2026 NASW-NC Virtual Fall Conference

MAY 11-12, 2026 | UP TO 31 HOURS OF CE LIVE AND RECORDED

2026 Virtual Clinical Social Work Institute

2026 Virtual Clinical Social Work Institute

  • Contains 1 Component(s)

    Please join us to speak LIVE with the sponsors and exhibitors of the 2026 NASW-NC Virtual Clinical Social Work Institute during lunch.

    Please join us to speak LIVE with the sponsors and exhibitors of the 2026 NASW-NC Virtual Clinical Social Work Institute during lunch.

  • Contains 1 Component(s)

    Please join us to speak LIVE with the sponsors and exhibitors of the 2026 NASW-NC Virtual Clinical Social Work Institute during lunch.

    Please join us to speak LIVE with the sponsors and exhibitors of the 2026 NASW-NC Virtual Clinical Social Work Institute during lunch.

  • Contains 3 Component(s), Includes Credits

    Clinical social workers are increasingly practicing in environments where social, political, and legal forces directly impact client safety, access to care, and autonomy. This workshop examines how to remain ethically grounded when professional values collide with restrictive laws, organizational mandates, or public pressure to remain “neutral.” Participants will explore real-world scenarios involving marginalized communities, where silence, compliance, or inaction may unintentionally cause harm. Using the NASW Code of Ethics as a living document rather than a static rulebook, the training emphasizes ethical reasoning over rigid answers. Through case analysis, guided reflection, and practical tools, clinicians will learn how to assess competing obligations, articulate ethical rationale, and make defensible decisions under scrutiny. The workshop also addresses moral distress and fear-driven decision-making, offering strategies to support ethical courage without reckless risk. Participants leave with a clear, repeatable framework for navigating politicized practice while staying aligned with professional ethics and clinical responsibility.

    Clinical social workers are increasingly practicing in environments where social, political, and legal forces directly impact client safety, access to care, and autonomy. This workshop examines how to remain ethically grounded when professional values collide with restrictive laws, organizational mandates, or public pressure to remain “neutral.” Participants will explore real-world scenarios involving marginalized communities, where silence, compliance, or inaction may unintentionally cause harm. Using the NASW Code of Ethics as a living document rather than a static rulebook, the training emphasizes ethical reasoning over rigid answers. Through case analysis, guided reflection, and practical tools, clinicians will learn how to assess competing obligations, articulate ethical rationale, and make defensible decisions under scrutiny. The workshop also addresses moral distress and fear-driven decision-making, offering strategies to support ethical courage without reckless risk. Participants leave with a clear, repeatable framework for navigating politicized practice while staying aligned with professional ethics and clinical responsibility.
    Katharine Campbell, PhD, LCSW

    Katharine Campbell, PhD, LCSW

    Dr. Katharine Campbell is an LCSW in private practice in NC, FL and TN where she provides counseling services focused on LGB care, transgender care, trauma informed care and medical specific care. Additionally, Dr Campbell provides nonprofit consulting and speaking services focused on increased efficient and effective clinical provisions.
  • Contains 3 Component(s), Includes Credits

    Perimenopause is a major life transition that can profoundly affect mental health, yet it is often overlooked or misdiagnosed. This session equips clinicians to identify the biological, psychological, and social features of perimenopause and recognize associated mental health symptoms including mood, trauma-related, and cognitive changes. Participants will learn trauma-informed, culturally responsive strategies to support clients, reduce misdiagnosis, and promote well-being. The session also covers collaboration and advocacy with medical providers and systems to improve outcomes. Attendees will leave with practical strategies and increased confidence for identifying and supporting clients through this critical life stage.

    Perimenopause is a major life transition that can profoundly affect mental health, yet it is often overlooked or misdiagnosed. This session equips clinicians to identify the biological, psychological, and social features of perimenopause and recognize associated mental health symptoms including mood, trauma-related, and cognitive changes. Participants will learn trauma-informed, culturally responsive strategies to support clients, reduce misdiagnosis, and promote well-being. The session also covers collaboration and advocacy with medical providers and systems to improve outcomes. Attendees will leave with practical strategies and increased confidence for identifying and supporting clients through this critical life stage.
    Avery Grant, LCSWA

    Avery Grant, LCSWA

    Co-founder

    Common Counseling

    Avery Grant is a Licensed Clinical Social Work Associate and co-founder of Common Counseling, a private practice that values common ground between client and clinician. Avery received their MSW from UNC Charlotte and also holds a master’s degree in Education from Emerson College and a BA from Smith College. Avery specializes in midlife mental healthcare with a focus on anxious attachment/codependency, open relationships, and the queer community. Their work is informed by EMDR, parts work/reparenting, recovery programs, and somatic approaches. Avery is a member of the NASW, Charlotte Trans Health, and the Carolinas LGBTQ Chamber Of Commerce.
  • Contains 3 Component(s), Includes Credits

    When a family hears "dementia," they start making irreversible decisions such as selling the house, quitting jobs, and planning for memory care. But what if the diagnosis was wrong? As a pharmacist specializing in older adults, I've reviewed medication lists where the "dementia" diagnosis was actually drug-induced cognitive impairment—completely reversible once identified; Anticholinergics hiding in PM medications. Benzodiazepines prescribed years ago and never stopped. Sedatives masking as sleep aids. Social workers are often the first professionals families trust during care transitions. You see the medication lists. You hear the family's timeline. You're positioned to catch what others miss if you know what to look for. This workshop introduces the MEDIC framework: a systematic approach to identifying medication red flags before families commit to permanent care decisions. You'll leave with practical tools to ask better questions and recognize when "dementia" deserves a second look.

    When a family hears "dementia," they start making irreversible decisions such as selling the house, quitting jobs, and planning for memory care. But what if the diagnosis was wrong? As a pharmacist specializing in older adults, I've reviewed medication lists where the "dementia" diagnosis was actually drug-induced cognitive impairment—completely reversible once identified; Anticholinergics hiding in PM medications. Benzodiazepines prescribed years ago and never stopped. Sedatives masking as sleep aids. Social workers are often the first professionals families trust during care transitions. You see the medication lists. You hear the family's timeline. You're positioned to catch what others miss if you know what to look for. This workshop introduces the MEDIC framework: a systematic approach to identifying medication red flags before families commit to permanent care decisions. You'll leave with practical tools to ask better questions and recognize when "dementia" deserves a second look.
    Jered Yalung, PharmD, CDP

    Jered Yalung, PharmD, CDP

    Owner

    Options Home Care

    Jered Yalung, PharmD, CDP, is a clinical pharmacist and Certified Dementia Practitioner who owns Options Home Care, a pharmacist-owned non-medical home care agency serving the Triad region of North Carolina. After years in long-term care pharmacy watching preventable medication problems go unaddressed, he now focuses on translating medication complexity for families navigating cognitive decline. He developed the MEDIC framework to systematically identify medication-induced cognitive impairment before families accept dementia diagnoses. His work has been published in McKnight's Home Care, and he was named a 2026 Triad Business Journal 40 Under 40 honoree.

  • Contains 3 Component(s), Includes Credits

    This session explores how social workers can rebuild trust and strengthen engagement with clients who feel overwhelmed or disconnected due to a variety of factors such as lack of trust. We will discuss how Accelerated Resolution Therapy (ART) quickly reduces trauma symptoms without retraumatization, while also helping protect clinicians from compassion fatigue. Through case examples and interactive activities, participants will learn practical, trauma-informed strategies they can use immediately across clinical, school, healthcare, crisis, and community settings.

    This session explores how social workers can rebuild trust and strengthen engagement with clients who feel overwhelmed or disconnected due to a variety of factors such as lack of trust. We will discuss how Accelerated Resolution Therapy (ART) quickly reduces trauma symptoms without retraumatization, while also helping protect clinicians from compassion fatigue. Through case examples and interactive activities, participants will learn practical, trauma-informed strategies they can use immediately across clinical, school, healthcare, crisis, and community settings.
    Ashley Buckner LCSW, LCSW- QS, LISW- CP, LICSW, LISW, LISW-S, LSCSW, LCSW-C, LIMHP, MCAP, ICADC, CEOLD, CSW-G

    Ashley Buckner LCSW, LCSW- QS, LISW- CP, LICSW, LISW, LISW-S, LSCSW, LCSW-C, LIMHP, MCAP, ICADC, CEOLD, CSW-G

    Founder

    Anchor & Rise Therapy

    Ashley Buckner, LCSW, LCSW-QS, LISW-CP, LICSW, LISW-S, LSCSW, LCSW-C, LIMHP, MCAP, ICADC, CEOLD, CSW-G is an A.R.T. certified, multi-state licensed clinical social worker, clinical supervisor, and founder of Anchor & Rise Therapy. She is recognized for her expertise in trauma-informed care, LGBTQIA+ inclusive and gender-affirming care, Accelerated Resolution Therapy, and clinical supervision across 30 states, as well as for developing high-impact training, consultation, and integrated behavioral health solutions that elevate clinical practice and workforce wellbeing.
    Bonnie Russo, LCSW, QS, MCAP

    Bonnie Russo, LCSW, QS, MCAP

    Founder

    Papillon Health & Wellness and Bridges to Wellness, Inc.

    Bonnie Russo, LCSW, QS, MCAP (pending), is an enthusiastic, trauma-informed psychotherapist and the founder of Papillon Health & Wellness and Bridges to Wellness, Inc. With both clinical expertise and lived experience, she brings warmth, energy, and deep compassion to her work with adults, seniors, veterans, and families. Bonnie specializes in trauma recovery, addiction, codependency, and high-conflict family systems, offering therapy, ART intensives, advocacy, and community wellness services. Her approach is uplifting and deeply relatable—helping people feel seen, supported, and empowered to turn their pain into purpose and create a life they’re proud of.
  • Contains 3 Component(s), Includes Credits

    Middle Eastern and North African (MENA) communities are often underserved and misunderstood within mental health systems in the United States. This presentation provides clinical social workers with a foundational understanding of the MENA region, including the countries it encompasses and patterns of migration to the U.S. Participants will explore the historical, political, and collective trauma shaping many MENA clients’ experiences, as well as the impact of war, displacement, colonialism, and ongoing global conflict. The session will examine cultural and religious contexts; including family structure, values, identity, and stigma, and how these factors influence mental health presentation and engagement in treatment. Emphasis will be placed on culturally responsive, trauma-informed clinical considerations to support effective assessment, therapeutic rapport, and intervention. This presentation is designed to strengthen clinicians’ cultural humility, competence, and effectiveness when working with MENA individuals and families across practice settings.

    Middle Eastern and North African (MENA) communities are often underserved and misunderstood within mental health systems in the United States. This presentation provides clinical social workers with a foundational understanding of the MENA region, including the countries it encompasses and patterns of migration to the U.S. Participants will explore the historical, political, and collective trauma shaping many MENA clients’ experiences, as well as the impact of war, displacement, colonialism, and ongoing global conflict. The session will examine cultural and religious contexts; including family structure, values, identity, and stigma, and how these factors influence mental health presentation and engagement in treatment. Emphasis will be placed on culturally responsive, trauma-informed clinical considerations to support effective assessment, therapeutic rapport, and intervention. This presentation is designed to strengthen clinicians’ cultural humility, competence, and effectiveness when working with MENA individuals and families across practice settings.
    Christeen Badie MSW, LCSWA, LGSW

    Christeen Badie MSW, LCSWA, LGSW

    The Holistic Living Co.

    Christeen is a Licensed Social Worker in NC and Washington, DC, with over 14 years of experience spanning clinical practice, program development, change management, and learning. She immigrated to NC as a pre-teen and received asylum status, an experience that informs her clinical focus and led her to establish her private practice, The Holistic Living Co., where she provides clinical care to immigrants across generations and well-being programming for organizations. Christeen supported violence prevention and child and family well-being across healthcare, corporate, and community settings. She holds a Master of Social Work from Rutgers University, and is fluent in Arabic.
  • Contains 3 Component(s), Includes Credits

    Social workers often ask clients to build self-awareness, set boundaries, and practice self-care—while navigating chronic stress and trauma exposure themselves. This session offers a practical, conversational look at the SELF CARE framework as a shared clinical language and an ethical responsibility in social work practice. Participants will explore how provider health directly affects decision-making, boundaries, and client outcomes, and how misalignment between insight and application can contribute to burnout and codependent patterns. The framework integrates principles found across therapeutic models, helping clinicians reduce confusion while strengthening consistency in how self-care is understood, modeled, and practiced. Attendees will gain tools to recognize early signs of strain, deepen their own application of therapeutic principles, and engage in recovery-oriented work that supports sustainability—for themselves and alongside the clients they serve.

    Social workers often ask clients to build self-awareness, set boundaries, and practice self-care—while navigating chronic stress and trauma exposure themselves. This session offers a practical, conversational look at the SELF CARE framework as a shared clinical language and an ethical responsibility in social work practice. Participants will explore how provider health directly affects decision-making, boundaries, and client outcomes, and how misalignment between insight and application can contribute to burnout and codependent patterns. The framework integrates principles found across therapeutic models, helping clinicians reduce confusion while strengthening consistency in how self-care is understood, modeled, and practiced. Attendees will gain tools to recognize early signs of strain, deepen their own application of therapeutic principles, and engage in recovery-oriented work that supports sustainability—for themselves and alongside the clients they serve.
    Sara Wilder, LCSW, LCAS, CCS

    Sara Wilder, LCSW, LCAS, CCS

    Founder

    Fresh Perspective

    Sara Wilder, LCSW, LCAS, CCS is a licensed clinical social worker and addiction specialist with over a decade of experience across corrections, inpatient psychiatry, residential recovery, and private practice. She is the founder of Fresh Perspective, a program rooted in the belief that recovery is a belief system nourished through our relationship with food. A passionate advocate for holistic healing and provider well-being, Sara brings her lived experience and clinical expertise to empower others toward sustainable transformation.
  • Contains 3 Component(s), Includes Credits

    End-of-life care is never culturally neutral. This training explores how cultural values, family systems, spirituality, and historical agency mistrust shape end-of-life experiences and decision-making for older adults. Participants will examine common ethical tensions between Western models of individual autonomy and family-centered approaches, and learn how to engage in advance care planning conversations with greater cultural humility and sensitivity. Through case examples and practical clinical language, clinicians will gain tools to reduce harm, navigate complex family dynamics, and support clients’ values without pathologizing difference. Emphasis is placed on respectful communication, ethical reflection, honoring religious beliefs, and relational approaches that build trust with aging clients and their families across diverse cultural backgrounds.

    End-of-life care is never culturally neutral. This training explores how cultural values, family systems, spirituality, and historical agency mistrust shape end-of-life experiences and decision-making for older adults. Participants will examine common ethical tensions between Western models of individual autonomy and family-centered approaches, and learn how to engage in advance care planning conversations with greater cultural humility and sensitivity. Through case examples and practical clinical language, clinicians will gain tools to reduce harm, navigate complex family dynamics, and support clients’ values without pathologizing difference. Emphasis is placed on respectful communication, ethical reflection, honoring religious beliefs, and relational approaches that build trust with aging clients and their families across diverse cultural backgrounds.

    Joanna Nunez, MSW, LCAS, LCSW

    Joanna Nunez, MSW, LCAS, LCSW

    Joanna Núñez, MSW, LCAS, LCSW is a Licensed Clinical Social Worker and trauma-informed therapist with a private practice established in 2010. She holds a Certification in Palliative Care from Stanford University and brings extensive experience supporting individuals and families navigating serious illness, caregiving, grief, and complex life transitions, including ALS. Joanna’s experience working with Service Members and Veterans has broadened her understanding of trauma, loss, and resilience across diverse populations. Joanna has presented nationally and internationally on Amyotropic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS), Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD), and Moral Injury. Her book Finding Peace with PTSD was published in 2015 and 2026.