Clinical Psychology, Nature, Development and Activities of Clinical Psychologist (MAPSY 202)
Clinical Psychology, Nature, Development and Activities of Clinical Psychologist (MAPSY 202)
Clinical Psychology, Nature, Development and Activities of Clinical Psychologist (MAPSY 202)
• It concerned with the assessment and treatment of mental illness, emotional disorders
and behavioural problems.
• Clinical Psychology is a science that generates research efforts to discover and validate
information about what people are like and why they behave as they do.
Historical Overview of Clinical Psychology
“The official birth of clinical psychology can be traced to 1896 when “Lighter Witmer”
opened the first Psychological Clinic in Philadelphia Pennsylvania.”
3. The ways in which Behavioural Disorders have been viewed and treated over the years.
“Clinical psychology involves research, teaching and services relevant to the application of
principles, methods and procedures for understanding, predicting and alleviating
intellectual, emotional, biological, psychological, social and behavioural maladjustment,
disability and discomfort, applied to a wide range of client populations.” (APA 1991)
Clinical Psychology Studies:
Disorders
Trauma Disabilities
Clinical
Psychology
Psychopatholog
Disfunction
ies
Maladjustment
s
Characteristics of Clinical Psychology :
Emphasis on science
Emphasis on maladjustment
Emphasis on helping
• Many clinical psychologist work directly with people who have a mental illness or
psychological disorder.
• All psychological intervention rests on the ability to develop and maintain functional
therapeutic relationships with clients.
• Psychotherapy is the activity that most frequently engages the typical clinician‟s efforts
and to which the most time is devoted.
2- Assessment and Diagnosis :
• Assessment has long been a critical part of the clinical psychologist‟s role.
• The process of assessment is very important as it leads to the diagnosis of the clients
problems.
Clinical Psychologist who have full or part-time academic appointments obviously devote a
considerable amount of time to teaching.
Those whose responsibilities are primarily in the area of graduate education, teach course in
advance psychopathology, psychological testing, interviewing, intervention, personality theory
and so on.
4- Clinical Supervision :
This activity is another form of teaching. However, it typically involves more one- to- one teaching,
small group approaches and other less formal, non class room varieties of instruction.
Clinical psychologists often spend significant portions of their time supervising students, interns and
others.
In short one learns by doing but under the controlled and secure conditions of a trainee – supervisor
relationship.
5 – Research
Clinical psychology has grown out of an academic research tradition. As a result, when clinical
training programs were first established after world war 2, the scientist – practitioner model
was adopted.
This meant that is contrast to other mental health workers such as psychiatrist or social
worker, all clinicians were to be trained both as scientist and practitioner.
Although this research emphasis may not be so prominent in some training programs as it
once was, the fact remains that clinical psychologists are in a unique position both to evaluate
research conducted by others and to conduct their own research.
6 – Consultation
Consultation, regardless of the setting in which it occurs, or the particular purpose it has, is
a significant activity of many clinical psychologists. A growing number of clinical
psychologists serve as consultants.
In consultation, the goal is to increase the effectiveness of those to whom one‟s efforts are
directed by imparting to them some degree of expertise. It takes innumerable forms, in
many different settings.
Consultation can run the gamut from clinical cases to matter of business, personal and
profit. It can deal with individuals or entire organizations. Sometimes it is remedial, other
times it is oriented toward prevention.