Our Vice President Julia Samuel, author of Grief Works, is a psychotherapist specialising in grief and supporting bereaved families. She has 30 yearsβ experience within the profession and is a senior accredited ΒιΆΉΤ΄΄ counsellor and a UKCP-registered psychotherapist. Here she shares her perspective on SCoPEd.
βI think SCoPEd works for both the public β including existing clients and future clients β and it also works for the profession.
Whatever peopleβs level of distress is - whether theyβre stuck and they want to talk things through or they have major psychological issues - theyβre not interested in training or hierarchies.Β Theyβre interested in knowing what it is theyβre going to get and having a clarity and coherence about that.
Build trust
The first thing anyone needs to do with a client is build trust. If we are externally naming ourselves and representing ourselves in a coherent and trustworthy way, then thatβs an incredibly good first step to having a trustworthy relationship with our clients.
More legitimate
From the counsellorsβ perspective, I think we will be much more legitimate in all the different areas of work for the same reason. Itβs all about that trustworthy relationship again. But I think this will also bring lucidity for each other and among each other which is something we really need.
Not a hierarchical position
I donβt see that we are denigrating what we already have by trying to have a clear understanding of what the words counsellor or psychotherapist are. It also acknowledges that these roles sit side by side. This is not a hierarchical position. This is not saying that one is better than another. Itβs reaffirming that they are both necessary and they both have a role to play. One doesnβt knock the other out. We need both. Clients need both.

Julia Samuel
One of the main things, in my view, is that SCoPEd will help offer further protection for the public from people who havenβt had the right training; those people whoβve done a weekβs course and call themselves a counsellor. As far as I can see these people may be able to form relationships, but they wouldnβt have the requisite checks and balances and understanding that would make them licensable. This is something we really need to address.
Input from members
Fundamentally, the positives totally override the negatives. I think itβs important for ΒιΆΉΤ΄΄ members to recognise therapeutically and psychologically that the process of change is always painful. It is always combative and difficult.Β But if it feels bad and difficult, it doesnβt mean it is bad and wrong. SCoPEd works best through this collaborative process, itβs different iterations, which come as a result of the input from its members.
Build bridges
In a profession that is about understanding, empathy and getting inside the frame of somebody else, whichever modality you work from, we have to work collaboratively. I think thatβs especially important in a world where there is so much conflict, and so many people shouting βIβm better than youβ. We have to be able to work with the other people who are in the same field as us and build bridges of relationships so we can serve our population better. I am not alone in finding the general backdrop to my daily life from media on all platforms this sense of splitting, blame and attack. We need to do the absolute opposite of that. We should allow difference; allow people to be the therapists they are, but also allow them to work alongside each other.
Use your voice
One of the difficulties is that the people who disagree tend to voice their opinions the loudest because they are angry. As they should, and as they must.Β But those who agree tend not to speak. They just go along with it. People need to use their voice, not silently, but actively. Iβd encourage those who are behind SCoPEd to voice their support, just as I have done here.β

Watch SCoPEd panel discussion
Our senior leadership were filmed being questioned on a variety of aspects of the SCoPEd project

SCoPEd: Aiming to promote the value of therapy and create more opportunities for members
Fiona Ballantine Dykes explains what the Scope of Practice and Education (SCoPEd) project hopes to achieve