Australian psychology practice today is a dynamic, well respected and
increasingly competitive environment. Many new psychologists graduate
with an expectation of setting up their own private practice. But how is
that best done? What are the traps to avoid, the questions to ask, the
knowledge needed to succeed? Find out here in this book written by three
highly experienced psychologists with more than 75 years of private
practice experience between them as well as backgrounds in academic
training, dealing with complaints about psychologists, training and
supervision of psychologists, and presenting as expert witnesses.
They've seen or experienced just about everything that can be thrown at
a modern Australia psychology practice and lived to impart their advice.
Written from a no-nonsense approach, with plenty of practical examples
and personal reflections from each author scattered throughout, this is
a manual designed for those either entering private practice or already
practicing who might want to continue their professional development.
Topics covered include: - setting up in private practice - Medicare
audits - treatment in a private practice setting - consultation,
supervision, self-care - ethical dilemmas - Feedback Informed Treatment
(FIT) - record keeping, case notes, writing reports - avoiding legal
pitfalls - contingency planning - closing and selling a practice