A Jungian Perspective on Sexual Compulsions and Bridging the Divide
  2 Hours, 30 Minutes   

Wednesday, July 15th, 2026
Class 1: 1:15 PM EDT-2:15 PM EDT
Class 2: 4:15 PM EDT-5:45 PM EDT
   Yitzi Horowitz, LCSW
   Malkie Schick, LCSW
  
2.5 CE Credits
Price
$49.99 USD

See Provider Info

Description

A 2.5 Hour Webinar

July 15th, 2026

1:15 PM and 4:15 PM EST

The cost of 2.5 hours is $49.99, an individual class is $29.99 and $39.99

To register for the 2 Hour SEMINAR Click "BUY IT NOW". To register for just one class, click on the Class/link below.

If you have any difficulty registering, please contact us here.

 

Class 1

1:15 PM - 2:15 PM EST

Fragmented Beauty: A Jungian Perspective on Sexual Compulsions

Most psychotherapeutic approaches to compulsive sexuality and pornography follow an addictions model, with a focus on curbing behavior. This presentation will offer an introduction to a Jungian perspective on the unconscious processes of compulsivity. It will further address some insights that a Jungian perspective might offer the professional working with a person suffering with sexual compulsivity that will impact treatment.

(Trainer - Yitzi Horowitz, LCSW maintains a private psychotherapy practice in New York where he provides adults with both individual and relationship psychotherapy sessions. Yitzi has been trained in multiple modalities which inform his work with people struggling with varying degree of presenting issues. He has an interest in the interplay between religion and psychology. He has presented on this topic professionally and works with people who struggle with these issues as well. Yitzi is currently a candidate at the Jungian Psychoanalytic Association of New York where he is training to be a Jungian Analyst.)

 

1 Hour

 

Class 2

4:15 PM - 5:45 PM EST

Bridging the Divide: The Essential Role of Interdisciplinary Collaboration in Behavioral Health

Behavioral health treatment increasingly requires an integrated, interdisciplinary approach to effectively address the complex intersection of trauma, mental illness, neurobiology, medical conditions, family systems, substance use, and social determinants of health. Yet professionals across disciplines often work in fragmented systems that limit communication, continuity of care, and treatment outcomes. This presentation explores the critical role of interdisciplinary collaboration in behavioral health settings and examines how clinicians, physicians, educators, social workers, case managers, legal professionals, and allied health providers can work together to create more cohesive, trauma-informed, and patient-centered systems of care.

(Trainer - Malkie Schick, LCSW, is the Director of Counseling and Integrative Care at Aizer Health, a Federally Qualified Health Center in Monroe, New York. Malkie has worked to provide high-quality community-based services through the establishment and direction of the counseling and integrative care departments, which provide access for all patients to receive behavioral health care in the primary care setting. Malkie is also a NEFESH board member. Malkie loves to teach and learn. She enjoys her work as a clinician, clinical supervisor, and program director. She has lectured across the United States on a wide variety of topics related to mental health. Malkie received her Master’s in Social Work from the University of Texas at Arlington, her postgraduate certification in Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy from the Dallas Psychoanalytic Institute, and her certification in Transference-Focused Psychotherapy from the Columbia University Center for Psychoanalytic Training.)

1.5 Hour

 

 

 

This One Day Seminar includes two excellent classes, a total of 2.5 CEs. You may attend an individual class for $29.99 and $39.99


Webinars included in this package:

Fragmented Beauty: A Jungian Perspective on Sexual Compulsions

Bridging the Divide: The Essential Role of Interdisciplinary Collaboration in Behavioral Health