My workplace: Naomi Ward Journals Published 18 Jan 2022 Naomi Ward talks to Nicola Banning about coaching educators across the world. She explains the role of poetry and metaphor in her work. BACP Workplace, January 2022
A pluralistic approach to student counselling Journals Published 1 Mar 2019 Open article: At the heart of good therapeutic outcomes is a respectful, collaborative client-therapist relationship. Marcia Stoll and John McLeod outline how this relationship underscores pluralistic therapy, and argue that it is ideally suited to student needs. University and College Counselling, March 2019
Working with students involved in the sex industry Journals Published 1 Mar 2022 Open article: Far from being a lifestyle choice, the sex industry brings suffering, trauma, abuse and coercion to students involved in it, as Anna Fisher highlights. University and College Counselling, March 2022
Working with the police Journals Published 18 Jan 2022 Open article: Zoe Davenport uncovers a less well-known story about policing. She argues that those who protect our society deserve a properly funded national standard of clinical support. BACP Workplace, January 2022
Redefining the menopause Journals Published 30 Apr 2015 Cordelia Nevin Galgut, a practising psychotherapist who is herself menopausal, raises the need for us to think differently about this phase of a woman’s life. Healthcare Counselling and Psychotherapy Journal, April 2015
Art therapy in mental healthcare: What makes a difference? Journals Published 31 Oct 2017 Dominik Havsteen-Franklin explores the contribution of art therapy to mental healthcare. Healthcare Counselling and Psychotherapy Journal, October 2017
The big interview: Dwight Turner Journals Published 29 Apr 2021 Open article: Catherine Jackson talks to Dwight Turner about race, anger, authenticity and intersectionality. Therapy Today, May 2021
Creating Connections: Counselling in the Age of TikTok and Instagram Louise Hudspith explores connecting with the digital generation: adapting counselling for TikTok and Instagram users. BACP member blogs
Working with postnatal depression Journals Published 30 Jun 2013 It is important to understand postnatal depression as a form of depression that occurs following the introduction of a baby into one’s life, rather than a specific type of depression for which you need specialist training, write Susan Utting-Simon and Lori Fitzgerald. Private Practice, Summer 2013