Job summary
The successful candidate will be a highly energetic and robust individual with sophisticated and sensitive clinical skills, and a proven track record of delivering high quality services in either the NHS, Prison healthcare, social care or the private sector. They will be a key part of the MDT and will liaise closely with colleagues from both mental health and primary care as well as partner agencies to provide true partnership working and seamless care pathways.
The successful candidate will be required to deliver specialist psychological assessment and interventions and provide training, advice and consultation on psychological approaches to other members of the clinical team and wider prison staff. They will supervise associated assistant and student roles and develop and co-facilitate groups with MH team colleagues.
Working in prison-based healthcare is challenging and rewarding - you can make a big difference to the men and women serving sentences, many of whom have significant trauma histories, and ongoing associated difficulties in mental health and functioning. We operate a stepped care model and the patients have a wide range of difficulties and interventions must be matched appropriately.
Main duties of the job
To provide a comprehensive, specialist psychological therapy service to patients of Health and Justice and to the men of HMP Aylesbury.
To provide specialist psychological assessment and therapy.
To provide training, advice and consultation to other staff about the psychological needs of the patients.
To utilise research skills for audit, policy and service development and research within the Health and Justice Directorate.
To work autonomously within professional guidelines and the overall framework of the Trust's policies and procedures.
About us
CNWL's Health and Justice is made up of a highly motivated and passionate team with vast experience in healthcare within a secure environment. We deliver health care in a range of settings; prisons, secure hospital and in the community. Our vision is: "Working in partnership with the criminal justice system and other agencies, we will provide responsive, dependable and high quality primary care, mental health and substance misuse services to existing offenders (and those at risk of offending) in the communities we serve, to improve their health status and to encourage social inclusion." CNWL operate a range of healthcare services across a number of prisons and secure facilities.
Joining a large, forward-thinking Trust will bring successful candidates excellent development opportunities, an exciting career structure, and job satisfaction. Working alongside experienced in-reach team colleagues, we are looking for the best clinicians, who will work well as part of a Team and Trust with a 'can do' attitude.
Job description
Job responsibilities
To provide comprehensive psychological assessments of patients within the prison using a structured and semi-structured clinical interview, psychometric instruments, and other assessment methods as appropriate.
To formulate and implement plans for the formal psychological treatment and/or management of a clients mental health problems, 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.
To be responsible for implementing a range of psychological interventions for individuals, and groups, with and across teams employed individually and in synthesis, adjusting and refining psychological formulations drawing upon different explanatory models and maintaining a number of provisional hypotheses.
To provide interventions for individuals presenting with a range of complexity, from common mental health problems to severe and enduring problems.
To evaluate and make decisions about treatment options considering highly complex factors concerning historical and developmental processes that have shaped the individual, family or group.
To exercise autonomous professional responsibility for the assessment, treatment and discharge of clients whose problems are managed by psychologically based standard care plans.
To provide specialist psychological advice, guidance and the consultation to other professionals contributing directly to clients formulation, diagnosis and treatment plan.
To attend seclusion and segregation reviews, recovery team meetings and safer custody meetings in the prison as appropriate and to offer psychological opinion about management and appropriate referrals in that context.
To undertake risk assessment and risk management for individual clients and to provide advice to other professions on psychological aspects of risk assessment and risk management.
To support clients nearing release in accessing statutory and voluntary community services where appropriate.
To promote self-help, self-management and healthy lifestyles enabling people to build their emotional health and capacity to deal with life events.
To act as care coordinator, where appropriate, taking responsibility for initiating planning and review of care plans under enhanced CPA including clients, their carers, referring agents and others involved in the network of care.
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.
To maintain the highest standards of clinical record keeping, including electronic data entry and recording, and report writing and the responsible exercise of professional self-governance, in accordance with professional codes of practice of the relevant governance body and Trust policies and procedures.
To work innovatively and in conjunction with colleagues (both mental health and prison staff) to develop appropriate, evidence based and effective services.
Job description
Job responsibilities
To provide comprehensive psychological assessments of patients within the prison using a structured and semi-structured clinical interview, psychometric instruments, and other assessment methods as appropriate.
To formulate and implement plans for the formal psychological treatment and/or management of a clients mental health problems, 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.
To be responsible for implementing a range of psychological interventions for individuals, and groups, with and across teams employed individually and in synthesis, adjusting and refining psychological formulations drawing upon different explanatory models and maintaining a number of provisional hypotheses.
To provide interventions for individuals presenting with a range of complexity, from common mental health problems to severe and enduring problems.
To evaluate and make decisions about treatment options considering highly complex factors concerning historical and developmental processes that have shaped the individual, family or group.
To exercise autonomous professional responsibility for the assessment, treatment and discharge of clients whose problems are managed by psychologically based standard care plans.
To provide specialist psychological advice, guidance and the consultation to other professionals contributing directly to clients formulation, diagnosis and treatment plan.
To attend seclusion and segregation reviews, recovery team meetings and safer custody meetings in the prison as appropriate and to offer psychological opinion about management and appropriate referrals in that context.
To undertake risk assessment and risk management for individual clients and to provide advice to other professions on psychological aspects of risk assessment and risk management.
To support clients nearing release in accessing statutory and voluntary community services where appropriate.
To promote self-help, self-management and healthy lifestyles enabling people to build their emotional health and capacity to deal with life events.
To act as care coordinator, where appropriate, taking responsibility for initiating planning and review of care plans under enhanced CPA including clients, their carers, referring agents and others involved in the network of care.
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.
To maintain the highest standards of clinical record keeping, including electronic data entry and recording, and report writing and the responsible exercise of professional self-governance, in accordance with professional codes of practice of the relevant governance body and Trust policies and procedures.
To work innovatively and in conjunction with colleagues (both mental health and prison staff) to develop appropriate, evidence based and effective services.
Person Specification
TRAINING & QUALIFICATIONS
Essential
- Doctoral level training in clinical, counselling or forensic psychology or its equivalent, accredited by the BPS. Training in models of developmental lifespan psychology, psychopathology, clinical psychometrics and neuropsychology and two or more distinct psychological therapies.
- HCPC Registered as a Practitioner Psychologist.
- OR A recognised post graduate qualification in Cognitive Behavioural Psychotherapy (or equivalent).
- Accreditation with the British Association for Behavioural and Cognitive Psychotherapy (BABCP) (via having a recognised qualification in one of the core mental health professions e.g. nursing, psychology, medicine, social work, occupational therapy or evidence of having achieved the Knowledge Skills and Attitudes (KSA) route)
- OR A recorded/registered qualification in counselling or psychotherapy and further post accreditation qualification in a nice recommended or evidence-based therapy (e.g. CBT; EMDR)
- Accreditation with a Professional Standards Authority recognised Accreditation Body.
Desirable
- Other relevant CPD qualifications, pre- or post-training. Especially training in working with people with trauma presentations, research methodology, staff training and/or other fields of applied psychology.
- Training in more than one psychological therapy.
EXPERIENCE
Essential
- Experience of specialist psychological assessment and treatment of clients across the full range of care settings, including outpatient, community, primary care and inpatient settings
- 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. Maintaining a high degree of professionalism in the face of highly emotive and distressing problems, verbal abuse and the threat of physical abuse.
- Experience working with and delivering psychological therapy to those with a diagnosis of personality disorder and/or a history of self-harm and substance misuse and experience of working with complex trauma
- Experience of delivering brief, primary care, CBT interventions or equivalent
- Experience of working effectively in multidisciplinary settings
- Experience of teaching and training
Desirable
- Experience of the application of psychology in different cultural and specialist contexts.
- Experience of working in secure settings, either prison or secure hospitals
- Experience of working with service-users to develop peer facilitated support or treatment initiatives
- Experience of working using multitherapeutic approaches
- Experience of using a trauma informed approach.
- Experience in supervising others in the delivery of psychological therapy
Person Specification
TRAINING & QUALIFICATIONS
Essential
- Doctoral level training in clinical, counselling or forensic psychology or its equivalent, accredited by the BPS. Training in models of developmental lifespan psychology, psychopathology, clinical psychometrics and neuropsychology and two or more distinct psychological therapies.
- HCPC Registered as a Practitioner Psychologist.
- OR A recognised post graduate qualification in Cognitive Behavioural Psychotherapy (or equivalent).
- Accreditation with the British Association for Behavioural and Cognitive Psychotherapy (BABCP) (via having a recognised qualification in one of the core mental health professions e.g. nursing, psychology, medicine, social work, occupational therapy or evidence of having achieved the Knowledge Skills and Attitudes (KSA) route)
- OR A recorded/registered qualification in counselling or psychotherapy and further post accreditation qualification in a nice recommended or evidence-based therapy (e.g. CBT; EMDR)
- Accreditation with a Professional Standards Authority recognised Accreditation Body.
Desirable
- Other relevant CPD qualifications, pre- or post-training. Especially training in working with people with trauma presentations, research methodology, staff training and/or other fields of applied psychology.
- Training in more than one psychological therapy.
EXPERIENCE
Essential
- Experience of specialist psychological assessment and treatment of clients across the full range of care settings, including outpatient, community, primary care and inpatient settings
- 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. Maintaining a high degree of professionalism in the face of highly emotive and distressing problems, verbal abuse and the threat of physical abuse.
- Experience working with and delivering psychological therapy to those with a diagnosis of personality disorder and/or a history of self-harm and substance misuse and experience of working with complex trauma
- Experience of delivering brief, primary care, CBT interventions or equivalent
- Experience of working effectively in multidisciplinary settings
- Experience of teaching and training
Desirable
- Experience of the application of psychology in different cultural and specialist contexts.
- Experience of working in secure settings, either prison or secure hospitals
- Experience of working with service-users to develop peer facilitated support or treatment initiatives
- Experience of working using multitherapeutic approaches
- Experience of using a trauma informed approach.
- Experience in supervising others in the delivery of psychological therapy
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.
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.
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).