Practitioners’ experiences of learning and implementing Counselling for Depression (CfD) in routine practice settings

Aim: Counselling for Depression (CfD) is a person-centred experiential therapy developed for implementation in the Improving Access to Psychological Therapies (IAPT) programme. Training in this model has been available across England since 2011. This study aims to investigate counselling practitione...

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Main Authors: Drewitt, Leah, Pybis, Joanne, Murphy, David, Barkham, Michael
Format: Article
Published: Wiley 2017
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Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/47063/
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author Drewitt, Leah
Pybis, Joanne
Murphy, David
Barkham, Michael
author_facet Drewitt, Leah
Pybis, Joanne
Murphy, David
Barkham, Michael
author_sort Drewitt, Leah
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Aim: Counselling for Depression (CfD) is a person-centred experiential therapy developed for implementation in the Improving Access to Psychological Therapies (IAPT) programme. Training in this model has been available across England since 2011. This study aims to investigate counselling practitioners’ experiences of learning the CfD model and implementing CfD in practice settings. Method: Participants were recruited by an email sent to the British Association for Counselling and Psychotherapy’s (BACP) CfD Practice Research Network (PRN). Of the 53 CfD practitioners belonging to BACP’s CfD PRN, 18 participated in this mixed-methods piece of research. All 18 participants completed an online questionnaire, and one hour follow-up semi-structured interviews were conducted with six of the participants. Results: Descriptive analyses from the online questionnaire indicated a positive experience of CfD training, with practitioners indicating a positive impact on sense of self, practice and skill set. Although a degree of challenge was encountered when training in the CfD model, thematic analysis from the six semi-structured interviews revealed factors contributing to the positives and challenges experienced on the course. Themes also revealed a predominately negative experience of CfD in practice and service settings, although this was service dependent. Conclusions and implications for practice: The findings can inform future recruitment of trainees to CfD training programmes and the training programme itself. They can also be used to achieve greater congruence between training in CfD and the delivery of the model. Future research may need to focus on the service level factors influencing practitioners’ experiences, and whether this experience is specific to the CfD modality in IAPT.
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spelling nottingham-470632020-05-04T19:10:50Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/47063/ Practitioners’ experiences of learning and implementing Counselling for Depression (CfD) in routine practice settings Drewitt, Leah Pybis, Joanne Murphy, David Barkham, Michael Aim: Counselling for Depression (CfD) is a person-centred experiential therapy developed for implementation in the Improving Access to Psychological Therapies (IAPT) programme. Training in this model has been available across England since 2011. This study aims to investigate counselling practitioners’ experiences of learning the CfD model and implementing CfD in practice settings. Method: Participants were recruited by an email sent to the British Association for Counselling and Psychotherapy’s (BACP) CfD Practice Research Network (PRN). Of the 53 CfD practitioners belonging to BACP’s CfD PRN, 18 participated in this mixed-methods piece of research. All 18 participants completed an online questionnaire, and one hour follow-up semi-structured interviews were conducted with six of the participants. Results: Descriptive analyses from the online questionnaire indicated a positive experience of CfD training, with practitioners indicating a positive impact on sense of self, practice and skill set. Although a degree of challenge was encountered when training in the CfD model, thematic analysis from the six semi-structured interviews revealed factors contributing to the positives and challenges experienced on the course. Themes also revealed a predominately negative experience of CfD in practice and service settings, although this was service dependent. Conclusions and implications for practice: The findings can inform future recruitment of trainees to CfD training programmes and the training programme itself. They can also be used to achieve greater congruence between training in CfD and the delivery of the model. Future research may need to focus on the service level factors influencing practitioners’ experiences, and whether this experience is specific to the CfD modality in IAPT. Wiley 2017-10-04 Article PeerReviewed Drewitt, Leah, Pybis, Joanne, Murphy, David and Barkham, Michael (2017) Practitioners’ experiences of learning and implementing Counselling for Depression (CfD) in routine practice settings. Counselling and Psychotherapy Research, 18 (1). pp. 3-13. ISSN 1746-1405 counselling for depression; training; trainees’ experiences; practice; IAPT http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/capr.12148/abstract doi:10.1002/capr.12148 doi:10.1002/capr.12148
spellingShingle counselling for depression; training; trainees’ experiences; practice; IAPT
Drewitt, Leah
Pybis, Joanne
Murphy, David
Barkham, Michael
Practitioners’ experiences of learning and implementing Counselling for Depression (CfD) in routine practice settings
title Practitioners’ experiences of learning and implementing Counselling for Depression (CfD) in routine practice settings
title_full Practitioners’ experiences of learning and implementing Counselling for Depression (CfD) in routine practice settings
title_fullStr Practitioners’ experiences of learning and implementing Counselling for Depression (CfD) in routine practice settings
title_full_unstemmed Practitioners’ experiences of learning and implementing Counselling for Depression (CfD) in routine practice settings
title_short Practitioners’ experiences of learning and implementing Counselling for Depression (CfD) in routine practice settings
title_sort practitioners’ experiences of learning and implementing counselling for depression (cfd) in routine practice settings
topic counselling for depression; training; trainees’ experiences; practice; IAPT
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/47063/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/47063/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/47063/