Description

LIVE STREAM: June 1 – 3, 2026 from 8:30am – 4:00pm (Halifax, NS) Please adjust your start time according to your specific time zone.
ON-DEMAND: Recorded footage & course content (certificate, videos, quiz) will be available until July 13, 2026. Please allow 3 – 10 business days for footage to be processed. Extensions cannot be granted under any circumstances.
June 1, 2026 | Day One
Synthesizing Neuroscience, Attachment Theory and Evidence-Based Modalities
Presented by John Arden, Ph.D., ABPP
This intensive explores a groundbreaking shift in how trauma, anxiety, and depression are understood and treated. It synthesizes research from various fields—metabolism, psychoneuroimmunology, epigenetics, and neuroscience—into an integrated model of mental health care. This model emphasizes the critical connections between the immune system, diet, brain structure, and even gut bacteria, offering a comprehensive vision of how these factors influence mental health and emotional well-being.
A key aspect of the intensive is its focus on clarifying fundamental terms like energy, mind, and self, which have been used ambiguously in both scientific and therapeutic contexts for over a century. By drawing on the latest research, the intensive proposes a more unified understanding of these concepts, offering a more precise framework for mental health professionals. It highlights how the brain’s mental operating networks create and influence our states of mind, which interact in feedback loops to form what we think of as the mind.
Therapists of the 21st century are increasingly expected to play a more holistic role in mental health care, akin to healthcare workers addressing the full range of mind-body-brain interactions. This intensive reflects that shift, encouraging practitioners to expand their toolkit to include an awareness of the body’s physiological processes and how they influence mental health.
The intensive concludes with an exploration of positive psychology and the role of contemplative practices like mindfulness, offering insights into how these approaches can enhance therapeutic work and promote resilience and healing.
Ultimately, this intensive is about rethinking how we approach mental health treatment, integrating a wide array of scientific disciplines to provide a more holistic and effective model for healing.
May 21, 2026 | Day Two
Synthesizing Neuroscience, Attachment Theory and Evidence-Based Modalities
Presented by John Arden, Ph.D., ABPP
Continuation of day one
June 3, 2026 | Day Three
Evidence-Based Treatments for Trauma, Chronic Anxiety, Depression, OCD and PTSD
Presented by Carissa Muth, Psy.D., CCC, R.Psych
In this workshop Dr. Carissa Muth guides participants through the complex landscape of treating co-occurring disorders, moving beyond “siloed” manuals to an integrated, evidence-based framework. Participants will examine the “Gold Standard” protocols for PTSD, OCD, Anxiety, and Depression—specifically Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT), Exposure and Response Prevention (ERP), and Trauma-Focused interventions—understanding not just how to use them, but when to sequence them for maximum efficacy. The course tackles the common clinical dilemma of the “complex client,” where trauma symptoms often fuel obsessive-compulsive cycles or depressive avoidance, requiring a nuanced, transdiagnostic approach. Dr. Muth will provide a roadmap for distinguishing between overlapping symptoms (e.g., intrusive trauma memories vs. OCD obsessions) to prevent misdiagnosis and contraindicated treatment. Through clinical demonstrations and case analysis, therapists will learn to build “fear hierarchies” that address multiple pathologies simultaneously while maintaining the therapeutic alliance. Finally, the workshop addresses the critical role of attachment and nervous system regulation in preparing high-acuity clients for the rigors of exposure-based work.








