The 6-Question Sex Issues Assessment for Therapists


Welcome to the workshop!

Part One

Why You Should Bring Up Sex in Therapy — And How to Open the Conversation

Most therapists wait for clients to bring up sex first. In this video you’ll learn why that’s a missed clinical opportunity — and get a simple, natural question that opens the conversation without awkwardness.

Watch Part 1 to help you get started talking about sex in therapy. If you are already bringing up the topic, and you need support with knowing the right questions to ask next, simply skip to the next video.

 

Downloads:

  • Brief Assessment Infographic. Print it out and put it right on your clipboard!
  • Presentation slides in PDF format
  • Free ebook! 10 Reasons Every Therapist Should Talk About Sex in Therapy… and How to Get Started
  • Part One Video Transcript
Click Here to Download

Part Two

How to Use the 6-Question Assessment — And Build a Treatment Plan From the Answers

This is the clinical tool you’ve been missing. Walk through all 6 questions, learn exactly how to ask them, and discover how the answers point you directly toward a clear, confident treatment plan for sex and desire concerns.

 
Download Part Two Video Transcript

The 6-Question Sex Issues Assessment

Your printable clinical reference — conversation openers to get the topic started, all 6 assessment questions, and a quick-read guide to interpreting what clients tell you.

Download the Assessment

Thank you for being here!

With the material in these two videos you are WELL on your way to building comfort, competence, and confidence working with sex issues. I applaud your willingness to try new things, and I hope you enjoy the adventure as you move into this material. Remember: comfort and confidence come with practice!

Here’s to your success,

P.S. If you like my teaching style and you want to become truly confident and competent working with sex issues, you might be a good candidate for my online course, Assessing and Treating Sex Issues in PsychotherapyIt's designed to take therapists all the way from "just starting out" to "skilled with sex issues."

It only opens once a year, but if it's closed right now, sign up for the waitlist you'll get some bonus goodies when you enroll.