PLAY PODCASTS
Growing the Workforce for Psychedelic Assisted Therapy: Dr. Ingmar Gorman & Dr. Elizabeth Nielson, Co-Founders of Fluence Training
Episode 478

Growing the Workforce for Psychedelic Assisted Therapy: Dr. Ingmar Gorman & Dr. Elizabeth Nielson, Co-Founders of Fluence Training

For those proponents of psychedelic-assisted therapy concerned that demand for therapists will outstrip supply in the coming years, you may be reassured by today’s conversation with Dr. Ingmar Gorman and Dr. Elizabeth Nielson, psychologists who have been involved in FDA-approved clinical trials of MDMA and psilocybin, and the co-founders of a company called Fluence Training which is working to scale education for this purpose. As they explain to host Shiv Gaglani, they see their task, broadly speaking, as serving three categories of people: those with general interest in the field; all types of clinicians who want to be able to have informed conversations with patients wishing to discuss their current and/or future use; and those who want to become therapists in this modality. Fluence is especially well-positioned for that last group because of Gorman’s and Nielson’s involvement in designing therapy protocols in clinical trials, but also because of their work developing therapy manuals for drug companies. “If and when their drugs go to market, we’ll be able to train clinicians in the community who will be working with those compounds,” says Gorman. One bottom line message in this richly-informed discussion is that the field needs all comers and they hope people aren’t dissuaded by misconceptions about what’s required. “We hear all the time, 'I want to be involved, but I’d have to go back to school and get all these years of clinical experience' when the reality is there's just so many ways now to get involved,” says Nielson. This is a great overview of the status of training, the potential pitfalls awaiting the field, the importance of managing patient expectations, and much more. Mentioned in this episode: https://www.fluencetraining.com

Raise the Line · Dr. Elizabeth Nielson, Dr. Ingmar Gordon, Shiv Gaglani

May 16, 202442m 21s

Audio is streamed directly from the publisher (cdn.simplecast.com) as published in their RSS feed. Play Podcasts does not host this file. Rights-holders can request removal through the copyright & takedown page.

Show Notes

For those proponents of psychedelic-assisted therapy concerned that demand for therapists will outstrip supply in the coming years, you may be reassured by today’s conversation with Dr. Ingmar Gorman and Dr. Elizabeth Nielson, psychologists who have been involved in FDA-approved clinical trials of MDMA and psilocybin, and the co-founders of a company called Fluence Training which is working to scale education for this purpose. As they explain to host Shiv Gaglani, they see their task, broadly speaking, as serving three categories of people: those with general interest in the field; all types of clinicians who want to be able to have informed conversations with patients wishing to discuss their current and/or future use; and those who want to become therapists in this modality. Fluence is especially well-positioned for that last group because of Gorman’s and Nielson’s involvement in designing therapy protocols in clinical trials, but also because of their work developing therapy manuals for drug companies. “If and when their drugs go to market, we’ll be able to train clinicians in the community who will be working with those compounds,” says Gorman. One bottom line message in this richly-informed discussion is that the field needs all comers and they hope people aren’t dissuaded by misconceptions about what’s required. “We hear all the time, 'I want to be involved, but I’d have to go back to school and get all these years of clinical experience' when the reality is there's just so many ways now to get involved,” says Nielson. This is a great overview of the status of training, the potential pitfalls awaiting the field, the importance of managing patient expectations, and much more.

Mentioned in this episode: https://www.fluencetraining.com/

If you like this podcast, please share it on your social channels. You can also subscribe to the series and check out all of our episodes at www.osmosis.org/podcast

Topics

drug costsdr. elizabeth nielsonpharmacy benefit managersdrug developmentcontinuing educationjohns hopkins universityomicrondoctorsmedical degreescoronavirushome caredigital healthhealth insurancewearablesfrontline providersosmosis from elsevierdr. ingmar gordonpfizerfdagovernment policypsilocybinmedicareraise the linevirusmachine learningeducation innovationpharmaceuticalshospital staysinterviewnursing schoolflatten the curvemichael carreseelsevieraihealthcare entrepreneursnursing cmenursesprimary carehealthcare capacityhealthcare reformbig pharmaastra zenecacovid-19rare disordershealthcare workforceexpertsspace repetitionmedical educationnursing shortagelsdmedicaidlearning sciencegene editingvalue-based caretechnologyflipped classroommedicare advantagenursing educationsolutionsphysician shortageprovider burnoutcdcepidemicosmosisdelta variantremote monitoringhealthcare systemmark cubanosmosis.orgdecision supportrare diseasesvirus outbreakfluence trainingonline educationallied health professionspublic policycovid19edtechshiv gaglanimdmamodernaphysician assistant educationvivian leechelsea clintonpodcastsnursing degreepsychedelicshospital systemspublic healthdr. ashish jhavaccineseric topolyear of the zebradental educationtestingcenters for disease controlpsychedelic-assisted therapyhealth professionspandemicjohnson & johnsontelehealth