Parent Support Consultation

How can a parent consultation help you?

Parenting Support Consultations are a single session (45 minutes) and follow up intervention where you can get the benefit of my knowledge and experience of working with children, adolescents, young people and families around certain concerns you have.

After our session you will be sent a written summary of strategies and options we discussed as well as relevant resources to help you move forward.

If you would like to feel more empowered, confident and in control of your parenting choices, get in touch.

What issues can parenting consultations help with?

Here are a few of the more common difficulties that can be supported through parent consultations:

Early Years Development

Self Harm

Step Parent/Child relationship problems

Grief, loss or bereavement

Blended Family concerns

Emotion Regulation

Family routine stress

Adolescent issues relating to development, identity and sexuality

Problems with family or school life

Frequently asked questions

Who should attend Parent Consultations?

Parents and primary caregivers - two parent families are encouraged to attend together so that a supportive whole family approach can be taken going forward.

Will everything I say be kept confidential?

Everything that is said within the counselling room is private - this is one of the main ways counselling and therapy differ from talking to a friend or relative. Once you are comfortable with the format of weekly sessions and the safe space they provide, you will find the freedom to speak in confidence is of great value.

Note that there are some situations where you may be a risk to yourself or others, and there the law requires that I notify an authority; in these cases I may not be able to keep total confidentiality. Breaking confidentiality is very rare though, and only happens after the person concerned has been informed.

Can I bring a friend or relative with me?

Usually I am asked this question by people who are nervous about entering into counselling, or when they are looking for support in coming to see a therapist. This anxiety is understandable, but a key aspect of therapy is that you should feel free to talk about any issues you feel are important to you. Having someone else with you who can be connected those issues makes this opening-up more difficult, so for this reason I do not see clients accompanied by friends or family.

How do the follow up sessions work?

You will have strategies to take forward after our first session and may want time to implement them and see how you get on. Follow up sessions help to reflect on how those strategies are working and consider further options.

How long will I have to wait for an appointment?

My aim is to offer a first appointment within 1-2 weeks. You can arrange a follow up at the single session or get in touch when you are ready to meet again to review.


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Reflective Dawn Counselling

What informaton is stored

During the enquiry process, your name and email address is captured on the contact form. Your phone number is captured on my mobile phone. This information is solely used to return contact as requested.


During the referral process, the following information is collected about you:

  • Full names of enquirer, child, parents or carers and other significant family members
  • Date of birth
  • Address, telephone numbers and email addresses
  • GP and school contact details
  • Reasons for seeking counselling or therapy
  • Family history
  • Experiences of school, work, family and social interactions and relevant medical information
  • Support networks, strengths and interests


Records of initial meetings, therapy sessions and review meetings including dates, times and a brief overview of content are also stored.

Why this information is stored

The General Data Protection Regulations (GDPR) define specific legal bases for storing information. Several of these apply to the information which we store about our clients and their families:

  • I ask clients and/or parents to consent to us storing and using this information
  • I only store information which I need to provide the therapy which you have asked me for
  • In some cases, I need to use the information I have collected in order to protect vulnerable children and young people (Safeguarding)

How information is stored and used

Beatrice Norville keeps electronic records which is stored on passcode, pattern or fingerprint protected smartphone. Electronic records are stored on the password protected tablet and is then accessed via password protected software.

Records are kept to help Beatrice Norville in her work with you. They also help to check that I am offering a good quality service and that my work is effective. I keep a brief written record of each session with you and keep any correspondence (for example emails and text messages) sent or received in relation to our work.

Any written records (for example, signed agreements) are stored securely in a locked cabinet.

I will securely dispose of all records 3 years after your therapy ends in line with my Professional Indemnity insurance policy.

  • Your address, phone number, or email address may be used to contact you in relation to your therapy. During the referral process, you will be asked to confirm the best ways to contact you, including whether to contact young people directly, parents or carers.

Confidentiality

I will not usually tell anyone anything that happens in therapy unless you/parents and carers explicitly asks for information to be shared. As required by my professional membership and ethical practice, I receive supervision which is also kept confidential.

Clients have the right to share whatever they like from their experience of therapy with anyone they choose. I encourage parents/carers not to ask children what they have done or talked about in therapy.

I offer regular review meeting to parents/carers, and we will discuss these in advance with the child or young person and agree what information I will share.

There are some situations where I may pass on information without a client's agreement. These are:

When I am concerned that a client, child, young person or someone else is at serious risk of harm if I do not pass on information.

When I have information relating to acts or potential acts of terrorism or money laundering - I am legally obliged to report this.

If at all possible, I will discuss my concerns with the client first and come to an agreement about what is best to do. I will tell the client what information I am going to share and who I am going to share it with. If the client is under 18, I will also discuss the situation with parents/careers before sharing information, as long as it is safe to do so.

If I am working with a child or young person in a school setting, I will share this information in accordance with that school's safeguarding policy.

  • If I need to share information without the client's or family's consent, I will consult my supervisor before taking action, unless waiting to do this would increase the risk. I will write down what information has been shared and why I breached confidentiality.

Access to records

You have the right to see records that are kept about you.

If you would like to do this, please ask. I will explain anything in a record that is unclear. You have the right to correct any part of a record that you believe is wrong.

Information stored about children belongs to the child, and young people have the right to ask to see their own records. If younger children want to see their records, their parents can request this on their behalf. I then have a legal obligation to consider whether it is in the child's interest to release this information to their parent.

  • Parents have the right to ask to see information which is stored about them, for example records of meetings where they were present.

Monitoring and evaluation

Some work may be evaluated to ensure that services delivered are effective, to enable professional growth and improve my practice and to help me plan and develop my service.

  • I don't want to ask clients to fill in lots of forms or take time out of your therapy sessions, so sometimes I use a holistic approach to monitoring and evaluation. This means I may record your comments in relation to your experience of therapy and its effects. If using end of therapy comments for marketing purposes, I request your explicit written consent and it is published anonymously to ensure individual clients cannot be identified.

Clients' written and creative art work

In private practice, I provide storage for art and craft work clients create during therapy sessions. At the end of therapy, you can decide whether to take your creation(s) home or whether you would prefer me to destroy it for you.

If I lose contact with a client before the planned end of their therapy, I store the art work for up to 3 months, during which time you can arrange to come and collect it. After 3 months any work which has not been collected will be disposed of.

  • Provision of storage of art work in schools is dependent on the available facilities and will be discussed with individual children and young people.