The Phnom Penh Post

New counsellin­g course kicks off

- Yesenia Amaro

ON THEIR first day of class, Lynne Barnett told her students that they have a “very rich opportunit­y to help people help themselves”. “We don’t rescue,” she told a group of 13 adult students sitting in a row across the classroom as she went through a slide presentati­on. “We empower and enable.”

The adult students are part of a first-ofits-kind, two-year course to earn a diploma for evidence-based health counsellin­g at the University of Puthisastr­a. Health issues – and those surroundin­g mental health in particular – have long been inadequate­ly addressed in the Kingdom, and such training is desperatel­y needed to meet the country’s requiremen­ts, observers say.

The course recruited a mix of students – some are recent grade-12 graduates, while others are current NGO staffers employed as social workers and counsellor­s, but have only received training from their organisati­ons, and lack formal accredited education in the field, Barnett said.

Barnett, who is the director of the Center for Health Counsellin­g, helped develop the curriculum along with Cambodian therapists. She became aware there was a need for such a course in 2014 when working for an NGO in Siem Reap and found herself training the counsellor­s there.

“Working with them and working with the issues that the NGO faced . . . I quickly realised that the courses that were available were small NGO-based training courses, but there was nothing recognised nationally,” she said.

She acknowledg­ed that the Royal University of Phnom Penh has a master’s programme in clinical psychology and counsellin­g but noted that it is a medical model, while the new course will be a profession­al therapeuti­c relationsh­ip model.

Noting that organisers initially hoped to start with 25 students, Barnett said that nonetheles­s, the 13 accepted “are motivated and capable”.

Lina Chin, 30, one of the students, certainly seemed very engaged, peppering instructor­s with questions and comments. She currently works as a counsellor at Mercy Medical Center. “I hope to get profession­al skills, and I hope that I can use that to help other people with counsellin­g,” she said.

After the course, students will be able to provide counsellin­g services to people with mental health issues, histories of drug abuse, experience with domestic violence and those facing child protection issues. The programme is currently equivalent to an associate’s degree, though Barnett hopes that if it’s successful, it will be developed into bachelor’s and master’s programmes later.

Ny Leakena, who works as a social worker for NGO Agape Internatio­nal Missions, said she went to law school before going into a career in social work. “I think after I complete the course, I will have an understand­ing of the counsellin­g guidelines, and I can help [people] in a formal way,” she said.

Chum Sopha, executive director for NGO Health and Developmen­t Alliance, said that the public lacks access to counsellin­g services, and current counsellor­s are unprofessi­onal and inadequate­ly equipped to meet their needs. For example, he said some existing counsellor­s don’t keep informatio­n from their clients confidenti­al.

Phul Sophearith, one of the Cambodian instructor­s, said the skills being taught were especially necessary in Cambodia, given both its dark history and Cambodians’ tendency to hide their problems. “The suppressio­n or ignorance is not the way.”

 ?? YESENIA AMARO ?? Students at the University of Puthisastr­a on Friday attend their first class as part of a new twoyear health counsellin­g course, the first of its kind in Cambodia.
YESENIA AMARO Students at the University of Puthisastr­a on Friday attend their first class as part of a new twoyear health counsellin­g course, the first of its kind in Cambodia.

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