Dáil debates

Wednesday, 24 February 2010

 

Mental Health Services.

8:00 am

Photo of Dan NevilleDan Neville (Limerick West, Fine Gael)

I welcome the opportunity to raise this issue, which I have raised previously over a number of years. I am prompted to do so having attended and addressed the European Association of Psychotherapy Conference in Vienna last week, which provided a great understanding of and much information in regard to what is happening in Europe.

I again express my concern that there are no statutory regulations in Ireland for the registration of psychotherapists and counsellors. There is no State control over who and what qualifications are held by those practising in these areas. It is dangerous for untrained, unskilled people to probe others' unconsciousness. They are dealing with human vulnerability and serious damage can be done to such delicate people.

The Government introduced the Health and Social Care Professionals Act 2005 to provide for the registration of persons qualifying to use the title of a designated profession and for the determination of complaints relating to their fitness to practice. Some 12 professions are listed as designated professions under the Act. When I challenged the then Minister, former Deputy O'Malley, on this issue during the debate on that Bill in the Dáil, he stated that regulated professionals had become so regulated by a process of discussion and consensus. However, the psychotherapists and counsellors group failed at that time to agree an approach to the regulations. The Minister stated that statutory regulation in such circumstances would have serious legal implications. He accepted the principle that all psychotherapists and counsellors should be properly qualified and pointed out that in consultation with the professional groups involved he was unable to obtain agreement on the criteria. The Minister stated that he asked the groups to revert to him with agreed proposals and that he could, rather than return the matter to the Dáil, designate them under ministerial order.

In response to the Minister's request, 22 organisations established a psychological therapies forum for counselling and psychotherapy. The forum accepted that it was imperative that the public is protected by the promotion of high standards of conduct, education, training and competence among the professionals of counselling and psychotherapy. It pointed out that all bodies involved with the forum provided a code of ethics by which their members must abide. It further stated that while this form of self-regulation provides protection to clients of these organisations, it falls short of optimal protection, as under our common law system it is possible for any person to take the title of counsellor or psychotherapist and practise accordingly without any training or competence. In other words, any person can put up a sign stating they are a counsellor or psychotherapist and charge €80 per hour for performing an act as a psychotherapist or counsellor, which is extremely dangerous to vulnerable people.

The current anomaly does not lend itself to good clinical governance and the maintenance of high standards of patient care. The Health and Social Care Professionals Act 2005 provides a mechanism to drive forward the clinical governance agenda. It creates a framework through which practitioners are accountable for continually improving the quality of their service and safeguarding high standards of care by creating an environment where excellence will flourish and optimal protection is afforded to the public who access counselling and psychotherapy.

The psychological therapists forum provided a proposal for statutory regulation of counsellors and psychotherapists. We have been informed that the 12 organisations already designated must have full recognition of designation before counsellors and psychotherapists are included in the Bill. This is critical to vulnerable people in crisis who will be damaged by counsellors and psychotherapists who are not properly trained or qualified, people who are mavericks involved in this area. We believe the issue of their designation should be given priority under the Bill.

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