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The National Service Framework for Mental Health places psychological therapies at the heart of a modern health service. The National Plan is committed to workforce expansion and training.
Consultant psychiatrists in psychotherapy play a pivotal role in both training and delivery of psychological therapies. Their distinctive contribution includes:
They have a 6-year medical training: a 3-year general psychiatric training which includes a mandatory psychotherapy component, and a further 3-year specialist registrar training in psychotherapy. The latter programme equips them with a broad range of expert psychotherapy skills in at least three modalities, and enables them to assess and offer appropriate treatment to complex cases.
Psychological therapies are evidence-based treatments, best organised in a tiered fashion, with simple time-limited treatments delivered in primary care, more difficult cases treated and held in CMHTs and complex cases referred for specialist therapies.
Consultant psychiatrists in psychotherapy work as part of a multi-disciplinary psychological therapies team alongside psychologists, nurses, counsellors, occupational therapists, social workers and lay psychotherapists.
They are few in number and unevenly distributed. Users and carers consistently call for more talking treatments. Postcode variation in provision of psychological therapies is the norm. A drive led by the Department of Health to create more consultant psychiatrists in psychotherapy posts will help overcome these gaps and inequalities in provision.
The full report is available from the College's Book Sales Office, tel: 020 7235 2351 ext. 146.
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