Supervision details
As a HCPC-registered Clinical Psychologist and BABCP-accredited CBT therapist, I offer clinical supervision grounded in evidence-based practice and a compassionate, collaborative approach. I have extensive experience working across primary, secondary, and specialist care settings, supporting clinicians from a wide range of professional backgrounds.
My therapeutic work draws on Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT), Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT), Compassion Focused Therapy (CFT), and Mindfulness-based approaches, and I bring this integrative perspective into supervision. I aim to create a reflective, supportive space that promotes both clinical skill development and personal growth. I genuinely enjoy supporting and mentoring clinicians to develop their own practice.
I have a particular interest in the interaction between physical and mental health, and I enjoy supporting practitioners working in health psychology and chronic illness, as well as general adult mental health.
In addition, I have specialist training and experience in working with eating disorders, including CBT-E, MANTRA, and CFT for eating disorders. I offer supervision to clinicians working in both general mental health and specialist eating disorder services.
Whether you're looking for regular supervision, ad-hoc case consultation, or support in developing confidence with a particular model or client group, I tailor my approach to your needs and developmental stage.
Please get in touch for details of availability and fees.
The BABCP is the lead organisation for Cognitive Behavioural Therapy in the UK. Membership is open to anyone with an interest in the practice, theory or development of CBT. BABCP also provides accreditation for CBT therapists. BABCP accredited members adhere to the Standards of Conduct, Performance and Ethics in the Practice of Behavioural and Cognitive Psychotherapies, and are willing to be scrutinised in this adherence as required.
The HCPC are an independent, UK-wide health regulator. They set standards of professional training, performance and conduct for 16 professions.
They keep a register of health professionals who meet their standards, and they take action if registered health professionals fall below those standards. They were created by a piece of legislation called the Health Professions Order 2001.
Registration means that a health professional meets national standards for their professional training, performance and conduct.
Accredited register membership
The Accredited Register Scheme was set up in 2013 by the Department of Health (DoH) as a way to recognise organisations that hold voluntary registers which meet certain standards. These standards are set by the Professional Standards Authority (PSA).
This therapist has indicated that they belong to an Accredited Register.