Imparting Self-Care Practices to Therapists: What the Experts Recommend

Authors

  • Anne Thériault University of Ottawa
  • Nicola Gazzola University of Ottawa
  • Jessica Isenor University of Ottawa
  • Lisa Pascal

Keywords:

Self-Care, Counsellor Education, Counsellor Supervision

Abstract

Therapist self-care has been lauded as a professional and ethical imperative. However, in education and in supervision, self-care themes are relegated to the realm of optional topics. Our objective was to discover what experts believed were the core hardships that should be brought forward in training courses or supervision, and how trainees or supervisees could be coached to develop self-care strategies in response to these challenges. The 26 experts sampled provided detailed responses to structured and open questions. Results indicate that there is agreement regarding the hazards involved in the profession of psychotherapy, that supervisors and educators address hazards through various mechanisms, but that the quest to incorporate self-care into standard academic programs is not unequivocal.

Author Biographies

Anne Thériault, University of Ottawa

Associate professor

Educational counselling concentration

Faculty of Education

Jessica Isenor, University of Ottawa

Ph.D. Candidate

Educational counselling

University of Ottawa

Downloads

Additional Files

Published

2015-10-28

How to Cite

Thériault, A., Gazzola, N., Isenor, J., & Pascal, L. (2015). Imparting Self-Care Practices to Therapists: What the Experts Recommend. Canadian Journal of Counselling and Psychotherapy, 49(4). Retrieved from https://cjc-rcc.ucalgary.ca/article/view/61031

Issue

Section

Articles/ Articles