special webinars in addition to our clinical webinars.
Webinars are 2:00–3:00 pm Eastern Time (1pm CT/12pm MT/11am PT) unless otherwise specified.
Register through your National Register account.
Pricing for standard webinars: National Register webinars are typically available at no charge to National Register Health Service Psychologists, National Register Practice Academy members, and Canadian Register Health Service Psychologists. National Register Associate Program members (psychology doctoral students and trainees) may also attend at no charge. Non-member psychologists and other healthcare providers may create an account and register for $35. Some State Psychological Association members and affiliates receive discounted access, so please check with your Association’s central office for details.
Please review our webinar tips and CE eligibility guidelines.
Annually, we host a certificate program for student members of the National Register Associate Program. Associates can join us live for a series of sessions on a particular topic and can earn a certificate for attending all sessions. JOIN NOW if you are not yet an Associate.
The National Register of Health Service Psychologists’ Professional Practice Builder: Knowledge & Skills to Thrive in Private Practice provides attendees with knowledge, confidence, and specific advice for starting a private practice as a health service psychologist (HSP). Watch archived sessions here!
Watch a selection of clinical webinar snippets below. Full presentations are on CE.NationalRegister.org
Note: These recordings are not for CE. Archived webinars for CE are available on CE.NationalRegister.org
Psychologists play a critical role in helping patients with chronic pain achieve their goals for opioid reduction. Dr. Beth Darnall reviews results from opioid tapering scientific studies, iatrogenic consequences of poor tapering practices, pitfalls to avoid, best clinical practices for patient safety, and tools and treatments that may support patient success.
Beth Darnall, PhD, is Associate Professor at Stanford University School of Medicine, Department of Anesthesiology, Perioperative, and Pain Medicine. Dr. Darnall is principal investigator for NIH and PCORI-funded clinical trials that broadly investigate behavioral medicine and self-management strategies for acute and chronic pain, and voluntary patient-centered prescription opioid reduction. She has authored/co-authored five books for patients and clinicians, including The Opioid-Free Pain Relief Kit, Less Pain, Fewer Pills, and Psychological Treatment for Chronic Pain. She develops and investigates digital interventions and virtual reality for perioperative and chronic pain, and is the chief science advisor for appliedVR. In 2018 she briefed the U.S. Congress on the opioid and pain crises, and in 2019 provided invited testimony to the FDA on iatrogenic harms from forced opioid tapering. Her work has been featured in Scientific American, NPR Radio, BBC Radio, JAMA Internal Medicine, and Nature. In 2018 she spoke on the psychology of pain relief at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.
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Watch full archived webinars and videos and access courses.
CE.NationalRegister.org