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Applied Psychologists, Not Psychotherapists: EPs and CBT.

Squires, Garry

In: Innovative applications of CBT in working with young people and children. West Midlands Continuing Professional Development Group: Summer Study Day 2009. ; 09 Jul 2009-09 Jul 2009; University of Birmingham. 2009.

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Abstract

Large numbers of adults and children have emotional difficulties that are severe enough to be classified as mental health problems. This places a current and future economic drain on society and prevents individuals from leading fulfilling lives and has led to a call for more therapists to work with those affected. However, there are insufficient professionals working in mental health services to meet demand. This paper will explore the case for educational psychologists (EPs) engaging in cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) in their role as applied psychologists. This discussion paper adds to the debate about the level of training needed to be deemed competent to deliver individual CBT. For example, would EPs have ‘appropriate levels of training’ suggested by the National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE) guidelines for the treatment of depression? Six arguments are presented discussing some of the issues of professional competence leading to the conclusion that EPs are well placed to deliver a cognitive behavioural psychology service to schools, pupils and families.

Bibliographic metadata

Type of resource:
Content type:
Type of conference contribution:
Publication date:
Author(s) list:
Conference title:
Innovative applications of CBT in working with young people and children. West Midlands Continuing Professional Development Group: Summer Study Day 2009.
Conference venue:
University of Birmingham
Conference start date:
2009-07-09
Conference end date:
2009-07-09
Abstract:
Large numbers of adults and children have emotional difficulties that are severe enough to be classified as mental health problems. This places a current and future economic drain on society and prevents individuals from leading fulfilling lives and has led to a call for more therapists to work with those affected. However, there are insufficient professionals working in mental health services to meet demand. This paper will explore the case for educational psychologists (EPs) engaging in cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) in their role as applied psychologists. This discussion paper adds to the debate about the level of training needed to be deemed competent to deliver individual CBT. For example, would EPs have ‘appropriate levels of training’ suggested by the National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE) guidelines for the treatment of depression? Six arguments are presented discussing some of the issues of professional competence leading to the conclusion that EPs are well placed to deliver a cognitive behavioural psychology service to schools, pupils and families.

Institutional metadata

University researcher(s):

Record metadata

Manchester eScholar ID:
uk-ac-man-scw:93189
Created by:
Squires, Garry
Created:
26th October, 2010, 10:41:48
Last modified by:
Squires, Garry
Last modified:
2nd August, 2013, 20:07:02

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