Virtual Clinical Supervision 2.5 hour CEU

$30.00

This is a bonus training for clinical supervisors who are interested in providing virtual clinical supervision. This is not a requirement of the BSRB for supervision certification. 

By the end of this training, you will be able to:

1.    Describe how virtual clinical supervision differs from in-person supervision and identify the unique opportunities and challenges it presents.

2.    Apply HIPAA compliance standards and platform security requirements to virtual supervision practice, including selection of appropriate technology platforms.

3.    Develop and deliver informed consent processes specific to telehealth supervision, including disclosure of technology use, security limitations, and supervisee rights.

4.    Design and implement protocols for managing technical difficulties that minimize clinical and relational disruption.

5.    Apply evidence-informed strategies for building and sustaining the supervisory relationship and supervisee engagement in a virtual environment.

6.    Apply ethical and legal frameworks — including state licensure requirements, interstate practice considerations, and professional ethics codes — to virtual supervision contexts.

7.    Use virtual observation methods — including recording review, live virtual observation, and platform-based collaboration tools — effectively and ethically.

8.    Identify multicultural considerations specific to virtual supervision and apply culturally responsive practices in digital environments.

9.    Develop and maintain documentation practices appropriate for virtual supervision, including session records, informed consent, and security protocols.

This is a bonus training for clinical supervisors who are interested in providing virtual clinical supervision. This is not a requirement of the BSRB for supervision certification. 

By the end of this training, you will be able to:

1.    Describe how virtual clinical supervision differs from in-person supervision and identify the unique opportunities and challenges it presents.

2.    Apply HIPAA compliance standards and platform security requirements to virtual supervision practice, including selection of appropriate technology platforms.

3.    Develop and deliver informed consent processes specific to telehealth supervision, including disclosure of technology use, security limitations, and supervisee rights.

4.    Design and implement protocols for managing technical difficulties that minimize clinical and relational disruption.

5.    Apply evidence-informed strategies for building and sustaining the supervisory relationship and supervisee engagement in a virtual environment.

6.    Apply ethical and legal frameworks — including state licensure requirements, interstate practice considerations, and professional ethics codes — to virtual supervision contexts.

7.    Use virtual observation methods — including recording review, live virtual observation, and platform-based collaboration tools — effectively and ethically.

8.    Identify multicultural considerations specific to virtual supervision and apply culturally responsive practices in digital environments.

9.    Develop and maintain documentation practices appropriate for virtual supervision, including session records, informed consent, and security protocols.