P R O G R A M
OBJECTIVE & ROADMAP:
FINANCIAL VIABILITY
CAPACITY OF PRACTICE
BENEFICIARY OUTREACH
VETERANS REINTEGRATION
WAR-RELATED P S Y C H O L O G I C A L T RAUMA
HUMANITARIAN RESPONSE
Disorders/Needs
3.000.000
Expected cases
Moderate to severe severity.
Requiring sessions therapy.
Critical
humanitarian problem of
post-war
recovery.
Scope of services
36.000.000
Hours/sessions
Average of 12 sessions
per course of therapy.
Professional Challenge
Every private practicing psychologist independently establishes the optimal balance between desired income and the social value of their work, thereby shaping the context and trajectory of professional development.
A HUMANITARIAN PROGRAM THAT EMPOWERS BENEFICIARIES WITH
EQUAL ACCESS TO PSYCHOLOGICAL REHABILITATION SERVICES.
Objective
ESTABLISH CONDITIONS FOR ENGAGEMENT AND MAINTAIN A PRIVATE PSYCHOLOGICAL PRACTICE TO DELIVER SERVICES WITHIN THE HUMANITARIAN FIELD.
Sector capacity
48.000
Clinical psychologists
are expected to fulfill their service scope throughout the year, amounting to a workload of 750 hours.
FeeL Program
was developed as a response to the humanitarian challenge posed by the growing number of war-related psychological trauma cases.
A consortium of professional organizations will implement the program.
Administration by
Open Society Foundation
ROADMAP Terms / Conditions for engaging practitioners
Channelizing
resources.
On payment for mental rehab services to psychologists in private practice.
Solution
Establish a controlled, transparent distribution in order to multichannel sustainable funding access.
Effective practice sharing.
To make professionals in the humanitarian sector more effective.
Solution
Distance learning and effective practices selection should be used to disseminate experience in a non-related professional community.
Reaching
beneficiaries.
Diagnosis, referrals, and support of recipients in obtaining services/resources.
Solution
Integrate services into digital communication channels to guarantee extensive and targeted reach to beneficiaries.
Psychological practice within the humanitarian sector
is growing rapidly, and sustainable, has a significant impact on employment sector.