- Post starter
- #61
Nicolas Connault
Bronze Member
Thank you Cat! Please bear in mind that I'm not yet sure I will be conducting this survey, it will depend on ethics approval. It gets quite messy when you try to access clients for questionnaires :(
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
My first psychologist was a young man who did a degree with honours and then was on supervised practice which I was not informed of. He did not have a Masters. Seems like the rules differ between states ?
In cases where a trauma is singular, I think exposure therapy is likely extremely useful. My traumas are multiple, include family members, aquaintances, strangers, and persons of authority, include gang rape, beatings, robbery/rape, statutory rape (repeatedly), in my childhood home, in school, in town, at college, in my adult home. I get triggered by so many things on a daily basis, it is like I live exposure therapy.
.
Nurses who do additional studies (Masters in Nurse Practitioner on top of the three year undergrad) can become a 'Nurse Practitioner' in Australia, the UK and US. This means that they have a certain amount of additional privileges, or an expanded role if you will, relating to assessment, ordering tests, diagnosis and treatment of 'certain conditions'. Not sure how far it stretches in the mental health community for diagnosis and prescriptions.
etc SNIP
I recently started therapy, maybe 6 weeks ago, and it's CBT, and the therapist encourages me to revisit events, but I don't really manage to, I just cry. So I have no idea if I'm receiving the therapy you're talking about?
Thanks Happy Head, maddog and PTSD sufferer for your interest, it's quite encouraging!
PTSD sufferer (please let me know if you use a shorter nickname!), I'm wondering if the recent massive funding for CBT therapists in the UK (IAPT) has had an influence on the treatment type and quality you have been receiving? I've been reading up on this mass-training of low and high intensity therapists, and I wonder how many of them are actually getting trained in exposure therapy. My concern is that therapists can be great at making clients feel good in the short term (between sessions), but can miss the lack of long-term progress that might help a person become independent of frequent therapy and/or medication.