South West London and St Georges Mental Health NHS Trust

Perinatal Parent Infant Therapist/ Adult or Child Psychotherapist

The closing date is 18 January 2026

Job summary

We are seeking an enthusiastic Perinatal Parent Infant Therapist/Adult Psychotherapist/Child & Adolescent Psychotherapist with a passion for perinatal care and infant mental health to join our specialist community perinatal mental health service and support our parent - infant pathway. We are dedicated to high quality, evidence-based practice. We welcome applications from all psychotherapy and psychological professions and those newly qualified with the necessary perinatal/parent-infant experience.

The post holder will have a proven interest in working with parents and infants and knowledge of infant and adult mental health. Training as a parent - infant therapist (including extended parent - infant observation) is desirable but not essential. Appropriate specialist clinical and professional supervision and opportunities for training and development will be made available.

They will be a key member of our parent-infant psychotherapy sub-team and join an experienced and friendly group of psychological therapists and psychotherapists who provide a range of highly specialist psychological interventions for service users under the care of the Perinatal Mental Health Team. A key aspect of this role is to provide highly specialist psychological care to parents (and their infants) experiencing moderate to severe mental health difficulties. An ability to assess and manage risk in this context is crucial.

Main duties of the job

o To provide specialist psychotherapeutic assessments and interventions to service users and their infants of the Perinatal mental health service.

o To exercise autonomous professional responsibility for managing an identified caseload of parents and infants with complex psychological problems, including assessment of risk and safeguarding adults and babies

o To enable staff and service users from all backgrounds to flourish by working together to create a psychologically safe and responsive environment, ensuring the team operates from an anti-racist and anti-discriminatory perspective at all times

o To provide consultation as appropriate to other members of the MDT and wider professional networks involved in a family's care.

o To undertake service evaluation, research and policy development

o To work collaboratively and flexibly as a member of the multi-disciplinary team and contribute to a psychologically informed framework of working across the service.

o To actively contribute to perinatal care plans, providing a psychological perspective, which may require attendance at pre-birth and post-birth planning meetings

Flexible working:

As one of the few Trusts in London we are proud to offer flexible working as part of our new ways of working, and we are happy to talk flexible working at the interview stage. In this role you will be able to work Monday to Friday in the time frames from 9am to 6pm, giving you the very best of good work life balance.

About us

We are Proud to Belong at South West London and St George's Mental Health NHS Trust.

We have expert services, a rich history and a clear commitment to providing the best quality care for those with mental ill-health. The Care Quality Commission already rates our services as 'good' - we aspire to be 'outstanding'.

This is a great time to join us. We are transforming the way we care for our communities to support our mission of Making Life Better Together. We have built two brand new mental health facilities at Springfield University Hospital, which are amongst the best in the world. More developments are planned across our sites and services as we invest a further £120m to upgrade and modernise our estate by 2027.

We are inclusive and diverse and strive to be actively anti racist. We want to attract people from all backgrounds and experiences to enrich the work we do together. We are proud to co-produce and involve our local communities in all that we do.

We offer flexible working, career development and a variety of benefits to enable a positive, welcoming environment in which our people and their careers can thrive.

Come and join our inclusive teams and help our patients on their recovery journey.

Details

Date posted

08 January 2026

Pay scheme

Agenda for change

Band

Band 7

Salary

£56,276 to £63,176 a year pro rota per annum Inclusive of inner London HCAS

Contract

Permanent

Working pattern

Part-time

Reference number

294-FASP-7722741-JB

Job locations

Springfield University Hospital

15 Springfield Drive

London

SW17 0YF


Job description

Job responsibilities

1.To provide specialist psychotherapeutic assessments of parent infant dyads in the perinatal mental health service based upon the appropriate use, interpretation and integration of complex data from a variety of sources including psychological tests, self-report measures, rating scales, direct and indirect structured observations and semi-structured interviews with clients, family members and others involved in the clients care.

2. To formulate and implement plans for the formal psychotherapeutic treatment and/or management of difficulties within the parent-infant relationship, based upon an appropriate conceptual framework of the clients problems, and employing methods based upon evidence of efficacy, across the full range of care settings.

3. To be responsible for implementing a range of psychotherapeutic interventions for parent infant relationship difficulties within and across teams employed individually and in synthesis, adjusting and refining psychotherapeutic formulations drawing upon different explanatory models and maintaining a number of provisional hypotheses.

4. To evaluate and make decisions about treatment options taking into account both theoretical and therapeutic models and highly complex factors concerning historical and developmental processes that have shaped the individual, family or group.

5. To exercise autonomous professional responsibility for the assessment, treatment and discharge of clients whose problems are managed by psychotherapeutic care plans.

6. To provide specialist psychotherapeutic advice, guidance, consultation and training to other professionals contributing directly to the formulation and treatment plan for difficulties in the parent infant relationship.

7. To contribute directly and indirectly to a psychologically based framework of understanding and care to the benefit of all service users under the care of the team.

8. To undertake risk assessment and risk management for individual clients and their babies and to provide advice to other professions on psychotherapeutic aspects of risk assessment and risk management. To utilise specific experience of assessing risk to the unborn child as well as to the infant and to make decisions based on care needs which are most supportive of mother and child.

9. To communicate in a skilled and sensitive manner, information concerning the assessment, formulation and treatment plans of clients under their care and to monitor progress during the course of both uni- and multi-disciplinary care, integrating the contribution of other professionals on the basis of client need.

10. To work jointly with psychologists & psychotherapists based in community teams, to plan and hand over the psychotherapy assessment and treatment of patients that may continue after discharge from the Perinatal Team.

Job description

Job responsibilities

1.To provide specialist psychotherapeutic assessments of parent infant dyads in the perinatal mental health service based upon the appropriate use, interpretation and integration of complex data from a variety of sources including psychological tests, self-report measures, rating scales, direct and indirect structured observations and semi-structured interviews with clients, family members and others involved in the clients care.

2. To formulate and implement plans for the formal psychotherapeutic treatment and/or management of difficulties within the parent-infant relationship, based upon an appropriate conceptual framework of the clients problems, and employing methods based upon evidence of efficacy, across the full range of care settings.

3. To be responsible for implementing a range of psychotherapeutic interventions for parent infant relationship difficulties within and across teams employed individually and in synthesis, adjusting and refining psychotherapeutic formulations drawing upon different explanatory models and maintaining a number of provisional hypotheses.

4. To evaluate and make decisions about treatment options taking into account both theoretical and therapeutic models and highly complex factors concerning historical and developmental processes that have shaped the individual, family or group.

5. To exercise autonomous professional responsibility for the assessment, treatment and discharge of clients whose problems are managed by psychotherapeutic care plans.

6. To provide specialist psychotherapeutic advice, guidance, consultation and training to other professionals contributing directly to the formulation and treatment plan for difficulties in the parent infant relationship.

7. To contribute directly and indirectly to a psychologically based framework of understanding and care to the benefit of all service users under the care of the team.

8. To undertake risk assessment and risk management for individual clients and their babies and to provide advice to other professions on psychotherapeutic aspects of risk assessment and risk management. To utilise specific experience of assessing risk to the unborn child as well as to the infant and to make decisions based on care needs which are most supportive of mother and child.

9. To communicate in a skilled and sensitive manner, information concerning the assessment, formulation and treatment plans of clients under their care and to monitor progress during the course of both uni- and multi-disciplinary care, integrating the contribution of other professionals on the basis of client need.

10. To work jointly with psychologists & psychotherapists based in community teams, to plan and hand over the psychotherapy assessment and treatment of patients that may continue after discharge from the Perinatal Team.

Person Specification

Training and Qualifications

Essential

  • Full/Completed training in Adult Psychodynamic or Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy or Child Psychotherapy or Systemic Family Therapy oor Doctoral level training or equivalent in Clinical or Counselling Psychology
  • Professional registration with -HCPC (Clinical or Counselling Psychologist) or -UKCP (under the Council for Psychoanalysis and Jungian Analysis section) or -BPC (Jungian Analyst; Psychoanalyst; Psychoanalytic Psychotherapist) or -ACP (Child Psychotherapist) -UKCP (Systemic Family Therapist via the College of Family & Systemic Psychotherapists)
  • Experience of parent-infant observation as part of training and / or clinical work to date

Desirable

  • Further training / qualifications in Perinatal Mental Health
  • Successful completion of Parent- Infant Psychotherapy Training (including completion of an infant observation and personal psychotherapy / psychoanalysis)
  • Post qualification training in applied research methods, staff training & other methods of applied psychotherapeutic work

Experience

Essential

  • Experience of formulating difficulties within the parent-infant relationship across a variety of care settings, including outpatient, community, primary care and in-patient settings.
  • Experience of drawing upon attachment models and parent-infant relational models
  • Experience of specialist psychological assessment and treatment of parent infant dyads with severe and complex relational difficulties.
  • Experience of working with a wide variety of client groups, across the whole life course with 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

Desirable

  • Experience of teaching, training and/or supervision
  • Evidence of teaching about parent-infant theory and psychopathology
  • Experience of supervising clinical work within the multidisciplinary team

Knowledge & Skills

Essential

  • Skills in the use of complex methods of parent -infant assessment, intervention and management frequently requiring sustained and intense concentration
  • Knowledge of NICE guidelines related to infant mental health and evidence of working in line with NICE recommendations
  • Well-developed skills in the ability to communicate effectively, orally and in writing, complex, highly technical and/or clinically sensitive information to clients, their families, carers and other professional colleagues both within and outside the NHS
  • Skills in providing consultation to other professional and non-professional groups

Desirable

  • Knowledge of the theory and practice of specialised psychological therapies in specific difficult to treat groups (e.g. dual diagnosis, people experiencing psychosis, with personality disorder, substance misuse, learning disability, neurological dysfunction and additional disabilities)
  • Knowledge of recent policy and legislation in relation to people with severe and enduring mental health problems specifically and concerning mental health in general
Person Specification

Training and Qualifications

Essential

  • Full/Completed training in Adult Psychodynamic or Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy or Child Psychotherapy or Systemic Family Therapy oor Doctoral level training or equivalent in Clinical or Counselling Psychology
  • Professional registration with -HCPC (Clinical or Counselling Psychologist) or -UKCP (under the Council for Psychoanalysis and Jungian Analysis section) or -BPC (Jungian Analyst; Psychoanalyst; Psychoanalytic Psychotherapist) or -ACP (Child Psychotherapist) -UKCP (Systemic Family Therapist via the College of Family & Systemic Psychotherapists)
  • Experience of parent-infant observation as part of training and / or clinical work to date

Desirable

  • Further training / qualifications in Perinatal Mental Health
  • Successful completion of Parent- Infant Psychotherapy Training (including completion of an infant observation and personal psychotherapy / psychoanalysis)
  • Post qualification training in applied research methods, staff training & other methods of applied psychotherapeutic work

Experience

Essential

  • Experience of formulating difficulties within the parent-infant relationship across a variety of care settings, including outpatient, community, primary care and in-patient settings.
  • Experience of drawing upon attachment models and parent-infant relational models
  • Experience of specialist psychological assessment and treatment of parent infant dyads with severe and complex relational difficulties.
  • Experience of working with a wide variety of client groups, across the whole life course with 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

Desirable

  • Experience of teaching, training and/or supervision
  • Evidence of teaching about parent-infant theory and psychopathology
  • Experience of supervising clinical work within the multidisciplinary team

Knowledge & Skills

Essential

  • Skills in the use of complex methods of parent -infant assessment, intervention and management frequently requiring sustained and intense concentration
  • Knowledge of NICE guidelines related to infant mental health and evidence of working in line with NICE recommendations
  • Well-developed skills in the ability to communicate effectively, orally and in writing, complex, highly technical and/or clinically sensitive information to clients, their families, carers and other professional colleagues both within and outside the NHS
  • Skills in providing consultation to other professional and non-professional groups

Desirable

  • Knowledge of the theory and practice of specialised psychological therapies in specific difficult to treat groups (e.g. dual diagnosis, people experiencing psychosis, with personality disorder, substance misuse, learning disability, neurological dysfunction and additional disabilities)
  • Knowledge of recent policy and legislation in relation to people with severe and enduring mental health problems specifically and concerning mental health in general

Disclosure and Barring Service Check

This post is subject to the Rehabilitation of Offenders Act (Exceptions Order) 1975 and as such it will be necessary for a submission for Disclosure to be made to the Disclosure and Barring Service (formerly known as CRB) to check for any previous criminal convictions.

Certificate of Sponsorship

Applications from job seekers who require current Skilled worker sponsorship to work in the UK are welcome and will be considered alongside all other applications. For further information visit the UK Visas and Immigration website (Opens in a new tab).

From 6 April 2017, skilled worker applicants, applying for entry clearance into the UK, have had to present a criminal record certificate from each country they have resided continuously or cumulatively for 12 months or more in the past 10 years. Adult dependants (over 18 years old) are also subject to this requirement. Guidance can be found here Criminal records checks for overseas applicants (Opens in a new tab).

UK Registration

Applicants must have current UK professional registration. For further information please see NHS Careers website (opens in a new window).

Additional information

Disclosure and Barring Service Check

This post is subject to the Rehabilitation of Offenders Act (Exceptions Order) 1975 and as such it will be necessary for a submission for Disclosure to be made to the Disclosure and Barring Service (formerly known as CRB) to check for any previous criminal convictions.

Certificate of Sponsorship

Applications from job seekers who require current Skilled worker sponsorship to work in the UK are welcome and will be considered alongside all other applications. For further information visit the UK Visas and Immigration website (Opens in a new tab).

From 6 April 2017, skilled worker applicants, applying for entry clearance into the UK, have had to present a criminal record certificate from each country they have resided continuously or cumulatively for 12 months or more in the past 10 years. Adult dependants (over 18 years old) are also subject to this requirement. Guidance can be found here Criminal records checks for overseas applicants (Opens in a new tab).

UK Registration

Applicants must have current UK professional registration. For further information please see NHS Careers website (opens in a new window).

Employer details

Employer name

South West London and St Georges Mental Health NHS Trust

Address

Springfield University Hospital

15 Springfield Drive

London

SW17 0YF


Employer's website

https://www.swlstg.nhs.uk/ (Opens in a new tab)


Employer details

Employer name

South West London and St Georges Mental Health NHS Trust

Address

Springfield University Hospital

15 Springfield Drive

London

SW17 0YF


Employer's website

https://www.swlstg.nhs.uk/ (Opens in a new tab)


Employer contact details

For questions about the job, contact:

Consultant Clinical Psychologist

Catherine Green

Catherine.Green@swlstg.nhs.uk

02035136577

Details

Date posted

08 January 2026

Pay scheme

Agenda for change

Band

Band 7

Salary

£56,276 to £63,176 a year pro rota per annum Inclusive of inner London HCAS

Contract

Permanent

Working pattern

Part-time

Reference number

294-FASP-7722741-JB

Job locations

Springfield University Hospital

15 Springfield Drive

London

SW17 0YF


Supporting documents

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