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European Association for Psychotherapy

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The European Association for Psychotherapy (EAP) is a Vienna-based umbrella organisation for some 430 European psychotherapist organizations (including 33 national associations, 18 European associations and 80 EAP accredited training institutes) from 43 countries with a membership of more than 120,000 psychotherapists.[1] Individual members may also join the organisation directly rather than through one of its member organisations.

The EAP has sponsored much of the European effort from the mid-1990s toward the professionalisation of psychotherapy and the formation of pan-European training standards, ethics and guidelines.[2]

A submission to the European Commission to establish the Common Training Framework for the Profession of Psychotherapist is currently in process (2021).

The President of EAP is Irena Bezić (Croatia);[1] the general secretary of the EAP is Tom Warnecke (UK)[3]

The association is based on the Strasbourg Declaration on Psychotherapy of 1990 whereby the EAP promotes the need for high standards of training on a scientific basis, and fights for free and independent exercise of psychotherapy in Europe.[4] Important activities include:

  • Creating a collaborative democratic forum for all European national and method-based professional associations in psychotherapy.
  • Establishing pan-European professional post-graduate training standards (the 'ECP Standard') consisting of a minimum of 2,400 hours, over a minimum of four years, of specialist training, with a significant component of supervised practice. The ECP Standard has since been brought into alignment with the EQF, the 'European Qualifications Framework' (ISO/IEC 17024; 2012)[5], also known as the 'Europass' and active in more than 30 countries. The ECP Standard matches EQF Level 7 and is implemented by all EAP accredited psychotherapy organisations thoughout Europe.
  • Awarding the European Certificate of Psychotherapy (ECP):[6] The aim of the European Certificate of Psychotherapy is to implement a comparable standard of training and mutual recognition of training across Europe. EAP has awarded about 10.000 ECPs since 1997.
  • Building the Register for ECP Psychotherapists: creating a searchable database of the availability of over 6,000 psychotherapists in Europe.
  • Promoting EAP Ethical Guidelines: The EAP has developed generic ethical guidelines for psychotherapy to protect patients across Europe, applicable to all EAP affiliated psychotherapy organisations. EAP also created additional guidances or statements for specific contexts.[7]
  • EAP is also a founding member of the World Council for Psychotherapy (WCP).

Publication

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Publication of the International Journal of Psychotherapy ISSN 1356-9082, a professional journal with 3 issues per annum.[8]

References

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  1. ^ a b "About". European Association for Psychotherapy. Retrieved 2021-03-23.
  2. ^ Young, C. (2011) The history and development of Body Psychotherapy: European collaboration, Body, Movement and Dance in Psychotherapy: An International Journal for Theory, Research and Practice, 6:1, DOI: 10.1080/17432979.2010.545189 p. 57.
  3. ^ "EAP Executive committee - European Association for Psychotherapy".
  4. ^ "Strasbourg Declaration on Psychotherapy - EAP". European Association for Psychotherapy. Retrieved 2021-03-23.
  5. ^ "European Qualifications Framework", Wikipedia, 2024-10-25, retrieved 2025-01-20
  6. ^ "EuroPsyche > Membership > ECP > About ECP". www.europsyche.org. Retrieved 2025-01-20.
  7. ^ "EuroPsyche > Psychotherapy > EAP Position Statement > Quality Standards > EAP Standards". www.europsyche.org. Retrieved 2025-01-20.
  8. ^ "International Journal of Psychotherapy". International Journal of Psychotherapy website.
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