These courses are accredited in the province of Alberta for 2 CME credits each.
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Course Objectives
By the end of this course, participants will be equipped to:
- Describe traditional and contemporary grief theories.
- Explain Landscape of Grief areas for assessment and intervention developed by the Children’s Grief Centre.
- Describe the concept and experience of loss throughout the lifespan.
- Demonstrate skills in the use of concrete intervention tools to assess and support grief in children, teens, and families.

Course Objectives
By the end of this course, participants will be equipped to:
- Recognize highly sensitive teens.
- Explain the common ways highly sensitive teens struggle.
- Describe strategies for parents to help their teen.
- Describe strategies for highly sensitive teens to manage emotions.

Course Objectives
By the end of this course, participants will be equipped to:
- Explain how cannabis acts on the endocannabinoid system and how the endocannabinoid system is involved in neurodevelopmental processes.
- Describe the current state of knowledge regarding the impacts of adolescent cannabis use in humans on brain development and neuropsychological function.
- Explain how preclinical literature using animal models informs the influence of cannabis in humans and describe what we know about the neurodevelopmental impacts of cannabis exposure during adolescence.

Course Objectives
By the end of this course, participants will be equipped to:
- Describe traditional and contemporary grief theories.
- Explain Landscape of Grief areas for assessment and intervention developed by the Children’s Grief Centre.
- Describe the concept and experience of loss throughout the lifespan.
- Demonstrate skills in the use of concrete intervention tools to assess and support grief in children, teens, and families.

Course Objectives
By the end of this course, participants will be equipped to:
- Differentiate between mental distress, mental health problems, and mental disorders, and apply these distinctions when assessing and responding to mental health presentations in emerging adults.
- Describe core developmental tasks of emerging adulthood—such as identity exploration, increasing independence, and evolving relationship dynamics—and explain how these influence mental health and care needs.
- Identify signs and symptoms of common mental disorders that typically emerge between ages 16 and 25, including how they may present in ways that impact daily functioning, relationships, or educational performance.
- Use developmentally appropriate, non-pathologizing language when engaging young people in conversations about mental health, including strategies to normalize stress and differentiate it from clinical concern.
- Recognize common barriers to help-seeking in emerging adults, and apply engagement strategies that support autonomy, build trust, and address discomfort with mental illness or professional care.
- Outline general principles for when to intervene, offer brief support, or connect emerging adults to additional care, while considering their developmental stage, evolving identity, and broader social context.
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Wish to view or revisit previously offered courses? Check them out in the Category B area.

