Counseling Clinical Supervision
Gregg Elliott, Ph.D., LPC, ACS
Clinical supervision is an important part of a counselor's practice, both for counselors working to obtain initial licensure and for counselors who are already licensed. I practice supervision with the Discrimination and Noeticus Models, which give me some flexibility in meeting your clinical needs. I have clinical experience working with adults, adolescents, and families, in outpatient, home-based, partial hospital, and inpatient settings. My clinical expertise is in working with suicidal clients and over the years I've served as an Applied Suicide Intervention Skills Training (ASIST) and an Assessing and Managing Suicide Risk (AMSR) trainer. As an academician I have over 50 presentations and publications - many focused on some element of working with suicidal clients. I also teach in a CACREP-accredited Counseling program and have served as a leader with the Colorado Counseling Association (CCA) and the American Counseling Association (ACA). I look forward to getting to know you and to providing support to your clinical practice.
Click the link below to read one of my articles on suicide and telehealth.

Counseling Clinical Supervision
Post-master's clinical supervision is a critical component in a counselor's development and ultimate application for licensure. The minimum two years of clinical supervision required by the State of Colorado provides supervisees the opportunity to grow in their confidence, competence, and use of evidence-based practices. My clinical supervision includes monitoring of supervisees' services against the generally accepted standards of practice, consultation on diagnosis and treatment planning questions, review of documentation, consultation and support on ethical dilemmas, review of billing records, review of activity logs, and guidance through the licensure application process.Post-master's clinical supervision is a critical component in a counselor's development and ultimate application for licensure. The minimum two years of clinical supervision required by the State of Colorado provides supervisees the opportunity to grow in their confidence, competence, and use of evidence-based practices. My clinical supervision includes monitoring of supervisees' services against the generally accepted standards of practice, consultation on diagnosis and treatment planning questions, review of documentation, consultation and support on ethical dilemmas, review of billing records, review of activity logs, and guidance through the licensure application process.
