Arts therapist (level 7)
Using art, drama or music to carry to improve a person’s mental, physical health and wellbeing.
- Qualification level
-
7
Equivalent to master’s degree. - Typical duration
- 24 months
- Apprenticeship category
- Health and science
- Maximum funding
-
£19,000
Maximum amount government will fund
for apprenticeship training. - Also known as
-
- Art psychotherapist
- Art therapist
- Dramatherapist
- Music therapist
- Skills
-
Skills an apprentice will learn
- Identify the limits of own practice and when to seek advice or refer to another professional or service.
- Recognise the need to manage own workload and resources safely and effectively, including managing the emotional burden that comes with working in a pressured environment.
- Keep own skills and knowledge up to date.
- Maintain high standards of personal and professional conduct.
- Promote and protect the service user’s interests at all times.
- Engage in safeguarding processes where necessary.
- Respect and uphold the rights, dignity, values, and autonomy of service users, including own role in the assessment, diagnostic, treatment and/or therapeutic process.
- Recognise that relationships with service users, carers and others should be based on mutual respect and trust, and maintain high standards of care in all circumstances.
- Obtain valid consent, which is voluntary and informed, has due regard to capacity, is proportionate to the circumstances and is appropriately documented.
- Exercise a duty of care.
- Apply legislation, policies and guidance relevant to own profession and scope of practice.
- Recognise the power imbalance which comes with being a health care professional, and ensure it is not for personal gain.
- Identify own anxiety and stress and recognise the potential impact on own practice.
- Develop and adopt clear strategies, including personal therapies, for physical and mental self-care and self-awareness, to maintain a high standard of professional effectiveness and a safe working environment.
- Recognise own personal responsibility for and justify own decisions and actions.
- Use own skills, knowledge and experience, and the information available, to make informed decisions and / or take action where necessary.
- Make reasoned decisions to initiate, continue, modify or cease treatment or the use of techniques or procedures, and record the decisions and reasoning appropriately.
- Make and receive appropriate referrals, where necessary.
- Exercise personal initiative.
- Demonstrate a logical and systematic approach to problem solving.
- Use research, reasoning and problem-solving skills when determining appropriate actions.
- Respond appropriately to the needs of all different groups and individuals in practice, recognising this can be affected by difference of any kind including, but not limited to, protected characteristics, intersectional experiences and cultural differences.
- Recognise the potential impact of own values, beliefs and personal biases, which may be unconscious, on practice and take personal action to ensure all service users and carers are treated appropriately with respect and dignity.
- Make and support reasonable adjustments in owns and others’ practice.
- Actively challenge barriers to inclusion, supporting the implementation of change wherever possible.
- Take account of psychological, social, cultural, economic and other relevant factors when collecting case histories and other appropriate information.
- Adhere to the professional duty of confidentiality.
- Recognise and respond in a timely manner to situations where it is necessary to share information to safeguard service users, carers and/or the wider public.
- Use effective and appropriate verbal and non-verbal skills to communicate with service users, carers, colleagues and others.
- Communicate in English to the standard required for the profession.
- Work with service users and/or own carers to facilitate the service user’s preferred role in decision-making, and provide service users and carers with the information they may need where appropriate.
- Modify own means of communication to address the individual communication needs and preferences of service users and carers, and remove any barriers to communication where possible.
- Use information, communication and digital technologies appropriate to own practice.
- Explain the nature, purpose and techniques of therapy to service users and carers and proceed within an ethos of co-designing the therapeutic alliance.
- Keep full, clear and accurate records in accordance with applicable legislation, protocols and guidelines.
- Manage records and all other information in accordance with applicable legislation, protocols and guidelines.
- Use digital record keeping tools, where required.
- Work in partnership with service users, carers, colleagues and others.
- Contribute effectively to work undertaken as part of a multi-disciplinary team.
- Identify anxiety and stress in service users, carers and colleagues, adapting own practice and providing support where appropriate.
- Identify own leadership qualities, behaviours and approaches, taking into account the importance of equality, diversity and inclusion.
- Demonstrate leadership behaviours appropriate to own practice.
- Act as a role model for others.
- Promote and engage in the learning of others.
- Engage in evidence-based practice.
- Gather and use feedback and information, including qualitative and quantitative data, to evaluate the responses of service users to own care.
- Monitor and systematically evaluate the quality of practice, and maintain an effective quality management and quality assurance process working towards continual improvement.
- Participate in quality management, including quality control, quality assurance, clinical governance and the use of appropriate outcome measures.
- Evaluate care plans or intervention plans using recognised and appropriate outcome measures and, in conjunction with the service user where possible, revise the plans as necessary.
- Comply with all local operational procedures and policies.
- Work safely, including being able to select appropriate hazard control and risk management, reduction or elimination techniques in a safe manner and in accordance with health and safety legislation.
- Select appropriate personal protective equipment and use it correctly.
- Establish safe environments for practice, which appropriately manages risk.
- Empower and enable individuals, including service users and colleagues, to play a part in managing own health.
- Engage in occupational health, including being aware of immunisation requirements.
Full information on Arts therapist (level 7) is available from the Institute for Apprenticeships and Technical Education.
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Regulated occupation
Arts therapist (level 7) needs a training provider who is approved by Health and Care Professions.
Apprenticeship location
CH62 3PA Remove location