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Because every client is different, an assessment interview is made to gauge:
- The prospective client’s suitability to work within the QCT format
- Their suitability to work within the formats that the therapist can offer
- What sort of variations to the model may be needed
- If the prospective client should be referred for a different treatment
Obviously, if a therapist is offering a five day single course, and follow up days would be difficult to schedule, the filters applied during the assessment interview need to be much finer. The assessment interview form will help assess whether or not QCT is likely to be the right path for the client, and if it is, how it is best offered. For some clients, the QCT format one day a week; standard PICT model; or another style of therapy or counselling altogether, may be the best recommendation.
The ideal QCT clients are those with clear-cut issues with whom it is easy to establish a good healthy adult to adult rapport fairly quickly - with splashes of healthy parent and healthy child! From the ideal client who may be suitable for a short one-off course, there’s a sliding scale of those who will need more time and for that time to be spread out, all the way to those who are not suitable.
Clients with eating disorders, DID issues, self-harm, drug/alcohol abuse or ritual abuse experiences will always take longer – and cannot be considered for a one-off 5 day format, but it would be possible to be seen for 5 days, once a month, until work is complete.
Clients who process slowly will also not be suitable for a single 5 day format. Slow processors are people who are slower than usual to answer questions or make visual pictures because they: need extra time to think carefully about any new information; need to create pictures in thorough detail; need time to fully ‘sense’ their pictures; have a step by step ‘thinking programme’ that has to be started over if they go off track or are interrupted; find it difficult to stay focused on one issue at a time; or spend a lot of time arguing in their own mind about what they want to say. Of course, there is always a possibility that a client is suffering from PMS or is on a medication that affects their thinking process. There is no right or wrong way to process information or create visual images in our minds, but people who have a slower way of processing may not have time to complete everything in the one-off 5 day format.
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