meta_pixel
Tapesearch Logo
Log in
Counselling Tutor

306 – Recognising Suicide Risk in Therapy Clients

Counselling Tutor

Ken Kelly and Rory Lees-Oakes

Education, Courses

4.6 β€’ 636 Ratings

πŸ—“οΈ 22 June 2024

⏱️ 58 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Unmasking Neurodivergence and Ethnicity Using Digital Tools - Giving Feedback to Your Tutors In Episode 306 of the Counselling Tutor Podcast, your hosts Rory Lees-Oakes and Ken Kelly take us through this week's three topics: Firstly in 'Ethical, Sustainable Practice', we look at recognising suicide risk in your therapy clients. Then in 'Practice Matters', Rory speaks with Lesley Simpson-Gray about unmasking neurodivergence and ethnicity using digital tools. And lastly in 'Student Services', Rory and Ken talk about how to give feedback to your tutors. Recognising Suicide Risk in Therapy Clients [starts at 03:41 mins] Supporting a client who is at risk of taking their own life can be very challenging as a counsellor. In this section, Rory and Ken discuss some ways of recognising if your client is high risk, and the steps you can take to prepare for this: It's time to make a shift away from prediction-based risk assessment and towards an emphasis on therapeutic engagement. We should be aiming to engage with these clients who may be thinking of taking their own life and working on it within the therapeutic relationship. This is a subject that requires continuous CPD. Risk assessments can be very useful - but they're not foolproof. To recognise suicide risk in your therapy clients, you need to be thinking about the dynamic nature of a client and how this might present. Detecting suicidality requires holistic evaluation, detailed enquiry, and checking context. This is a subject with a lot of personalisation - it could present itself differently in different clients. Neurodivergent clients could be at a higher risk. Do you need to break confidentiality? Can you take a collaborative approach with an involvement of support systems around the individual? To help yourself recognise suicide risk in your therapy clients, make sure you're doing the training around this subject. Unmasking Neurodivergence and Ethnicity Using Digital Tools [starts at 19:09 mins] In this week's 'Practice Matters', Rory speaks with Lesley Simpson-Gray about unmasking neurodivergence and ethnicity using digital tools such as video games. The main points of this discussion include: There are so many layers to identity. People have different ethnic experiences and that shape their perception of the world. This can also change how mental health is viewed. Neurodivergence is yet another layer to identity - some difference may be seen as threatening to those less accepting. Learning difficulties can often be dismissed as behavioural issues. Video games can be used as a way for the autistic community to practice social skills and have a space that sometimes feels safer than the real world in terms of social relationships. Finding characters they can relate to, and gaining power through that. Allowing them to be themselves in a way that helps people to see it and accept them. Tools for communication and figuring out identity. A co-created environment to allow the client to feel comfortable and invite you into that space. Giving Feedback to Your Tutors [starts at 44:04 mins] It's common to receive feedback from your tutor, but sometimes you get the opportunity to give them feedback - and you should use it! In this section, Rory and Ken discuss how to give helpful feedback, particularly to your tutor: Giving honest feedback can require us to have courage and be congruent. Feedback should never be given with the intention to hurt someone - it should be aiming to help. There can be an element of power imbalance in tutor-student relationships, but giving feedback can help to rebalance this slightly. Useful feedback offers suggestions for improvement. Try to think of a positive, then state what your challenge/struggle was, and then say what could have made that better for you - what works, what doesn't, how can that improve?

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Today's episode of the counselling tutor podcast is sponsored by Webhealer. You're a counsellor in

0:07.6

private practice and you need a website or you've got an existing website which you need help with.

0:15.6

Webheeler are offering counselling tutor podcast listeners, that's you, 100 pounds off the cost of a website design and build.

0:24.4

Now, Webheeler specialise in websites for counsellors and psychotherapists.

0:28.5

It's what they do.

0:30.8

And the Webhealer team provide a completely non-technical done-for-you solution,

0:36.7

leaving you to focus your time on your clients.

0:40.6

Operating for 20 years, Webhealer are a trusted resource amongst counselors when it comes to

0:46.5

getting your practice online. So get the package details and claim your 100 pound off coupon for your new website by going to

0:57.6

counsellingtutor.com forward slash website. That's counsellingtutor.com forward slash website.

1:07.2

Hi, I'm Rory and welcome to episode 306 of the counselling tutor podcast.

1:13.2

I'm delighted to catch up again with Leslie Simpson-Gray, who has an M.A. in Integrative Child and Adolescent Psychotherapy,

1:22.9

a diploma in therapeutic application of the arts, a diploma in therapeutic life storywork, a certificate

1:30.5

in cyber psychotherapy, a diploma in virtual reality exposure therapy. She's also a master's level

1:38.4

graduate in racism and black issues in the therapeutic process. And also she studied in the Nubia,

1:45.8

wellness and healing,

1:47.2

African-centered child development

1:49.2

from pre-natal adolescence,

1:51.8

raising the bar on cultural competency.

1:55.2

Today, Leslie is going to talk to us

1:57.4

about a lecture she has delivered

1:59.1

for the Council of CPD library on the topic of

...

Please login to see the full transcript.

Disclaimer: The podcast and artwork embedded on this page are from Ken Kelly and Rory Lees-Oakes, and are the property of its owner and not affiliated with or endorsed by Tapesearch.

Generated transcripts are the property of Ken Kelly and Rory Lees-Oakes and are distributed freely under the Fair Use doctrine. Transcripts generated by Tapesearch are not guaranteed to be accurate.

Copyright Β© Tapesearch 2025.