Anxiety Disorders Screening Day: What Clinicians Are Still Missing in Early Detection

Anxiety is one of the most commonly diagnosed mental health conditions in the world—and one of the most overlooked in its early stages. That’s why National Anxiety Disorders Screening Day matters. It’s not just another awareness date on the calendar. It’s a reminder that early detection can change the entire trajectory of a person’s mental […]

Sexual Assault Awareness Month: Trauma-Informed Clinical Responsibility and Survivor-Centered Practice

Sexual Assault Awareness Month each April reminds mental health professionals that trauma-informed care must remain central to ethical clinical practice. Sexual violence affects clients across diagnostic categories, age groups, genders, and treatment settings, yet disclosure often occurs slowly, indirectly, or not at all. For many survivors, therapy becomes the first place where fragmented experiences are […]

Stress Awareness Month: Clinical Perspectives on Recognizing, Assessing, and Addressing Stress in Practice

Every April, Stress Awareness Month creates an opportunity for mental health professionals to revisit one of the most universal yet frequently underestimated drivers of psychological distress: stress. Although stress is a common presenting concern across clinical settings, it often arrives disguised—as irritability, insomnia, relational conflict, poor concentration, somatic complaints, emotional numbness, or even treatment resistance. […]

Black Maternal Health Week: Clinical Responsibility in Supporting Black Mothers Before, During, and After Birth

Black maternal health week offers mental health professionals an important opportunity to examine how race, maternal care, trauma, and mental health intersect in clinical practice. For Black mothers, maternal mental health cannot be separated from larger systemic realities that include medical mistrust, disparities in care, chronic stress exposure, and often being unheard in healthcare environments. […]

Uplift. Defend. Transform. — What National Social Work Month 2026 Means for Clinical Social Workers

Every March, the profession pauses to reflect, recalibrate, and recommit. National Social Work Month, led by the National Association of Social Workers (NASW), is more than a celebratory campaign—it is a call to action. The 2026 theme, “Social Workers: Uplift. Defend. Transform.”, is both timely and urgent. For mental health professionals—particularly clinical social workers—this theme […]

From Awareness to Action: Honoring Suicide Prevention Month in Our Work

Each September, Suicide Prevention Awareness Month reminds us of the urgent and ongoing responsibility mental health professionals carry in addressing one of the most pressing public health concerns of our time. Suicide is not only a leading cause of death in the United States, but it also ripples through families, communities, and entire systems of […]

Easing Into Structure: Supporting Clients (and Ourselves) During Back-to-School Season

As the long days of summer begin to wind down, a familiar shift starts to happen. Vacations wrap up, backpacks are filled, routines are reestablished, and a new rhythm emerges. The transition from summer’s slower pace to the structure of the school year is both energizing and overwhelming—for clients, families, and let’s be honest—for many […]