Written answers

Tuesday, 17 October 2023

Photo of Mark WardMark Ward (Dublin Mid West, Sinn Fein)
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515. To ask the Minister for Health for an update on psychotherapy registration through CORU; and if he will make a statement on the matter. [44745/23]

Photo of Mark WardMark Ward (Dublin Mid West, Sinn Fein)
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516. To ask the Minister for Health if an organisation (details supplied) can be included in the next round of discussion for registration of psychotherapy through CORU; to outline the consultation process; and if he will make a statement on the matter. [44746/23]

Photo of Stephen DonnellyStephen Donnelly (Wicklow, Fianna Fail)
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I propose to take Questions Nos. 515 and 516 together.

As the Deputy may be aware, the Health and Social Care Professionals Council and Registration Boards, collectively known as CORU, are responsible for protecting the public by promoting high standards of professional conduct, education, training, and competence amongst the professions designated under the Health and Social Care Professionals Act (2005). The Act is being implemented on a phased basis as registration boards and their registers are being established.

Regulations under SI No. 170 of 2018 were made by my predecessor in 2018 to designate the professions of counsellor and psychotherapist under the 2005 Act and to establish one registration board for both professions. Members were appointed to the Counsellors and Psychotherapists Registration Board in February 2019 and they held their inaugural meeting in May 2019.

The work of the Counsellors and Psychotherapists Registration Board (CPRB) includes consideration of the titles to be protected and the minimum qualifications to be required of existing practitioners and the qualifications that will be required for future graduates. The work of the CPRB is significantly more challenging than it is for registration boards for some of the more established professions owing to the different and complex pathways into these professions, the variety of titles used, and the variety and number of courses and course providers.

To date, the following progress has been made by the CPRB:

  • Identification, verification and comprehensive assessment of legacy/historical qualifications to determine if they are appropriate for transitioning existing practitioners onto the respective registers (when open);
  • Scoping and research on the regulation of counsellors and psychotherapists internationally has been conducted;
  • Drafting of separate and distinct Standards of Proficiencyfor counsellors and psychotherapists and Criteria for Education and Training Programmeshas been finalised.
A public consultation on the draft Standards of Proficiency and Criteria for Education and Training Programmes has been launched and will run until 5pm on Friday 1stDecember 2023. As part of this consultation, the CPRB welcomes feedback from stakeholders, including members of the professions, education providers, employers, professional and representative bodies, as well as members of the public.

Further information on the consultation process is available on the CORU website here: www.coru.ie/public-protection/public-consultations/current-consultations/public-consultation-psychotherapists-standards-of-proficiency-and-criteria-for-education-and-training-programmes-for-psychotherapists.html.

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