The coronavirus crisis is having a huge impact on both therapy as a profession, and therapists as individuals. Practitioners are encountering their clients’ responses to world events and the resulting uncertainty at the same time as trying to manage their own. In practical terms, recent weeks have seen a mass move online for our client work, supervision and trainings, while some are struggling with an overload and others with a sudden drop-off of clients. Therapists represent a vital national resource at a time of crisis – but what plans, if any, does the government have to use it? We’ll be joined by Sarah Niblock, Chief Executive of the UKCP, to discuss how the current pandemic may shape the future of the profession.
This online program is worth 1 hours CPD.
Sarah Niblock, CEO, UKCP, a journalist, broadcaster and academic, Sarah became CEO of UK Council for Psychotherapy in September 2017, and is tasked with shaping the organisation to play a leading role in improving access to high quality talking therapies. She is cut from very different cloth to most professors and CEOs we know. Previous to joining UKCP, she was professor and associate dean at University of Westminster’s School of Media, Arts and Design and she has published research on media, trauma and ethics as well as popular music and identity. An academic fellow of the Dart Centre for Journalism and Trauma at Columbia University, she commentates on media ethics, specifically trauma and journalism, for a range of outlets. Sarah is co-author (with Stan Hawkins) of Prince: The Making of a Pop Icon (Ashgate) and numerous other books, chapters and articles. She has presented to the paying public on pop culture at Latitude, the Southbank and the ICA.
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