
Senior Trial Therapist
- Manchester
- £55,690-62,682 per year
- Permanent
- Part-time
- Pay Enhancements
- 27 days annual leave plus bank holidays rising to 29 after 5 years and 33 days after 10 years
- Excellent pension
- Cycle to work scheme
- Salary sacrifice car scheme
- Wellbeing programme
- Blue Light Card Discounts
- fuelGenie Fuel Cards (for applicable roles)
- Pay Enhancements
- 27 days annual leave plus bank holidays rising to 29 after 5 years and 33 days after 10 years
- Excellent pension
- Cycle to work scheme
- Salary sacrifice car scheme
- Wellbeing programme
- Blue Light Card Discounts
- fuelGenie Fuel Cards (for applicable roles)
- Postgraduate level training in applied psychology (Clinical/ Forensic/ Counselling Psychology) as approved by an appropriate accrediting body (HCPC, BABCP).
- To have completed the first year of Cognitive Analytic Therapy (CAT) practitioner training. The training provider must be recognised by the Association for Cognitive Analytic Therapy (ACAT). This may include applicants who completed the first year of CAT training as part of a Clinical Psychology Doctoral programme (where year 1 CAT training is an embedded part of the programme).
- To have fully completed Cognitive Analytic Therapy (CAT) practitioner training. The training provider must be recognised by the Association for Cognitive Analytic Therapy (ACAT).
- Experience of specialist psychological assessment, formulation and treatment of young people within a mental health setting.
- Experience of working with a wide variety of client groups, across the whole life course presenting problems that reflect the full range of clinical severity including maintaining a high degree of professionalism in the face of highly emotive and distressing problems, verbal abuse and the threat of physical abuse
- Experience of working therapeutically with clients who have experienced self-harm
- Experience of using CAT or CAT-informed approaches with clients experiencing self-harm
- Shows evidence of knowledge and expertise into the issues of providing psychological therapy to young people who self-harm
- Evidence of high level of general clinical skills
- Ability to prepare and present research reports and presentations
- Good IT skills
- Postgraduate level training in applied psychology (Clinical/ Forensic/ Counselling Psychology) as approved by an appropriate accrediting body (HCPC, BABCP).
- To have completed the first year of Cognitive Analytic Therapy (CAT) practitioner training. The training provider must be recognised by the Association for Cognitive Analytic Therapy (ACAT). This may include applicants who completed the first year of CAT training as part of a Clinical Psychology Doctoral programme (where year 1 CAT training is an embedded part of the programme).
- To have fully completed Cognitive Analytic Therapy (CAT) practitioner training. The training provider must be recognised by the Association for Cognitive Analytic Therapy (ACAT).
- Experience of specialist psychological assessment, formulation and treatment of young people within a mental health setting.
- Experience of working with a wide variety of client groups, across the whole life course presenting problems that reflect the full range of clinical severity including maintaining a high degree of professionalism in the face of highly emotive and distressing problems, verbal abuse and the threat of physical abuse
- Experience of working therapeutically with clients who have experienced self-harm
- Experience of using CAT or CAT-informed approaches with clients experiencing self-harm
- Shows evidence of knowledge and expertise into the issues of providing psychological therapy to young people who self-harm
- Evidence of high level of general clinical skills
- Ability to prepare and present research reports and presentations
- Good IT skills