Adjustment to Disability Counseling: A Comprehensive Overview for Behavioral Health Professionals

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Specifications

Format: Online Self-Study
CE Hours: 0
Included: Downloadable e-book of course slides, a downloadable certificate of completion, and course video(s).

Description

This course does not offer CE Credits. The same course is available for purchase and offers 6 CE hours for behavioral health clinicians.  See "related products" below.

Adjustment to Disability Counseling  A Comprehensive Overview for Counseling Professionals Promo

We are all, at best, “temporarily able-bodied.” Persons with disabilities and those living with chronic illness and disability represent a large and diverse population, yet many behavioral health professionals report feeling underprepared or uncomfortable addressing disability-related concerns in clinical practice. For clients, this gap can contribute to repeated referrals, misunderstanding, invalidation, and a lack of support for the emotional, relational, social, and identity-related dimensions of living with disability.

This course helps behavioral health professionals develop a more disability-affirming approach to counseling clients with chronic illness and disability. Rather than focusing narrowly on symptom reduction or “fixing” disability, the training explores how clinicians can better understand clients’ lived experience, support adjustment or response to disability, and provide care that respects autonomy, dignity, meaning-making, and disability identity.

You will learn from Michael Gerald, Ph.D., LCMHC, LMHC, CRC, and Jennifer Hunsaker, MRC, CRC, ACMHC, LPC, faculty members in Rehabilitation Counseling at Utah State University. Dr. Gerald and Ms. Hunsaker are also clinicians at their on-campus teaching and learning clinic, Clinical Rehabilitation Counseling Services, which provides mental health services for persons with chronic illness, disability, and neurodevelopmental disability. Their combined academic, clinical, and rehabilitation counseling experience supports the course’s focus on translating disability-affirming principles into behavioral health practice.

Dr. Gerald and Ms. Hunsaker present adjustment to disability counseling as a flexible framework that can be integrated across theoretical orientations. Rather than treating disability as something clinicians must fix, explain, or move clients beyond, the course encourages clinicians to begin with the client’s own experience. From this perspective, effective counseling requires curiosity, humility, and a willingness to understand how disability may shape identity, relationships, autonomy, belonging, and the therapeutic relationship itself.

The training situates this clinical work within a broader understanding of disability, including how medical, social, environmental, functional, and sociopolitical perspectives influence the way disability is understood and addressed. Dr. Gerald and Ms. Hunsaker connect these models to the real-world effects of ableism, stigma, prejudice, discrimination, and social exclusion, while emphasizing that adjustment does not follow one correct path. Through case examples, clinicians consider how clients may be navigating loss, uncertainty, changing roles, social disconnection, or symptoms that may not resolve—and how therapy can offer a space of deep empathic understanding, nonjudgmental acceptance, and support as clients make sense of their experience and develop a more integrated, affirmed sense of self.

Key Takeaways

  • Disability-Affirming Framework: Develop a disability-affirming approach that centers the lived experience, autonomy, dignity, and identity of persons with disabilities and those living with chronic illness and disability.
  • Adjustment and Meaning-Making: Understand adjustment or response to disability as a complex, individualized process shaped by personal meaning, social context, functional changes, identity, stigma, support, and environmental barriers.
  • Clinically Grounded Counseling Practice: Strengthen your ability to use foundational counseling skills—such as deep empathic understanding, validation, reflection, nonjudgmental acceptance, and careful self-awareness—to better support clients with chronic illness and disability.

Why This Course?

  • Addresses a Common Training Gap: Many clinicians receive limited preparation for working with clients with chronic illness and disability, despite the prevalence of disability and the frequency with which these concerns intersect with mental health care.
  • Moves Beyond “Fixing” Disability: The course helps clinicians avoid unintentionally reinforcing ableist assumptions, overemphasizing symptom elimination, or setting expectations for how clients “should” adjust.
  • Supports More Affirming Clinical Relationships: By focusing on the therapeutic relationship, meaning-making, disability identity, and social inclusion, the training helps clinicians provide care that is more respectful, responsive, and clinically attuned.

Learning Objectives:

  • Define Clinical Rehabilitation Counseling and the perspective of Clinical Rehabilitation Counseling with respect to serving Persons with Disabilities (PWD).
  • Describe and summarize models and definitions of Disability.
  • Define response to or adjustment to Disability and its effect on the counseling process.
  • Identify and describe factors that influence response to Disability.
  • Define and discuss Disability Identity and its influence on adjustment to Disability.
  • Discuss Clinical Rehabilitation Counseling for Persons with CID: A Disability-Affirming Approach.

To provide more equitable and effective care for persons with chronic illness and disability, clinicians need more than general goodwill or broad cultural sensitivity. This course offers a clinically grounded way to understand disability as lived experience, social context, and an important part of the counseling relationship. We invite you to enroll to strengthen your ability to support this chronically underserved population with greater confidence, humility, and care.

Enroll now in this course to gain the confidence you need to serve this chronically underserved population.

Format and Access

 This is a non-interactive, self-study course. Instruction consists of 6 hours of video instruction and a course evaluation. 

Course Details

Availability: 

From the time of registration, you have six months to access the coursework.

Who Should Attend: 

This course is intended for clinicians who provide behavioral health services.

Teaching Methods: 

This is a non-interactive, self-study course. Teaching methods for this course include recorded lectures, videos, a post-test, and a course evaluation.

How to Attend: 

Course access and completion instructions.

Instructor and Disclosures

Instructors

Michael Gerald Headshot

Michael Gerald, Ph.D., LCMHC, LMHC, CRC

Michael Esteban Gerald is currently employed as an Assistant Professor in Rehabilitation Counseling at Utah State University (USU) in Logan, UT. Michael currently directs the Clinical Rehabilitation Counseling Services (CRCS), which provides clinical mental health counseling services for persons with Chronic Illness, Disability, and Developmental Disability. Michael earned a PhD in Rehabilitation Counselor Education from the University of Iowa. Michael is currently a Licensed Mental Health Counselor (LMHC-Iowa), Licensed Clinical Mental Health Counselor (CMHC-Utah), and a Certified Rehabilitation Counselor (CRC).

Jennifer Hunsaker Headshot

About Jennifer Hunsaker, MRC, CRC, ACMHC

Jennifer Johnson Hunsaker is a Professional Practice Assistant Professor in Rehabilitation Counseling at Utah State University (USU) in Logan, UT. Jennifer is also a clinician and clinical supervisor with the Clinical Rehabilitation Counseling Services (CRCS) of the Sorenson Center for Clinical Excellence (SCCE), which provides clinical mental health counseling services for persons with Chronic Illness, Disability, and Developmental Disability. Jennifer owns a mental health practice with offices in Utah and Idaho and has grown it into a thriving hub for chronically underserved populations. Jennifer is currently an Associate Clinical Mental Health Counselor (ACMHC-Utah) and a Certified Rehabilitation Counselor (CRC).

Disclosure Statement: 

The instructor(s) for this course receive compensation for their services. There are no reported conflicts of interest to disclose.

CE Hours

Credit Hours:

This course does not offer continuing education hours of credit.  See "related courses" below for the version that offers 6 CEs.

This course is a non-interactive, online self-study.

Participants may request a printed version of their certificate of completion to be delivered by mail. A shipping/handling fee of $6.95 will be charged per request. Shipping internationally may require an additional charge.

Accommodations and Policies

Close Captioning is available for live webinars and recorded video presentations.

You can click on the following links to view our policies:

This course was recorded 2/13/2026

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