The landscape of mental health is always shifting. New research emerges, social and cultural contexts evolve, and the clients who walk through our doors (or join us online) bring concerns that reflect the world they’re living in. CPD that keeps pace with these shifts doesn’t just keep your practice current; it keeps it genuinely relevant.
So, what are the most valuable CPD topics for therapists right now? Below, we’ve identified ten areas that reflect both the growing evidence base and the clinical realities therapists across the UK are encountering in their practices today.
1. Trauma-Informed Practice
Trauma-informed practice has moved from specialist niche to mainstream expectation over the past decade, and for good reason. Research into the prevalence and long-term impact of adverse childhood experiences (ACEs), combined with a broader cultural shift in how we understand mental health, means that clients across all presenting concerns are increasingly understood through a trauma lens.
You don’t need to be a trauma specialist to benefit from training in this area. Understanding how trauma affects the nervous system, how it shows up in the therapy relationship, and how to work in ways that don’t inadvertently retraumatise clients is now considered good practice across modalities.
Key areas to explore within trauma CPD include:
- Polyvagal theory and its clinical applications
- Somatic approaches to trauma
- Working with complex or developmental trauma
- Trauma-informed approaches to specific presentations such as anxiety, dissociation, and eating disorders
Browse the ThEO video library for trauma CPD here

2. Neurodiversity
Awareness of neurodevelopmental conditions, including autism, ADHD, dyslexia, and dyspraxia, has grown significantly in recent years, particularly following a sharp rise in adults seeking diagnosis. Many therapists are finding that clients present with undiagnosed or newly diagnosed neurodivergence, often accompanied by years of confusion, shame, or misattributed struggles.
CPD in this area helps therapists to adapt their practice to genuinely meet neurodivergent clients where they are, adjusting session structure, communication style, and therapeutic expectations in ways that are affirming rather than inadvertently pathologising.
- Understanding autism in adults, including late diagnosis
- ADHD in therapy: what it means for the therapeutic relationship
- Adapting therapy for neurodivergent clients
- Intersections of neurodivergence with trauma, anxiety, and identity
Browse the ThEO video library for neurodiversity CPD here
3. Working with Men and Masculinity
Men remain significantly underrepresented in therapy despite bearing considerable mental health burden. Suicide remains the leading cause of death for men under 50 in the UK. CPD in this area helps therapists to understand the specific cultural, relational, and psychological factors that shape how men experience and express distress — and how to create a therapeutic environment that is genuinely accessible and effective for male clients.
This is an area where thoughtful, evidence-informed training can have a real impact on who seeks help and whether they stick with it.
4. Menopause and Women’s Hormonal Health
Menopause has entered public conversation in a significant way in recent years, and its psychological dimensions are increasingly recognised. Many women experiencing perimenopause or menopause present to therapy with symptoms that may not initially be linked to hormonal change: anxiety, low mood, brain fog, changes in identity and relationships, and loss of confidence.
CPD in this area allows therapists to work with greater knowledge and sensitivity with clients navigating this life stage, avoiding misattribution of symptoms and providing genuinely informed support.
Explore the ThEO CPD library for “Working with the Menopause in Therapy”

5. Online and Hybrid Therapy Practice
The shift to online therapy, accelerated by the pandemic, has become a permanent feature of the therapeutic landscape. Many therapists now work entirely online, or offer a hybrid model — but relatively few have received formal training in the specific clinical and ethical dimensions of remote practice.
CPD in this area covers:
- Therapeutic presence and relationship-building in online settings
- Managing risk and safeguarding remotely
- Technology, security, and ethical practice
- Working with clients across time zones and international contexts
- Understanding what the evidence says about online therapy effectiveness
6. Working with Grief and Loss
Grief is one of the most universal human experiences, yet it is also one of the areas where therapists most frequently report feeling under-equipped. Contemporary understandings of grief have moved considerably beyond stage models, encompassing continuing bonds theory, prolonged grief disorder (now a recognised clinical diagnosis), and the complexity of grief responses to non-death losses such as relationship breakdown, infertility, and identity change.
For therapists working in private practice or community settings, a solid grounding in grief and loss work is invaluable regardless of your primary orientation.
Browse the ThEO video library for bereavement CPD here
7. Eating Disorders and Disordered Eating
Eating disorders have among the highest mortality rates of any mental health condition, and disordered eating exists on a spectrum that extends well beyond diagnosable conditions. Therapists regularly encounter clients with complicated relationships with food and body image, often without the presenting concern being named explicitly as an eating difficulty.
CPD in this area develops both the clinical knowledge to recognise and understand eating difficulties and the skills to work therapeutically in a way that is safe, evidence-informed, and aligned with current best practice around medical collaboration and risk management.
Browse the ThEO video library for food and eating disorders CPD here
8. Sleep and Its Impact on Mental Health
The relationship between sleep and mental health is significant. Poor sleep exacerbates almost every psychological difficulty, and psychological difficulties in turn disrupt sleep. Despite this, many therapists have little formal training in sleep science or evidence-based approaches to sleep difficulties.
CPD in this area, covering the neuroscience of sleep, the evidence base for CBT for insomnia (CBT-I), and how to integrate sleep-focused work into broader therapeutic approaches, is increasingly relevant for therapists working with anxiety, depression, trauma, and chronic illness.
9. Working with Chronic Illness and Health Anxiety
The intersection of physical health and psychological wellbeing is a rich and growing area of practice. Clients living with chronic illness, pain, or life-limiting conditions bring a complex combination of practical, emotional, and existential challenges. Equally, health anxiety, a presentation that has increased in visibility in recent years, requires specific clinical understanding to work with effectively.
CPD in this area helps therapists to hold the psychological and physical dimensions of a client’s experience together, and to work collaboratively within health-focused systems of care.
10. Artificial Intelligence and the Future of Therapy
AI is beginning to feature in mental health care, from AI-assisted CBT tools to chatbots designed to provide psychological support between sessions. While this is an emerging area, it raises significant ethical, clinical, and professional questions that therapists would benefit from engaging with now, rather than waiting for the implications to arrive fully formed.
CPD in this area doesn’t require technical expertise. What matters is developing a thoughtful, informed perspective on how AI tools intersect with the therapeutic relationship, ethical practice, and professional responsibility, so you can respond with confidence when clients raise these questions, as increasingly they will.
Choosing From This List
You don’t need to tackle all of these areas and you certainly don’t need to do so at once. The most effective approach is to identify which one or two topics are most directly relevant to your current practice and client groups, and to invest meaningfully in those first.
If you’re unsure where to start, take your questions back to supervision. The topics that have surfaced most often in your clinical discussions over the past year are usually the ones worth prioritising.
Explore our CPD courses for therapists at all career stages at therapyeducationonline.com.
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