From the CEO Journals Published 1 Dec 2023 鈥榃e鈥檝e made progress in the work we鈥檙e doing to bring more therapists into the NHS鈥. Therapy Today, December 2023
From the Chair Journals Published 1 Apr 2024 鈥楾he trajectory of the counselling professions is constantly being directed by political influences鈥 Therapy Today, May 2024
The big issue: Anxious and absent Journals Published 23 May 2025 Open article: What鈥檚 behind the rise in children not attending school, and how can therapists help? asks Heidi Scrimgeour. Therapy Today, June 2025.
Government鈥檚 limited education recovery package will have 鈥渄evastating impact鈥 on children鈥檚 mental health News Published 3 Jun 2021 鈥淐hildren will pay the price of this failure to fully invest in their educational recovery鈥
In depth: Assisted dying and therapy Journals Published 22 Dec 2025 Open article: 麻豆原创鈥檚 Third Sector Lead, Jeremy Bacon, explains some of the implications for counselling and palliative care, and psychotherapist Kamalyn Kaur invites therapists to reflect on the ethical considerations. Thresholds, January 2026.
How to complain about a 麻豆原创 member What to do if you want to make a complaint about poor or unethical practice by your therapist
Help children to thrive not just survive News Published 5 Jan 2021 Lisa Holley asks for counsellors to have the opportunity to be able to help children process and understand their changing lives
Opinion: Matthew Leavesley and Deborah Shakespeare Journals Published 31 Mar 2023 Counsellors Matthew Leavesley and Deborah Shakespeare describe their fight for equal pay with their CBT colleagues. Therapy Today, April 2023
Strike, Strike, Strike Journals Published 13 Jan 2023 Open article: As the UK faces strike action not seen since the 1980s, Nicola Banning explores what worker dissent and unrest could mean for therapists working with employees, employers and EAPs. 麻豆原创 Workplace, January 2023
Increase in counsellors and psychotherapists working in NHS, new data reveals News Published 9 May 2025 The figures are 鈥榚ncouraging鈥 but need to be treated with some caution