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Grief is a natural yet deeply individual process that can profoundly impact a person’s emotional, physical, and spiritual well-being. This training offers clinicians foundational knowledge and practical skills for supporting clients navigating loss in its many forms, including death, relationship endings, life transitions, and non-death losses. This training explores key grief theories, common misconceptions, cultural considerations, and the therapist’s role in fostering a safe, compassionate space for mourning and meaning-making. Clinicians will learn how to recognize the diverse manifestations of grief and how to respond with interventions that honor both the universality and uniqueness of each client’s experience.

Upon completion of this training, participants will be able to

  • Describe at least three theoretical models of grief and their implications for clinical practice.
  • Identify common myths and cultural variations in the grieving process that may affect client expectations and experiences.
  • Explain how to implement at least two evidence-based strategies for creating a supportive therapeutic environment for clients experiencing grief.

Syllabus:

Introduction

Objective #1: Foundations of Grief

  • Definitions and Types of Loss
  • Common Misconceptions
  • Individual Nature of Grief

Objective #2: The Grieving Process

  • Emotional, Physical, and Cognitive Responses
  • Grief Models and Theories
  • Variability in Grief Experiences

Objective #3: Cultural and Contextual Considerations

  • Cultural Influences on Grief
  • Non-Death and Disenfranchised Grief
  • Impact of Life Transitions

Objective #4: Clinical Support Strategies

  • Creating a Safe Therapeutic Space
  • Communication and Presence
  • Supporting Meaning-Making

Summary/Q&A


Social workers completing this course receive 1.5 Clinical asynchronous continuing education credits.

For other board approvals, this course qualifies for 1.5 Clinical continuing education training.

Instructor: Dreya Blume, LCSW

Recording Date: March 9, 2026


CEUS On-Demand, LLC, provider #2274, is approved as an ACE provider to offer social work continuing education by the Association of Social Work Boards (ASWB) Approved Continuing Education (ACE) program. Regulatory boards are the final authority on courses accepted for continuing education credit. ACE provider approval period: 08/7/2025 - 08/6/2026. Social workers completing this course receive 1.5hrs Clinical continuing education credits.  

CEUs On-Demand, LLC has been approved by NBCC as an Approved Continuing Education Provider, ACEP No. 7091. Programs that do not qualify for NBCC credit are clearly identified. CEUs On-Demand, LLC is solely responsible for all aspects of the programs.

System Requirements: Firefox, Chrome, Brave, Safari, Edge on any modern operating system (Windows, MacOS, Linux, Android, iOS). A desktop browser is recommended. We do not provide support resources for issues encountered using a mobile device.

Request for Special Accommodations: Learners can request special accommodations by contacting the administrative team at admin@ceus-ondemand.com


Course Instructor: Dreya Blume is a licensed clinical social worker, with her MSW from Radford University and an MA in anthropology from the University of Hawaii. Dreya has twenty years of experience working in mental health, from case management to intensive in-home services to leading groups for addicts in recovery. Dreya began a part-time counseling practice in 2004, and as a psychotherapist, her focus has been on serving the LGBTQ+ community. Dreya also has been a teacher for thirty years. Prior to her career in social work, she taught English in places such as Japan, Thailand, Australia, and Hawaii. Since 2010, Dreya has been an adjunct professor for Virginia Western Community College, preparing future social workers for the field. In her spare time, Dreya loves to write. She is the author of a number of books (published under her former name, Andy Matzner), including “Everyone Has a Story: Using the Hero’s Journey and Narrative Therapy to Reframe the Struggle of Mental Illness,” “The Tarot Activity Book: A Collection of Creative and Therapeutic Ideas for the Cards,” and “The Buddha Diet: A Guide to Creating a Positive Relationship with Food and Eating.”

Course Content

Begin Lesson – Introduction to Griefwork
Introduction to Griefwork
Online Training Evaluation For Asynchronous