The post-holder will be part of a multidisciplinary team, embedded within the Brent CAMHS Learning Disability Pathway that delivers high quality, evidence-based, and effective psychological care to individuals being treated under the team pathway. The role includes the provision of specialist psychological assessment, therapy, advice, and consultation on children and young people's psychological care. The post-holder will work autonomously within professional guidelines and the overall framework of the team’s policies and procedures.
The post-holder will utilise research skills for audit, policy and service development and research within the area served by the team/service providing high-level clinical leadership across the service, working closely with the team, families, and multi-agency professionals to improve emotional and holistic well-being, delivering highly innovative and adaptive evidence-based psychological interventions.
The post-holder will develop opportunities to offer consultation to non-psychologist colleagues, professionals, and carers within the young people’s network, working autonomously within professional guidelines. Working alongside services involved in the children and young people to coproduce creative activities and person-centred care plans will be key to respond to the needs and aspirations of children and young people it serves.
The successful applicant may have contact with patients or service users. As an NHS Trust, we strongly encourage and support vaccination as this remains the best way to protect yourself, your family, your colleagues, and of course patients and service users when working in our healthcare settings.
The responsibilities of this role are diverse and include:
1. Direct work with children and young people with learning disabilities and autism and their families/caregivers.
2. Liaison and consultation work with a wide range of stakeholders, including special education schools, 0-25 children with disabilities team, SENCO, SENDAS, and commissioners.
3. Teaching and training.
4. Providing clinical supervision.
5. Working strategically with senior leads within the team and Trust to improve the quality of treatment and intervention given to children and young people with learning disabilities and autism, and their families and carers.
Our catchment area spans diverse communities, with over 100 first languages spoken. It contains areas of great affluence as well as areas of much deprivation. We are committed to providing services that meet the needs of the people who use them, and we actively encourage involvement from local people who can help make a difference. We’re proud of our diversity and we continue to undertake new initiatives to advance equality for LGBT+, BME, and people with disabilities to promote good relations and understanding between our staff.
We are recognised locally, nationally, and internationally for providing high quality, innovative healthcare. We aim to employ only the best people, and our experts are frequently called upon to contribute to national health strategy and policy, and many models of our care have been adapted for use in other countries.
We offer a generous relocation package (subject to eligibility assessment) and flexible working options, including bank assignments for most roles. See attached Staff Reward and Wellbeing Handbook on our website.
The Brent CAMHS team has a strong multi-disciplinary approach and thrives on innovative practice to meet the local population needs. The Team has robust links with neighbouring borough CAMHS teams as well as universities and local partners.
To find out more about working in CAMHS please CLICK HERE for one of our CAMHS videos.
To act as care coordinator for a caseload of children and young people with learning disabilities and autism and significant mental health needs.
To provide an efficient, effective, comprehensive, and highly specialist assessment and treatment for children and adolescents with severe/profound learning disabilities and mental health problems, their carers/parents, and families.
To formulate and implement plans for formal clinical treatment and management of behavioral difficulties based upon an appropriate conceptual framework of these problems employing methods based upon evidence of proven efficacy within modality and with reference to appropriate clinical guidelines and care pathways (e.g., NICE, CEG).
In liaison with colleagues and in response to an identified need, to provide specialist systemic psychological and clinical autonomy drawing on a range of models and wherever possible brief intervention. To practice in a way which is inclusive and considerate of the needs of each individual in the system including family members and their varying network.
Regularly monitor and evaluate therapeutic interventions and progress using routine outcome measures and include family members as appropriate.
To evaluate and make decisions about the treatment options considering both theoretical and therapeutic models and highly complex factors concerning historical, environmental, and developmental processes that have shaped the individual, family, or group.
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