Professionals who are Grieving
Payment Options: Credit Card, PayPal, Venmo, or Pay Later (4 payments)
Rewards: You earn 10% on all of your orders towards your next purchase.
The add to cart button will appear once you select the values above
Specifications
This course does not offer CE Credits. The same course is available for purchase and offers 1.5 CE hours for behavioral health clinicians. See "related products" below. When clinicians are grieving, clinical work can become more complicated in ways that are both deeply personal and professionally significant. A client’s story may touch on a recent loss, questions about time away from work may raise decisions about what to share, and returning to a caseload may require more intentional boundaries than usual. During these seasons, clinicians need ways to care for themselves while continuing to protect the client-centered focus of therapy. In this training, clinicians are invited to examine the ethical and relational decisions that can arise when their own grief intersects with client care. The course explores how to think through disclosure following a loss, how to distinguish self-disclosure from self-involving responses, and how to decide what information may or may not be clinically appropriate to share with different clients. Tiffani Dilworth is a licensed clinical professional counselor and fellow in thanatology who has trained a wide range of organizations, including the U.S. Air Force chaplain team. Her experience at the intersection of grief, loss, and clinical practice informs her approach to ethical disclosure, grounding skills, self-care, and work-related boundaries for clinicians navigating their own seasons of grief. Ms. Dilworth offers practical frameworks for assessing the purpose, timing, and potential impact of sharing personal information. You will explore how a client's unique needs, attachment patterns, and expectations of the therapy relationship influence whether disclosure helps or hinders their progress. The discussion also covers how to navigate direct personal questions, repair moments when sharing doesn't land as intended, and skillfully guide the focus back to the client. Because grief can be unpredictably activated during a session, having immediate grounding strategies is essential. Drawing from Compassion-Focused Therapy, you will learn to navigate your own threat, drive, and soothing systems. Techniques like mindful movement, soothing rhythm breathing, and compassionate imagery will equip you to stay anchored in the present moment. Finally, the content extends beyond the therapy hour, offering guidance on recognizing your window of tolerance and setting sustainable, work-related boundaries as you transition back to your caseload. Holding space for clients while grieving requires honesty, discernment, and care. This training offers clinicians a grounded way to navigate disclosure, manage in-session triggers, and return to work with boundaries that support both client care and clinician well-being. Register for the course to learn strategies you can apply during seasons of personal loss. This is a non-interactive, self-study course. Instruction consists of 1.5 hours of video instruction and a course evaluation. From the time of registration, you have six months to access the coursework. This course is intended for clinicians who provide behavioral health services. This is a non-interactive, self-study course. Teaching methods for this course include recorded lectures, videos, a post-test, and a course evaluation. Course access and completion instructions. Miss Dilworth is a successful psychotherapist, author, and sought-after speaker on topics related to grief, PTSD, and sexual assault. Miss Dilworth earned her Master’s in Community Counseling from Oklahoma State University. She is a Licensed Clinical Professional Counselor specializing in grief and trauma and a Fellow in Thanatology. She has worked across the US with various organizations, schools, universities, and corporations to bring awareness to the grieving process and to teach countless people how to live alongside their grief. In addition to facilitating trainings for the United States Air Force Chaplain Team, Miss Dilworth maintains a private practice and provides professional training for clinicians in need of CEs. Drawing on her rich clinical experience, Ms. Dilworth incorporates the most current information on the process of grieving with evidence-based and innovative treatment techniques that clinicians can immediately use in their practice. She’s the author of the books 11 Tools to Help Manage the Aftermath of Trauma and Types of Grief, and the host of Managing My Grief Podcast. The instructor(s) for this course receive compensation for their services. There are no reported conflicts of interest to disclose. This course does not offer continuing education hours of credit. See "related courses" below for the version that offers 1.5 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. Close Captioning is available for live webinars and recorded video presentations. You can click on the following links to view our policies:Description
Key Takeaways
Why This Course?
Learning Objectives
Format and Access
Course Details
Availability:
Who Should Attend:
Teaching Methods:
How to Attend:
Instructor and Disclosures
Instructor

About Tiffani Dilworth, MA, LCPC
Disclosure Statement:
CE Hours
Credit Hours:
Accommodations and Policies
This course was recorded 4/10/2026
Related products
Testimonials
Iveyana Kiara Smith
Jessy Hainbach
Bryant Wilson
Ben Keyser
Mei Chan
Meghan Co, LCSW-C, LICSW