We knew we needed to involve more locations than just the United States and North America. MikeDemo: If we look back at at the past years we have been in California, Boston and Mexico and India most recently. We agreed it should be a real Worldly event that travels around and empowers and engages communities around the world and helps to put Joomla on the map, including with outreach to students and local business. Was it the world league (like in American sports) or an actual global event and what was the purpose. Ronni: Originally we had a debate around what the word "World" meant. What went into the decision for the location of this year’s JWC? Out of all the places in North America, why Vancouver, BC? Last year the JWC was in India, but this year it’s back in North America again. Joining us today from the Joomla World Conference Committee are Mike Demo, TJ Baker, and Ronni Christiansen to answers a few questions about the upcoming event later this year. We’ve got a great team this year putting together the event. The Joomla! World Conference is back again for it’s fifth year, and this time it’s in Vancouver, British Columbia. This year's event will be taking place during November 11-13 at the Sheraton Hotel in downtown Vancouver. The workshop ends with a very uplifting topic: the emerging and exceedingly hopeful literature on post-traumatic growth.The Joomla! World Conference is back again for it’s fifth year, and this time it’s in Vancouver, British Columbia. Special topics include the curious case of EMDR (Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing), “emotional baggage” (i.e., old traumata), the eye-opening forgiveness research, so-called "hindsight bias", the Oprah-esque "imaginal rescripting", intergenerational trauma, the Faustian bargain of children who survived ACEs (adverse childhood experiences), complex PTSD (C-PTSD), trauma-informed care, and what data we have on medical marijuana. As always, the assumption is a ten-minute appointment (with three patients in the waiting room). The core of the workshop-training in treatment-emphasizes those tools realistic for use in primary care. We then review a shortcut to the diagnosis of PTSD, proceeding from there to the details of (and controversies pertaining to) the fuller diagnostic criteria. This popular workshop begins with a review of debriefing (i.e., interventions designed to prevent PTSD after a trauma), including insights from the lead presenter’s work with the Canadian government's National Roundtable in Ottawa. Fortunately, the DSM-5 "holy book" made it easier to diagnose PTSD, and recent research has provided us with much more effective treatments. PTSD has a lifetime prevalence rate of nearly 10% in women (5% in men), which rivals that of depression. Note: This is a serious workshop that even saw-wielding orthopods can relate to, with nary a mention of yoni steaming or herbal colonics, and there are absolutely no Zoom group hugs. You’ll emerge equipped with versatile CBT tools to boost the functioning and improve the mental health of your patients, your family, your friends-and the ongoing project called “you”. Please join CBT Canada faculty for the fast-paced & practical SuperDoc workshop. PCAD is not inevitable: you don’t need to age faster than the required rate (unless you want to). Happily, state‐of‐the‐art CBT includes a collection of powerful techniques for silencing self‐criticism, decreasing rumination, letting go of the past, increasing self-compassion, improving decision‐making, optimizing time management, boosting mindfulness, and making a marriage spark joy. PCAD is also predicted by one's psychology. PCAD isn't just the result of a heavy caseload and long hours. Sadly, the burned-out are also at risk for Premature Clinician Aging Disorder (PCAD). Simply put, the burned-out doctor is probably a crappy doctor. Physician wellness is important for countless reasons, including that it significantly determines the quality of care delivered (CMPA, 2018). Today’s cognitive behavior therapy (CBT) is a treasure-trove of scientifically‐tested tools to help physicians increase their resiliency and reduce their risk of burnout.