
Wednesday, February 4, 12 to 1p.m. EST, on Zoom
Developed by: Michael Antoni Ph.D. Professor, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, University of Miami Miller School of Medicine; Professor, Department of Psychology, University of Miami. Lead, Biobehavioral Oncology and Cancer Epidemiology Program, and Principal Investigator in the Antoni Lab at the Sylvester Cancer Center, Miami, Florida.
In a paper published in the Annual Review of Psychology, Antoni and his team shared decades of data from NCI-funded studies showing how stress reduction approaches, such as cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) and relaxation training, can improve outcomes for cancer patients. Much of the stress management research conducted at Sylvester has focused on breast and prostate cancer patients, and the long-term results have been encouraging.
What to expect:
Dr. Antoni and his team of collaborators, researchers in the Behavioral Medicine Research Center at the University of Miami, Department of Psychology, and the Sylvester Comprehensive Cancer Center developed a groundbreaking program intervention, based on the principles of Cognitive-Behavioral Stress Management (CBSM).
Guided by a Therapist Manual and Participant Workbook, four main workshop components (awareness, appraisal, coping, resources) follow a sequence of didactics:
In this Webinar, we’ll focus more on the fourth component, more specifically on how to engage patients in optimizing support systems to meet their needs and mitigate distress.
Featuring:
Celestina Martopullo is the psycho-oncology clinical lead practitioner for the Gastrointestinal Tumor Group in the Calgary zone, Department of Psychosocial Oncology, Arthur J.E. Child Comprehensive Cancer Center, Calgary, AB, for over 18 years.
She has established a record of success adapting and delivering CBT psychoeducational formats to patients, trainees, graduate clinical students, medical staff, and other stakeholders.
Celestina’s Psychosocial Oncology service is distinguished as clinically oriented, patient-centered, progressive (addresses systemic barriers through the ‘person-in-environment’s lens), and scholarly, whereby empirical evidence is valued in the service of enhancing clinical interventions, patients’ experiences, and outcomes.
Fees:
- FREE to CAPO Members
- FREE to Non-Member Patients/Caregivers
- $15 to Non-Members
We hope you’ll join us for this powerful and timely conversation.
Webinar access details will be provided in the registration confirmation email. Pending quality of the recording, this webcast will be available within 30 days of the live webinar.
If you are not a current member of CAPO, find out more about membership by going to https://capo.ca/apply