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Course Goals. Introduce main concepts of clinical/ counselingUnderstand differences and similarities of fieldsHow clinical and counseling psychology contribute Get you interested in clinical and counseling!!!. Course Structure: 4 sections. Section 1: Professional context and historical rootsSect
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1. Introduction to Clinical and Counseling Psychology PSY 340
Lauren J. Roscoe, M. A.
2. Course Goals Introduce main concepts of clinical/ counseling
Understand differences and similarities of fields
How clinical and counseling psychology contribute
Get you interested in clinical and counseling!!!
3. Course Structure: 4 sections Section 1: Professional context and historical roots
Section 2: Psychotherapy Fundamentals and Theories
Section 3: Career Counseling, Assessment and Diagnosis
Section 4: Research, Integration, Becoming a Psychologist
4. Section 1: Professional Context and Historical Roots Goals for this section:
Understand the context of helping professions
Know where psychologists work, what they do, and necessary training
History/ development of clinical/ counseling
Ethical Considerations
Current/Future Professional Issues
5. Mental Health Professions in Context There are several mental health professions (MHP)
All with similar goals but various specialties
Differ in training, education, licensing, pay and prestige levels
Ideally need to work together
Understand the complex social matrix
See clinical and counselings contribution
6. Clinical and Counseling: What sets us a part! We are professional:
Extensive post-graduate education at recognized universities
Educated in research, evaluation, and implementation of helping skills
Licensed or certified by states
Guided by American Psychological Association (APA) Ethics Code
Psychologist: term only used for individuals with a doctorate
7. What are the differences? Clinical
More emphasis on medical model
Clientele issues may be more serious, beyond the developmental focus
May include focus on children Counseling
Developmental, focus assets/ strengths
Prevention and wellness vs. medical model
Vocational Roots
Relatively non-disturbed clientele, adjustment issues
Works primarily with adults
8. Are the differences that meaningful? Course work and requirements similar
Example of SIU program
Each person chooses specialty areas
Need to be experts in the areas
Clinical or counseling doesnt matter
sought and acquired knowledge and expertise does!!!
Differences emphasized/ enlarged as each field attempts to keep its special place and define itself in the complex matrix of MHPs
9. In relation to other MHPs Other types of Psychology
Educational Psychology
School Psychology
Clinical Neuropsychology
Rehabilitation Psychology
Community Psychology
Forensic Psychology
Industrial/ Organizational (IO) psychology
Psychiatry
Social Work
Marriage, Family, Child Counseling (MFCCs)
10. So what do C/Cs Do? Psychotherapy and counseling
Assessment
Teaching
Research and Publishing
Consulting
Administration
11. Where do C/Cs work? Psychotherapy and counseling:
Counseling and clinical centers
Community Mental Health
Private/ Group Practice
Hospitals, VAs
Employee Assistance Programs (EPAs)
Prisons, Government agencies, Military
Assessment:
All of the above
12. Where do C/Cs work? (cont) Teaching
Colleges & Universities
Professional Schools
Community Colleges (can with M.A.)
Research
Colleges & Universities
Professional Schools
Hospitals
Professional organizations (APA)
13. Where do C/Cs work? (cont) Consulting
Business/ Industry
Larger Consulting firms (e.g.,RHR)
Private Practice/ Executive coaching
Administration
Hospitals, VAs
Community Mental Health
Schools and Universities
Professional organizations
Non-profits, Government
14. How are C/Cs trained? Two training models
Boulder Model (1949, APA)
Scientist-Practitioner Model
Research/academic + applied skills
Vail Model (1973, APA)
Professional Model
Emphasizes practice, much less research focus
Development of free-standing professional schools
15. Degrees in Clinical and Counseling Master of Arts (M.A.) or Master of Science (M.S.)
2 years, with completion a of Thesis
Often obtained in route to Ph.D.
Can teach at community college, see clients under a supervisor
16. Degrees in Clinical and Counseling Ph.D., Doctor of Philosophy
Scientist-practitioner (Boulder Model)
3 years related course work
1year Dissertation
1year Internship (APA approved)
Totaling a minimum 5 years postgraduate
APA accredited programs in universities
Typically in Psychology Department or School of Education
17. Degrees in Clinical and Counseling Psy.D (sigh-dee), Doctor of Psychology
Professional Model (Vail Model)
4 to 6 years
Applied focus
Not researched driven, some will do dissertation
Completion of year internship
Typically at professional schools
18. Licensure and Certification Motivating forces:
Protect public from untrained/ incompetent
Need to establish independent professional identity
License- demonstrated competence
Certification- verify completed education
Registration- inform state that practicing
19. Professional Organizations American Psychological Association (APA)
Formed 1892 by G. Stanley Hall
Over 50 specialty Divisions
Division 17: Counseling Psychology (1952)
Division 12: Clinical Psychology (1944)
Journals, Conferences, Professional Standards, Ethics Code
American Psychological Society (APS)
Dissatisfied scientists broke off from APA in 1988
Advancement of scientific psychology
20. History of Clinical and Counseling Modern academic psychology developed in Western Europe and American
Psychology born 1879 in Leipzig, Germany
Wilhelm Wundt
William James- 1st American Psychologist
Laboratory at Harvard in 1875
Shift from structuralism, to functionalism, and to behaviorism
Person-centered/ Humanism: 3rd force
Multi-culturism: 4th force
21. History: Explanation of Deviant Members Supernatural forces
Demonology
Invasion of spirits, Gods, or demons
Priests were appropriate treatment
Medical Model
Define and discover solutions
Helped to remove stigma
Note symptoms, reveal disease process, treatment and prevention
Psychological Model: Freud
22. History: Treatment of Deviant Members Dark and Middle Ages
Often involved cruelty, tortured until confessed, execution
Monasteries were refuges
19th Century
Treatment shifted to asylums
Often chained, poorly fed, various treatments
23. History: Reform Advocates of mentally ill
Phillip Pinel- release from restraints and treat with kindness
Benjamin Rush- Advocated humane treatment in U.S.
Dorothea Dix- (1841- 1881 campaign)
improved conditions in U.S. and Europe
32 new mental hospitals
Clifford Beers- 1908 published book about experience in asylum: A mind that found itself
24. Bridging Academic and Applied Early 1900s, Emil Kraeplin developed 1st diagnostic system for mental disorders
Mental illnesses separate and distinct disorder
Course and outcome predetermined
Historical events shaping psychology
World War I
Army Alpha IQ test to screen recruits
Army Beta- non-verbal test for illiterates
Norms, standards, reliability, validity established for tests
Discipline of Clinical Psychology recognized
25. Historical Summary: Take Homes! Shift in focus of cause and treatment of deviant members
Supernatural Medical Psychological
Development and merge of academic and applied psychology
Facilitated by World Wars
Need for testing and psychological services
Development of assessments
Struggle still seen in models (Boulder vs. Vail)
Clinical and counseling psychology had similar and different routes
Remnants are seen today
26. Ethical Terminology Confidentiality-
Ethical responsibility to not reveal information
3 circumstances when must break confidentiality
Tarasoff Liability (1971) Duty to warn, protect
Privilege-
Legal right of consumers to control information
Protected relationship (husband-wife; lawyer-client)
Laws vary by state, no partial waiving
27. Ethical Terminology (cont) Assumptions:
Success treatment requires full disclosure
Clients will not disclose unless assured privacy
Informed Consent
Fully informed about the treatment ($,timing, Xments, therapist qualifications,etc.)
Limits of confidentiality
28. APA Ethics Code Rationale
Protect public and psychologists
Agreed upon professional standards
Framework for decisions and grievances
Revisions
First code published 1953
Four extensive revisions since 1953
Currently use 1992 code, but new revision draft out by APA
Format
Introduction and preamble
6 General Principles
Standards
29. General Principles Principle A: Competence
Knowledgeable and practice within expertise
Principle B: Integrity
Honest and fair, aware how beliefs affect work, clarify roles
Principle C: Professional and Scientific Responsibility
Uphold professional standards of conduct, collaborate when necessary, recognize the effect personal actions have on view of psychology
30. General Principles (cont) Principle D: Respect for Peoples Rights and Dignity
Value worth/dignity of all people, aware of differences (i.e., age, gender, race,religion, sexual orientation, etc), eliminate biases/ prejudices
Principle E: Concern for Others Welfare
Respect integrity, protect welfare, aware of power differences, do not exploit or mislead
Principle F: Social Responsibility
Work to benefit society (i.e., share knowledge, pro-bono), work to alleviate suffering, avoid misuse of work
31. Higher Order Ethical Principles Autonomy
Responsibility/ freedom for own behavior, not at the expense of others and must be competent
Beneficence
do good, contribute to health and welfare
Non-maleficence
Above all do no harm,
Justice
Fairness and equality, equal treatment of all people
Fidelity
Truthfulness, loyalty and trust
32. Ethical Dilemma Ethical Dilemma: a situation where no course of action is satisfactory, reasons for both sides
Prima Facia- follow principles unless conflicted with a higher principle (Kitchener, 1984)
Prevalent ethical issues (Pope & Vetter, 1992):
Confidentiality
Dual relationships
33. Ethical Misconduct Psychologist personal vs. professional roles
Consider public view of psychology
APA Ethics Review Board
Report to state licensing board
Malpractice
Professional relationship existed
Negligent Act
Client harmed
Negligent act caused harm
34. The Changing Environment Diversity and changing population
Increased diversity, fewer diverse counselors
Population is aging
The era of Managed Care, HMOs
Efficacy, Accountability, and Cost-effectiveness
Defining roles & Competition with other MHPs
Medical Model vs. Wellness/ Prevention
35. Era of Managed Care Changes in health care system
Driven by increasing costs
Increased accountability
Health care controlled by corporations
Conflict of interest: profit vs. care
Competition ($ focus, accountability)
Accountability
Demonstrate services accomplish what they claim
Peer review- judgment of services by peers
OQ45.2- outcome tracking instrument
36. Era of Managed Care (cont) Cost-effectiveness
Treatments that work and cost less
Role of prevention????
Cost cutting strategies
Reimburse low cost Dr.s
Contract for specific services
Prospective Payment System (PPS)
Diagnose Related Groups
Limit payment to certain proven treatments
37. Era of Managed Care (cont) Efficacy vs. Effectiveness
Empirically supported treatments (ESTs)
ESTs and treatment manuals
Treatment planning based on diagnosis
Movement towards medical model
Manuals to treat symptoms
Impact on training, education, research
38. Defining Roles in the New Era Who will provide services?
Cost-effectiveness
Treatment manuals
Master level services
PhDs
Supervise
Create Manuals
Administration
39. Defining Roles (cont) HMOs determine what services and who gets them!
Permission for services, gatekeeper
Who you see
Provider Panels
Provider Profiling
How much $$
How many sessions
Managed Care and ethical considerations
40. Defining Roles (cont) Specialties fighting for niche
Facilitates definition of clinical and counseling
Relationship with physicians
Prescription Privileges???
Medical Model vs. Prevention/ Wellness
How does it fit into managed care??
41. Prescription Privileges (Gutierrez & Silk, 1998) Arguments For
Integrated care
Cost-effective
Help underserved
Not enough Psychiatrists
Different levels of training, licenses, insurances
Control of MEDS
Precedent of other fields Arguments Against
Against developmental framework
Improve collaboration
Split the profession
Increase in premiums
Specialists better
Changes in training
42. Medical Model vs. Wellness Medical Model
Sick-well dichotomy
Labels, diagnosis
Remedial, not preventative
Negative focus Wellness
Developmental
Prevention
Focus on holism
Synergistic
Continuum
Positive focus
43. Wellness and Counseling Psychology Definition and Dimensions of Wellness
Wellness as a paradigm for counseling psychology
Prevention
Psychology should work to put itself out of business
Cost-effective in era of cost containment
44. Wellness Definition & Dimensions Wellness in not just absence of illness
WHO (1967)
Dimensions:
Social, Physical, Emotional,Intellectual, Spiritual, Environmental/ Occupational
Integrative, Synergistic parts
sum is greater than whole
Wellness as a continuum
Movement towards higher levels
45. Wellness: Paradigm for Counseling Psychology Myers (1991)
Wellness as the paradigm for counseling psychology
Label what we already do
Aligns with developmental focus and emphasis on positive psychology and prevention
46. Section 1 Wrap-Up!! Understand the context of helping professions
Know where psychologists work, what they do, and necessary training
Basic history/ development
Ethical Considerations
Current/Future Professional Issues
HMOs, ESTs, Prevention, Medical vs. Wellness