The article focuses on some studies related to psychotheraphy published in the recent issue of the journal "Counseling and Psychotherapy Research (CPR)." One of the studies found that practitioners and clients experience a shared powerlessness when asylum rejections interrupts the therapeutic process abruptly.
*MENTAL health laws, *HEALTH services accessibility, *HEALTH status indicators, *HEALTH care reform, *NATIONAL health services
Abstract
The article focuses on the aim of the Reforming the Mental Health Act white paper appears good in strengthening people's rights, expanding and providing more culturally appropriate advocacy and offering treatment choice to patients, this is contradicted by changes proposed in Health and Care Bill.
The article reports that Susie Orbach, a consultant psychotherapist, has condemned Great Britain's green paper on children’s mental health for its failure to address the part played by its own policies in the rising rates of referral to children and young people’s mental health services.
The article explores as any therapist working in private practice, or any service provider, will tell you, the admin involved in running a practice can be time consuming. At its most basic level, it includes scheduling and booking appointments, tracking payments and recording and safely storing client notes and other personal data. I'm assuming I'm not the only practitioner who uses a mixed bag of digital and manual/ paper- based approaches.
The article discusses a collaboration between Working for You and Citizens U.K. to campaign for funded school and college counseling in England. It highlights the organization's response to a government white paper acknowledging mental health links to problem gambling and it describes an amendment to the victims and prisoners bill to protect rape survivors by limiting police requests for necessary and proportionate material, including therapy notes.
*POLICY sciences, *HEALTH services accessibility, *COUNSELING, *MENTAL health services, *SCHOOL health services, *PSYCHOLOGY
Abstract
The author expresses his disappointment with the 2017 Green Paper on children and young people's mental health published by the British government, which excludes school-based counseling from the proposed mainstream provision. He reveals the burden brought by the plan on the teaching staff. The author mentions the effort of the British Association for Counselling and Psychotherapy (BACP) to improve access to counseling for children and young people.
The article discusses the Tampon Tax Fund wherein initiatives to tackle sexual violence and social exclusion and improve women's mental health and wellbeing will benefit from grants from the Minister for Sports and Civil Society Tracey Crouch.
Published
2018
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