C3 De-escalation for Care Providers-December 3, 2025-Tulsa OSU/Tulsa - NAB and HCA approved C3D2

Wednesday, December 3, 2025 (9:30 AM - 3:00 PM) (CST)

Description

C3 De-escalation is an innovative, practical technique that works with brain function to calm aggressive or distraught individuals. It’s appropriate for use with people with severe and persistent mental health disorders, substance use disorders, co-occurring disorders, or intellectual disabilities. This training is for anyone working in NH, AL, ICF/IID, Home Care and Mental Health settings. 

Training Objectives: 1. Acquire skills to calm a patient who is angry, frustrated or overwhelmed. 2. Decrease stress and burnout in staff 3. Create a de-escalation plan that is actionable, practical, and supports human dignity.

Click link for more information:  https://acrobat.adobe.com/id/urn:aaid:sc:VA6C2:f4052021-8ce6-402c-a4c4-7fbeee7d9b66

How Does It Work? 

C3 De-escalation® targets a breakdown in the brain. Stress or anger– i.e., “losing it”– causes a physical short–circuit. Brain sections that handle self-restraint, reason and consequences essentially disconnect. This can result in outbursts of aggression, agitation, or reckless behavior.
We’ve all experienced this to some degree. However, someone with mental health or addiction issues is more vulnerable, often with worse consequences.

C3 provides three groups of techniques to help the brain calm down and stabilize:

Calm: Stress chemicals trigger the short-circuit. C3 provides ways to lower the stress chemicals, giving circuits a chance to re-connect.
Example: Any large muscle action drops adrenaline. For instance, if you walk someone around or walk them up a flight of stairs, you’ll find they’re less agitated and less aggressive at the top of the stairs than at the bottom. It’s that fast. Just be sure they’re safe to walk up a flight of stairs.

Circuit: Since parts of the brain disconnect, C3 provides ways to cue disconnected parts and jump-start the circuit.
Example: One disconnected part puts things into order. So, ask simple sequence questions: “What happened first?” Then, “What happened next?” Other simple sequences are asking about their children in order, or having them spell their own name. As you step them through the sequence, you’ll hear their voices calm down and their agitation lessen.

Connection: Typically, there’s a lead time before the actual explosion. If we notice the signs and intervene wisely, we can stop the explosion before it happens. C3 shows how to connect the dots: spot the pattern, head off the eruption.

This training is for anyone working in NH, AL, ICF/IID, Home Care and Mental Health settings. This program has been approved for 4 hours of CEs for LNHA by NAB and HCA by Home Care Administrator Registry.

This programming was offered as a pre-conference training at the 2024 Spring Convention in Norman. 

Pricing

$100.00 per person member NO CEs

$125.00 per person member WITH CEs (4 hours) 

$150.00 per person non-member NO CEs

$175.00 per person non-member WITH CEs (4 hours)

$15.00 cancellation processing fee 

Limited seating.  Registration cut-off is December 1 at 11 p.m. or when all seats are reserved.  

OSU Tulsa
700 N. Greenwood Avenue
Tulsa, OK 74106 United States

Training conducted in Conference Center Entrance, BS Roberts Room. Enter through glass sliding doors and go to your left.  

Event Contact
Connie Guinn
405-524-8338
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Wednesday, December 3, 2025 (9:30 AM - 3:00 PM) (CST)
Check-in: 9:00 am to 9:30 am Training: 9:30 am to 3:00 pm Lite lunch provided
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