Title: Clinical Psychology Practice
1Clinical Psychology Practice Training
- Prof Michael Wang
- Clinical Psychology Section
- School of Psychology
- University of Leicester
2Who am I and what do I do?
- Director of the Doctorate in Clinical Psychology
Training Course at the University of Leicester - One clinical day per week anxiety, depression,
post-traumatic stress disorder - Research in anaesthesia
- Medico-legal expert in neuropsychology
- Former Chair, BPS Division of Clinical Psychology
3Outline
- What is Clinical Psychology?
- Employment pay
- Training structure content
- Getting on a course
4Branches of Applied Psychology
- Educational Psychology
- Occupational Psychology
- Forensic Psychology
- Clinical Psychology
- Counselling Psychology
- Health Psychology
- Neuropsychology
- Sport and Exercise Psychology
5Training
- 3-year undergraduate degree in Psychology
(minimum 21 honours degree) - Healthcare-related experience, e.g. assistant
psychologist, clinical research (1-year ) - 3-year postgraduate clinical training (Doctor of
Clinical Psychology - ClinPsyD)
6What do Clinical Psychologists do?
- Clinical Psychologists work with different
patient groups - Work includes assessment and treatment of
psychological problems - This includes one-to-one psychotherapy, group
therapy, supervising nurses, working through
parents, relatives, carers
7Range of Client Groups
- Adults
- Children
- People with a Learning Disability
- Older Adults
- Brain injured patients
- Forensic patients
8Range of Types of Problem
- minor mental health problems
- major mental health problems
- acute physical illness
- chronic physical illness
- substance abuse
- sexual problems
- personality disorder
9Range of Settings
- hospital in-patient ward
- day hospital
- out-patient clinic
- community home visiting
- primary care
10Range of Types of Intervention
- one-to-one therapy
- couple family therapy
- group therapy
- carer nurse training or intervention
- organisational intervention
11Variety of Theoretical Orientations
- Behavioural
- Cognitive-behavioural
- Psychoanalytic
- Systemic
- Pan-theoretical
12Organisation of Services
- Psychology Department
- unidisciplinary
- base clinic rooms
- CP head manager
- direct GP referrals
- professional support
- Community Team
- multidisciplinary
- shared office space
- nurse manager
- shared referrals
- professional isolation
13Adult Mental Health Problems
- anxiety e.g. phobias, PTSD, GAD, panic
- obsessional-compulsive disorder
- depression
- eating disorders
- CSA
- Personality disorder
- Psychosis
14Child Problems
- developmental or educational problems
- conduct disorder, attention deficit disorder
- anxiety depression
- psychosomatic complaints
- self-harm
- sexual or physical abuse
15Older Adult Problems
- dementia stroke
- depression anxiety
- bereavement
- challenging behaviour
- physical illness
16People with Learning Disability
- Emotional problems
- Challenging behaviour
- Developmental problems
- Trauma, abuse and bereavement issues
- Behavioural intervention
- Systemic intervention
- Working through carers and staff
17Other Specialisations
- Clinical Forensic
- Neuropsychology
- Clinical Health Psychology
- Psychosis and Personality Disorder
- Addictions
- Sexual health and HIV/AIDS
18Case Management
- intensive, detailed assessment
- consideration of alternative hypotheses
- hypothesis testing
- problem formulation
- individualised, multifaceted intervention
- evaluation
19Case Example
- ?Agoraphobia
- ?Dog phobia
- Obsessional Compulsive Disorder
- Home visit, self-monitoring
- Graded response prevention
- Graded exposure
- Marital intervention
20The MAS (1989) MPAG (1990) Reports
- In 1989 the Department of Health commissioned a
report from an independent management consultancy
into the activities of clinical psychologists in
the NHS. - The MAS MPAG reports described three levels of
psychological intervention commonly employed in
the NHS.
21The MAS (1989) MPAG (1990) Reports
- Level 1 supportive relationship basic
counselling skills - Level 2 specific, circumscribed therapeutic
techniques, e.g. behaviour therapy - Level 3 specialist psychological intervention,
drawing on multiple psychological theories,
involving individualised assessment, formulation
treatment
22The MAS (1989) MPAG (1990) Reports
- Level 1 supportive relationship basic
counselling skills - used by GPs, nurses, social
workers, etc. - Level 2 specific, circumscribed therapeutic
techniques, e.g. behaviour therapy - used by
psychiatric nurses with specialist training,
assistant psychologists, etc.
23The MAS (1989) MPAG (1990) Reports
- Clinical Psychologists are distinguished by their
use of level 3 skills - Level 3 specialist psychological intervention,
drawing on multiple psychological theories,
involving individualised assessment, formulation
treatment
24Scientist-Practitioner Approach
- Review critical evaluation of empirical and
qualitative literature relevant to presenting
problem - Clinical qualitative and quantitative assessment
and analysis of problem - Consideration of alternative hypotheses and
clinical hypothesis testing - Development of formulation, synthesising
literature with clinical assessment data - Development and implementation of intervention
derived from formulation - On-going monitoring and evaluation of effects of
intervention review of formulation and
intervention
25The Reflective Practitioner
- ill defined situations complex problems
promptcreative approaches intuitive problem
solving - drawing on experience, intuitive approach
on-going reflection - embedded in reflection-in-action thinking
about thinking - restructuring of strategies, on-the-spot
experiments
26Psychological Formulation as alternative to
Psychiatric Diagnosis
- Deriving formulations of presenting problems or
situations which integrate information from
assessments within a coherent framework that
draws upon psychological theory and evidence and
which incorporates interpersonal, societal,
cultural and biological factors - Utilising formulations to plan appropriate
interventions - Revising formulations in the light of ongoing
intervention and when necessary re-formulating
the problem
27Unique skills in comparison with other applied
psychologists in healthcare
- Broad knowledge and experience base of client
groups and types of problem within
pre-qualification training - Psychopathology and the assessment of mental
state risk assessment - Broad range of psychometric assessment in
healthcare - Formulation of problems from a wide range of
perspectives including biopsychosocial - Scientist-practitioner approach to individual
clinical casework
28Employment Pay
- Clinical Psychologists work mainly in the NHS
- Some work in Private Practice
- Trainees are paid around 25k
- Qualified Clinical Psychologists start at around
27k - Consultant Clinical Psychologists earn 40 - 65k
- Heads of Service earn up to 85k
29Current developments
- NHS financial difficulties
- New Mental Health Act and Clinical Supervisor
Role - New Incapacity Act
- Redesigning the role of the Consultant
Psychiatrist and implications for CPs - New Ways of Working for Psychologists
30 Traditional Clinical Model
Undergraduate Degree in Psychology
GBR
BSc (21)
210 years
Assistant Psychologist
Nursing or care assistant roles
Postgraduate Clinical research
Selection (Leeds Clearing House)
Postgraduate Clinical psychology training (3
years)
DClinPsy
Clinical Psychologist
CPD
Consultant Psychologist
31 New Roles Model
Undergraduate Degree in Psychology (3-4 years)
BSc
Assistant Psychologist (1 year)
Certificate
A4C band 4
Associate Psychologist (1 year)
A4C band 5
Diploma
Senior Associate Psychologist (1 year)
A4C band 6
MSc
2-year Doctoral Training (clinical/counselling/hea
lth)
DPsy
Clinical Psychologist
Health Psychologist
Counselling Psychologist
Consultant Psychologist
32PG Clinical Psychology Training
- 3 major strands
- Teaching
- Clinical placements
- Doctoral research project
33Teaching
- Phenomenology, epidemiology nature of
Psychological disturbance - Theoretical bases for therapeutic intervention
- Interview, assessment therapy skills
- Research teaching
- Professional ethics, NHS statutory
organisational framework
34Clinical Placements
- Commonly 6-month duration
- Supervisor for each placement
- Own cases
- Core client groups adult, children, people with
a learning disability, older adults - 3rd year elective specialist placements
- New emphasis on competencies
35Competency based Training Accreditation Criteria
(2002)
- Transferable skills
- Psychological assessment
- Psychological formulation
- Psychological intervention
- Evaluation
- Research
- Personal and professional skills
- Communication and teaching
- Service delivery
36Progressive Developmental Learning Model (Version
2)
- Basic one-to-one case skills
- Working through complex systems, carers,
families, organisational interventions - Advanced one-to-one skills, organisational and
consultancy skills
37Doctoral Research
- Clinically relevant topic
- PhD standard but not length
- Commonly 2-year research period
38Evaluation of Trainees
- Exams vs Coursework essays
- Case studies
- Placement-based small-scale projects
- Placement performance evaluation
- Research thesis, journal article viva
39How to get on a course
- Work hard! 21 minimum
- Relevant experience
- Consider a higher research degree
- Write a paper or two!
- Observe a clinical psychologist
- Apply through the Clearing House
- Interview preparation
40References
- Marzillier, J Hall, J (1992) What is Clinical
Psychology? Oxford Medical Publications Oxford - Nierboer, R. (1994) From undergraduate to
clinical psychology trainee a worms eye view.
The Psychologist 7(3) 110-112 - Clearing House for Clinical Psychology, 15 Hyde
Terrace, Leeds LS2 7LT