Supporting and promoting the well-being of mental health carers and their families.
Mental Health Carers Austalia.
14-11-2016 10:36 PM - edited 10-09-2019 01:50 PM
14-11-2016 10:36 PM - edited 10-09-2019 01:50 PM
Today at the Dr, while having my Mental Health Care Plan reviewed, I raised the question "When do you STOP getting counselling / therapy?" It was my GP's opinion that:
(1) Ten sessions a year or apx one session a month, is not really enough for effective 'therapy' as such" (10 being the maximum subsidised / affordable sessions available a year - the public system).
(2) Counselling is something that never ends for some people ad its a good means of providing support to stay on track or a backup if things become too difficult (which is me I think).
I'm also conscious of "taxpayer funding" being wasted on me, like its a bit self indulgent getting expendive professional counsel... I am considering not continuing counselling next year, when my 10sessions stop, but I am a little afraid of being 'alone' if I come undone again, maybe land back in hospital.
Just wondering what others think about this?
15-11-2016 05:33 AM
15-11-2016 05:33 AM
15-11-2016 08:58 AM
15-11-2016 08:58 AM
15-11-2016 04:31 PM
15-11-2016 04:31 PM
15-11-2016 04:44 PM
15-11-2016 04:44 PM
15-11-2016 05:13 PM
15-11-2016 05:13 PM
As a person who understands the system pretty thoroughly, I thought you were right on the mark, but being tongue in cheek @Kurra with your maybe I am being dumb... maybe I am wrong? I have learned that it is expected to insert such phrases into conversation in Australia more than in America ... with our cut down tall poppies syndrome ... otherwise one might be scorned as "a know it all"
I dont think anybody actually knows the answer to that one @Former-Member .. when is enough enough ... on either side of the therapy/counselling fence. I experimented with going without and taking the sessions as needed. Before the recent changes in my approach and relinquishing my teaching studio.
"Counselling" usually suggests less thorough training but there are always exceptions. Better counselling courses are cropping up here and there and may even be more appropriate to delivering "effective care" than some psychology degrees. Depends on the units taken and the individual and the reason why there is the "clinical"/non-clinical divide among psychologists.
I have a "counselling" and a "therapy" qualification but do not practise ... except on here . lol .. it has highly influenced my mindset and approach to people, family, students, peers, train travellers and people on the street etc.,
We can use the terms interchangeably in general conversation, but we can also get technical ..
Psycho-analytic therapy traditionally takes many years but after all it is a pretty new tradition (100 years) compared to some traditions.
For about 7, years my old GP managed my plans and I usually used less the the 10 and down to about 3. That approach might work well for you @Former-Member keep the sessions under your belt for if you really need it but get support to go it alone as much as you feel fine. I had about 5 years on very low antidepressant dose and low counselling session use.
Which is why I am not 100% sure about my "therapy" & med approach at the moment .. I am aware of the triggers and journalling them, so maybe I just need to fine tune this boundary thing ... but will follow through medical reccomendations as far as seems reasonable, (with some 2nd opionions ??) as I think that is the most responsible thing to do.
15-11-2016 05:15 PM
15-11-2016 05:15 PM
15-11-2016 08:02 PM
15-11-2016 08:02 PM
@Former-Member 4.5 years. 3 years with my current psychologist and I'm going to keep going. I find problems keep popping up (illness) and she's really good.
I think its totally personal. I find with my illness, bipolar, that I need her help. But I guess if an illness is less episodic than that person may not need a psychologist all the time.
16-11-2016 08:49 PM
16-11-2016 08:49 PM
16-11-2016 09:16 PM
16-11-2016 09:16 PM
Hey @Former-Member, for my two cents worth I've never really differentiated between these terms when it comes to what they offer. As a Psychologist I've referred to the work I've done with clients as both counselling and therapy depending on the language they were most comfortable with. I guess I would say that I've learned therapeutic approaches but practise them within a counselling framework. I've always thought that therapy/therapists were more American terms but they seem to be used more frequently here now.
Yes, the 10 session medicare model is woefully inadequate for many people. I understand the line of thought that it's just to keep you on track given the limitations of what can be achieved in 10 sessions. But it's there if you need it - and meet the threshold - so take it up if you feel that it would benefit you.
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Supporting and promoting the well-being of mental health carers and their families.
Mental Health Carers Austalia.
Our Mission
To be the voice of mental health carers to enable the best life possible.
Get In Touch With Us
We're here to support and promote the well-being of mental health carers and their families
Mental Health Carers Australia is the only national advocacy group solely concerned with the well-being and promotion of the needs of mental health carers.
Supporting and promoting the well-being of mental health carers and their families.
Mental Health Carers Austalia.
Our Mission
To be the voice of mental health carers to enable the best life possible.
Get In Touch With Us
We're here to support and promote the well-being of mental health carers and their families
Mental Health Carers Australia is the only national advocacy group solely concerned with the well-being and promotion of the needs of mental health carers.