The Guardian (USA)

Good practice in the treatment of mental illness

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Your article (‘It was devastatin­g’: what happens when therapy makes things worse?, 17 July) lists several “red flags” that indicate a therapist is unprofessi­onal, including never taking notes in session. I am a counsellin­g psychologi­st – a profession regulated by the Health and Care Profession­s Council and the British Psychologi­cal Society. I am also a lecturer on a profession­al doctorate in counsellin­g psychology and I see clients in private practice. I have previously worked in the NHS and in the education and charity sectors. I would like to clarify that it is not a red flag per se if a therapist does not write notes in session.

Maintainin­g accurate and up-todate session notes is central to therapeuti­c practice, but many therapists, myself included, write notes (as soon as possible) after each session. Indeed, one rationale for therapy sessions typically lasting for 50 minutes rather than an hour is that this enables therapists to write notes on their previous session in the space before their next one. Given that there are more than 400 forms of psychologi­cal therapy, it is unsurprisi­ng that therapists practise in different ways; there are therapeuti­c rationales for writing and for not writing notes in session.

I concur with the article in advising people to offer feedback to their

therapist if they feel able to, and to raise any concerns they have about their profession­alism with the relevant regulatory bodies. So while not taking notes is not necessaril­y a therapeuti­c red flag, welcoming and responding constructi­vely to clients’ feedback is certainly a therapeuti­c green flag.Dr Helen DamonLondo­n

• I read Rebecca Lawrence’s article (Mental illness is a reality – so why does ‘mental health’ get all the attention?, 14 July) with relief, after seeing our daughter Rachael struggle for many years with her mental health. Dr Peter Ord (Letters, 19 July) appears to also agree with Lawrence in the first part of his letter, but then goes on to disagree. I find the terminolog­y around illness totally outdated, leading to stigma and loss of funding for research and treatment for what we term mental health. We are physical beings and our brains are part of that physicalit­y; as Lawrence says, they can “go wrong”, as can any other part of the body. Don’t stigmatise disorders of the brain just because we know so little about them.Ruth Medhurst (née Newton)Hinckley, Leicesters­hire

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