Grief & Loss in Families:
An Intra-Interpersonal Framework

When a death happens in a family, how the surviving family members respond to the loss and cope with the resulting disruptions can be diverse.  In this module, we will consider several variables that influence the post-loss adjustment of the individual members and the family as a whole, as well as identifying strength factors and warning signs for complications in the family.  In addition, we will address the possible relational tension in the family’s grieving process by talking about “talking” and “listening” to each other’s pain and struggles.

Considering family rules and traditions, taboos and secrets, intergenerational impacts, and the implications of bereavement for family homeostasis and change, learners will become familiar with an Integrative Intra-Interpersonal Framework for the assessment of family function in the wake of loss, and discuss its application to actual case material.

Note:  This 2.5-hour CE module focuses on topics related to psychological practice, education, or research other than application of psychological assessment and/or intervention methods that are supported by contemporary scholarship grounded in established research procedures.

LEARNING OBJECTIVES

  • Describe an Integrative Intra-Interpersonal Framework for family assessment;
  • Facilitate a discussion about “talking” and “listening” among family members; and
  • Identify indicators for resilience and warning signs for grief complications in bereaved families.

Earn 2.5 Continuing Education (CE) Credits

Portland Institute for Loss and Transition is approved by the American Psychological Association to sponsor continuing education for psychologists.  Portland Institute for Loss and Transition maintains responsibility for this program and its content.

Portland Institute for Loss and Transition, [Provider number 1954], is approved to offer social work continuing education by the Association of Social Work Boards (ASWB) Approved Continuing Education (ACE) program.  Organizations, not individual courses, are approved as ACE providers.  State and provincial regulatory boards have the final authority to determine whether an individual course may be accepted for continuing education credit.  Portland Institute for Loss and Transition maintains responsibility for this course.  ACE provider approval period: 09/09/2025-09/09/2028.

Earn 1 Credit for Orientation Module toward
Certification in Family-Focused Grief Therapy
Offered by the Portland Institute.

 
 

PROGRAM SCHEDULE

This program contains the following video segments:

  • Meaning Co-Construction:  A Model for Family Therapy (31 mins)
  • Talking about Talking and Listening:  Emotional Co-Regulation in the Wake of Loss (46 mins)
  • From Risk to Resilience:  An Intra-Interpersonal Assessment Framework (36 mins)
  • Signs of Complication:  A Case Study (41 mins)

Grief & Loss in Families:
An Intra-Interpersonal Framework

USD$99 for 3-hour module / USD$124 with CE Credits

GRIEF TRAINING FACULTY​

Carolyn Ng

PsyD, MMSAC, RegCLR
Singapore

Carolyn Ng, PsyD, MMSAC, RegCLR maintains a private practice, Anchorage for Loss and Transition, for training, supervision and therapy in Singapore, while also serving as an Associate Director of the Portland Institute.  Previously she served as Principal Counsellor with the Children’s Cancer Foundation in Singapore, specialising in cancer-related palliative care and bereavement counselling.  She is a registered counsellor, master clinical member and approved supervisor with the Singapore Association for Counselling (SAC), a Fellow in Thanatology with the Association of Death Education and Counselling (ADEC), USA, as well as a consultant to a cancer support and bereavement ministry in Sydney, Australia.  She is a trained end-of-life doula and advanced care planning facilitator.  She is also trained in the Critical Incident Stress Management (CISM) by the International Critical Incident Stress Foundation, USA, community crisis response by the National Organisation for Victim Assistance (NOVA), USA, as well as Applied Suicide Intervention Skills Training (ASIST) by LivingWorks, Canada. Her recent writing concerns meaning-oriented narrative reconstruction with bereaved families, with an emphasis on conversational approaches for fostering new meaning and action.

Find out more at: www.anchorage-for-loss.org.

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