We are seeking a compassionate, innovative, and enthusiastic Band 8a Clinical Psychologist to join our ‘Outstanding’ community Children’s and Young People’s Specialist services. A preceptorship post for Band 7 to 8a is available. You would be joining a friendly and supportive highly specialist multidisciplinary team and would be involved in shaping psychological provision within our Learning Disability Child and Adolescent Mental Health Service (Starfish).
The post is 30 hours per week, and will be based at St James, King’s Lynn, but working across Norfolk, including Kings Lynn, Great Yarmouth, and Norwich. Flexible working is supported and includes agile/home working where relevant. Preceptorship options can also be discussed at interview.
The Starfish Team offers assessment and intervention for young people of school age (4-18 years) with a diagnosed learning disability who are experiencing significant behavioural and/or mental health difficulties.
Your role will be varied and will include a range of assessment, formulation, and intervention. This will include direct and indirect work with the children and young people that we support, as well as their families and the professional networks involved in their care.
Your role will include bringing a psychologically informed perspective through consultation to the clinical team and external agencies. There will be opportunities to contribute to the supervision, teaching and training of psychological practitioners and other professionals within the team.
You will utilise your research skills for audit, policy and service development, and dissemination of appropriate research evidence. Further involvement in research can also be supported where appropriate to the needs of the service.
Our supportive teams value innovation, foster development and are committed to improving the lives of the children and young people we work with. There will be the opportunity to liaise with other Psychologists working within the Trust. The Psychology Team within NCH&C offers excellent opportunities for CPD, research and teaching as well as close links with the Doctoral Programme in Clinical Psychology at the University of East Anglia.
Find out more about working for our organisation here:
Apply now to join an organisation that has been awarded an ‘Outstanding’ rating by the Care Quality Commission (CQC), the highest possible rating and the first stand-alone NHS community trust in the country to be awarded the title.
We aim to attract and retain a diverse, talented and committed workforce, who are caring and compassionate, and therefore able to meet the demands of the modern NHS now and in the future. In return we can offer a dynamic working environment in which to build a career.
We would love to hear from candidates who have a passion for working with children and young people with Learning Disabilities. We strongly encourage informal visits and discussion prior to application and have allocated slots for prospective applicants to book into in order to discuss the roles and answer any questions. Please contact Cherie Clayton (01603 272463) for more information.
Clinical Contacts:
Dr Nicola Martin, Clinical Psychologist, Starfish@nchc.nhs.uk, 01603 272319
Laura Wetton, Starfish Clinical Lead,Starfish@nchc.nhs.uk, 01603 272319
Clinical
1. To provide specialist psychological assessments of children and young people referred to the teams based upon the appropriate use, interpretation, and integration of complex data from a variety of sources including psychological and neuropsychological tests, self-report measures, rating scales, direct and indirect structured observations and semi-structured interviews with the child, their family members and other involved people.
2. The communication of highly complex information and diagnostic outcomes to parents/carers, young people, and other professionals in a sensitive manner.
3. To communicate, in a highly skilled and sensitive manner, to children and young people,
their family, carers and others as appropriate, information that may be contentious or highly distressing concerning the assessment, formulation and treatment plans of clients under their care.
4. To develop psychological formulations of presenting problems or situations that integrate information from assessments within a coherent framework that draws upon psychological theory and evidence, and which incorporates interpersonal, societal, cultural and biological factors.
5. To develop and implement plans for the formal psychological treatment and/or management of the child or young person, based upon an appropriate conceptual framework of their problems, and employing methods based upon evidence of efficacy, across the full range of environmental settings.
6. To be responsible for implementing a range of psychological interventions for children/young people, their families, carers, teachers, or support workers, adjusting and refining psychological formulations drawing upon different explanatory models and maintaining a number of provisional hypotheses.
7. 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 child/young person, their family or carers.
8. To act as care coordinator, ensuring the provision of a care package appropriate for the child’s needs, coordinating the work of others involved with care, taking responsibility for arranging CPA reviews as required and communicating effectively with the child/young person, his/her family and all others involved in the network of care, and to monitor progress during the course of multi-disciplinary interventions.
9. To monitor and evaluate progress during the course of both uni- and multi-disciplinary care, and to provide appropriate reports on this.
10. To produce reports in a timely manner, that convey the key findings of psychological assessment, formulation and treatment outcome in a way that does justice to the complexity of the problems described, but that are understandable to the recipients of the reports, including children/young people, and referrers. The post demands periods of concentrated effort both mental (therapy and verbal mediation and written communication) and physical (administration of psychometric assessment, therapy and report writing).
11.To manage the workloads of assistant and trainee clinical psychologists, within the framework of the teams’ policies and procedures.
Professional
1. To exercise autonomous professional responsibility for the assessment, treatment and discharge of children and young people, and manage and maintain a caseload in line with service guidelines.
2.To provide specialist psychological advice guidance and consultation to other professionals contributing directly to a shared formulation, diagnosis and treatment plan.
3. To promote psychologically based frameworks of understanding and care to the benefit of all children and young people of the services, across all settings and agencies serving the client group.
4. To communicate, in a highly skilled and sensitive manner, to children and young people, their family, carers and others as appropriate, information that may be contentious or highly distressing concerning the assessment, formulation and treatment plans of clients under their care.
5. To assist in the management of the team caseload with regard to prioritising cases in terms of appropriateness, urgency and risk.
6. To develop psychological formulations of presenting problems or situations that integrate information from assessments within a coherent framework that draws upon psychological theory and evidence, and which incorporates interpersonal, societal, cultural, and biological factors.
7. To work in partnership with other disciplines and to maintain links with statutory and non-statutory and primary care agencies as appropriate.
8. To gain additional specialist experience and skills relevant to clinical psychology and/or the service (as agreed with the Professional Lead) in line with BPS policy on CPD.
9. To maintain skills and knowledge of child protection procedures from the Local Safeguarding Children Board and ensure training in this area for assistant psychologists and trainee psychologists in the team.
10. To develop skills in the area of professional post-graduate teaching, training and supervision and to provide supervision to other MDT staff’s psychological work as appropriate. To organise and deliver teaching and training to clients, carers and others.
11.To provide professional and clinical supervision of assistant psychologists and to act as placement supervisor for doctoral clinical psychology trainees, taking clinical responsibility for the supervisee’s work.
12.To contribute to the pre- and post-qualification teaching of clinical and other applied psychologists, as appropriate.
13.To provide supervision and training to staff working with children and young people referred to the teams across a range of agencies and settings where appropriate.
14.To undertake, within NCH&C’s IPR, PDP and Clinical Governance policies, CPD through teaching, clinical supervision, discussions, visits, study days, courses and relevant reading as agreed with professional and line managers. Supervision and management of Assistant Psychologists.
15.To contribute to the development and maintenance of the highest professional standards of practice, through active participation in internal and external CPD training and development programmes, in consultation with the postholder’s professional and service manager(s).
16.To utilise theory, evidence-based literature and research to support evidence-based practice in individual work and work with other team members.
17.To undertake appropriate research including, where appropriate, making ethics and/or funding applications.
18. To undertake service orientated and clinically relevant research as agreed by NCH&C and Professional Psychology Lead.
19. To provide advice to other professionals as required on research design and methodology including complex audit and clinical and service evaluation to help develop service provision.
20. To prepare research reports for dissemination in peer-reviewed journals or at local or national conferences.
21. To contribute to the development and promotion of best practice in psychology across the service, taking part in regular professional supervision and appraisal and maintaining an active engagement with current developments in the field of clinical psychology and related disciplines.
22.To maintain and develop the profile of psychology within the Trust, regionally and nationally as appropriate during all professional contacts with families, carers, colleagues and the public.
23.To maintain up to date knowledge of legislation, national and local policies and issues in relation to children and young people, mental health/learning disability and early support.
24. To work in accordance with Trust policies and procedures, The BPS Code of Conduct and DCP Professional Practice Guidelines and to be aware of changes in these. To maintain an up-to-date knowledge of all relevant legislation and local policies and procedures implementing this.
Organisational
1. To undertake risk assessment and risk management for individual children and young people and to provide advice to other professions on psychological aspects of risk assessment and risk management in line with Trust and inter-agency policies and procedures.
2. To represent the team at appropriate meetings.
3. In common with all clinical psychologists receives regular clinical supervision in accordance with good practice guidelines.
4. To receive regular clinical supervision from one or more consultant clinical psychologists and where appropriate, other senior professional colleagues in line with BPS guidelines.
5. To contribute to the analysis, development, evaluation and monitoring of the Trust’s and team’s operational policies and services, through the deployment of professional skills in research, service evaluation and audit.
6. To advise both service and professional management in the teams on those aspects of the service where psychological and/or organisational matters need addressing.
7. To be involved, as appropriate, in the recruitment process of assistant psychologists.
8. To use appropriate computer software to produce statistical data, including analysis and presentation of date.
9. To provide advice, consultation, supervision and training to staff working with children and young people referred to the teams across a range of agencies and settings, where appropriate.
10.To maintain the highest standards of clinical record keeping including electronic data entry and recording, report writing and the responsible exercise of professional self-governance in accordance with professional codes of practice of the British Psychological Society and Trust policies and procedures
11.To produce psychological reports and notes in a timely manner and to provide management information in line with Trust policies and procedures in a timely manner.
This advert closes on Sunday 23 Mar 2025
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