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Improving access to psychological therapies: a comparison between two devolved nations

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 June 2013

Louise Waddington*
Affiliation:
Cardiff CBT Programmes, School of Psychology, Tower Building, Cardiff, UK
Rebecca Jury
Affiliation:
Cardiff CBT Programmes, School of Psychology, Tower Building, Cardiff, UK
*
*Author for correspondence: Dr L. Waddington, Cardiff CBT Programmes, School of Psychology, Tower Building, 70 Park Place, Cardiff CF10 3AT, UK (email: louise.waddington@wales.nhs.uk).
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Abstract

Scotland and Wales share the opportunities of devolved government as well as challenges such as urban deprivation and remote rural communities. Such commonalities make a comparison of their approaches to psychological therapies relevant. The Scottish and Welsh governments have both published guidance concerning improved access to psychological therapies and these reveal different approaches. The Scottish Government has provided clear and concrete guidance for services, retains a close overview of progress, and plans training from the centre. The Welsh Government has published guidance which is unspecific, has largely devolved responsibility for implementation to local health boards and has no central plan for training. Scottish guidance provides clear information about who can expect to receive specific evidence-based therapies, the number of sessions they can expect to receive, and crucially the level of training and competence required for therapists. Welsh guidance documents have not yet specified which patient groups can expect to access formal psychological therapies, which psychological therapies are considered to have a sound evidence base, the number of sessions patients can expect, or the level of training and competence required for practitioners. Welsh policy documents make no reference to competence frameworks for therapists.

Information

Type
Service models and forms of delivery
Copyright
Copyright © British Association for Behavioural and Cognitive Psychotherapies 2013 
Figure 0

Table 1. The expected level of treatment and therapy for different patient groups as outlined by the Matrix (Scottish Government, 2012)

Figure 1

Table 2. Guidelines taken from the Matrix on the evidence-based interventions for generalized anxiety disorder

Figure 2

Table 3. Training and competences specified by the Matrix for delivering each level of therapy

Figure 3

Table 4. Information from the National Service Model (Welsh Government, 2011) relevant to patients’ expectations

Figure 4

Table 5. Information from the Policy Information Guidance (Welsh Government, 2012) relevant to training

Figure 5

Table 6. Information from the Wales National Service Model (Welsh Government, 2011) relevant to training

Figure 6

Table 7a. Three levels of mental health practitioner described in the Policy Implementation Guidance (Welsh Government, 2012)

Figure 7

Table 7b. An example of tiered care including training and competences described in the Policy Implementation Guidance (Welsh Government, 2012)

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