Why Clinical Art Therapy as its own License?
Clinical Art Therapy license is needed in Minnesota to promote the safe and effective use of art in therapy by trained art therapists, differentiate and safeguard the profession from being uprooted by changes in the counseling world, and increase access to non-traditional and nonverbal forms of therapy for those with complex mental health needs.
What can I do that is easy and quick?
Take five and write down why art therapy is important to you, and why and how it works. What has it meant to you. Personal stories are effective! There’s always a way to advocate on behalf of art therapy and for the bill, and communication with elected officials is most effective when it’s ongoing. Get to know your representatives, and make clear why you care about art therapy and it having its own licensure. Send a letter, make a phone call with the info you wrote down. Not sure who reps you? Find out here: https://www.gis.lcc.mn.gov/iMaps/districts/
What do I say? What are the talking points?
Harm Reduction, protect the public (see Sunrise Report here)
Expands Access to More Services for the Public
Not Competitive with other Therapy Licenses
Protect the jobs of hundreds of Minnesotans who are registered, working art therapists who each serve more than 2,000 hours of direct client work annually.
Regulation is important, Art Therapy works, which means it also can be incorrectly used and do harm. Some regulation (like licensure) is one way to protect the public.
Art Therapy is by nature trauma informed, and art therapists need to be properly trained.
Many states across the country have licensed art therapy. In a state like Minnesota that is usually focused on the well being of the public at large, this makes sense for all Minnesotans.
As an art therapist, someone who is dedicated their life to the study and practice of art therapy, licensure, brings about job security, validity, and a sense of identity.
We have a dedicated program in MN for art therapy that graduates many working art therapists annually who may serve in a variety of settings, including but not limited to: hospitals, education centers, schools, clinics, and in private practice, serving countless Minnesotans.
Can non-trained therapists using art really do harm?
Recent advancements in understanding the brain and its functions have increased public awareness of how the process of art-making can influence neural pathways and lead to improved physical and mental health. This has encouraged other licensed mental health practitioners (non-art therapists) to include art materials and art therapy methods within their practice without formal art therapy training and, often, with as little as basic continuing education courses or seminars in specific art therapy diagnostic tools. Art therapy is not regulated in Minnesota and almost anyone can represent themselves to the public as an art therapist or as having the training to practice art therapy. The primary potential for harm exists from individuals using art therapy methods without appropriate training. (Source: Sunrise Report)
How can I assert the data support these claims?
The Sunrise Report (read here) and scroll below to detailed FAQs.
Detailed FAQs
What are the formal requirements to practice Art Therapy?
National requirements for professional entry into the practice of art therapy include, at minimum, a master’s degree and extensive post-graduate clinical experience under the supervision of credentialed art therapists—a process which typically requires a minimum of four years. Some art therapists also have a doctorate degree. Because of the uniqueness of the study and practice of art therapy, practitioners must be trained within approved art therapy master’s degree programs recognized by the American Art Therapy Association (AATA). The Association has approved thirty-nine art therapy master’s degree programs at thirty-five accredited colleges and universities in twenty states and the District of Columbia. A program for external accreditation of art therapy master’s degree programs by the Commission on Accreditation of Allied Health Education Programs (CAAHEP) will begin operation in 2017.
Art therapy master’s level education requires a minimum of 60 semester credit hours of graduate level coursework that includes training in studio art (drawing, painting, sculpture, etc.), the creative process, psychological development, group therapy, art therapy assessment, psycho-diagnostics, research methods, and multicultural diversity competence. Students must also complete 100 hours of supervised practicum, and 600 hours of supervised art therapy clinical internship. The art therapy graduate curriculum is uniquely guided by the premise that focused art-making constitutes reflective practice and facilitates learning.
In addition to rigorous academic and clinical training, professional entry also requires a credential from the Art Therapy Credentials Board (ATCB). The ATCB administers the national art therapy proficiency examination and sets the parameters of ethical practice of art therapy with the ATCB Code of Professional Practice. Following completion of the master’s degree, graduates of approved programs must complete 1000 hours of direct client contact, with 100 hours of direct supervision, to be eligible to apply to ATCB for the ATR (Art Therapist, Registered) credential. Those who subsequently pass the ATCB proficiency examination become Board Certified and hold the ATR-BC credential. To maintain these credentials, art therapists must comply with a renewal process that involves at least 20 hours of approved continuing education requirements per year.
Why is a seperate Art Therapy Licence Needed?
The idea of licensing art therapists is not a new one. Five states have enacted distinct art therapy licenses, and four states authorize art therapists to be licensed under other related mental health licenses. However, only in recent years has the public become aware of the benefits of art therapy, plus sufficient numbers of qualified credentialed art therapists, to necessitate separate licensure of art therapists in the majority of states.
In the absence of specialized art therapy licenses, many art therapy graduates have sought to be licensed in related mental health fields, and particularly as professional counselors and marriage and family therapists. At the same time, approved art therapy master’s degree programs have had to expand their curriculum requirements to include areas of study that would enable graduates to qualify for these licenses. These dual specialty programs provide graduates with rigorous training that qualifies them for both state licensure and the ATR credential.
While licensure in related mental health fields has provided art therapists with needed state sanction to gain employment, advertise their services to the public, and when applicable, bill third-party insurance carriers for their services, it has also created significant difficulties for many art therapists, including:
• Failing to provide art therapists with a distinct professional identity, with defined qualifications and scope of practice in state law, that accurately reflects the specialized academic and clinical training required to practice art therapy.
• Failing to protect the public by not allowing consumers to easily identify practitioners with appropriate training to practice art therapy.
• Creating false assumptions that art therapy is merely a subspecialty of the other licensed profession license, and that other practitioners holding that license can incorporate art therapy methods in their practice without appropriate training.
• Providing the limited numbers of art therapists holding a license with little ability to influence the policies or direction of the licensed profession, as well as little influence to avert licensing board actions that may be detrimental to art therapists.
Licensure under other professional licenses also is proving to be, at best, a stop gap approach for art therapists as other mental health professions continue to define or clarify their professional identities with increasingly restrictive educational, clinical experience, and examination requirements. Almost all states now require master’s degrees from programs accredited by the Council on Social Work Education (CSWE) to qualify for social work licenses. A large majority of states also require graduation from programs accredited by the Commission on Accreditation of Marriage and Family Therapy Education (COAMFTE) to qualify for marriage and family therapy licenses. State professional counseling and mental health counseling licenses, which have been the primary licenses available to art therapists in many states, also are being restricted by the counseling profession’s ongoing effort to create a single identity for all counselors based on required degrees from programs accredited by the Council for Accreditation of Counseling and Related Educational Programs (CACREP). State licensing boards also are using regulatory measures to limit eligibility for counseling licenses, including requirements that all courses to meet educational requirements for licensure must be completed prior to receipt of the master’s degree, that all coursework in non-accredited programs must “focus exclusively” on mental health counseling, and that limit the number of qualifying courses that can be taken after completion of a Master’s degree to meet state educational requirements for licensure.
The effect of these program accreditation and processing requirements has been to deny art therapists relevant licensing options in growing numbers of states. It also necessitates separate licensure of art therapists to establish qualifications and standards for practice of art therapy and protections against unethical practices. Recent advancements in understanding the brain and its functions, especially its implications for social, emotional and behavioral development, have only begun to reveal how the process of art-making can influence neural pathways and lead to improved physical and mental health. Without separate licensure of art therapists, there will be fewer qualified and licensed practitioners to meet the public’s growing need for mental health services, less diversity and innovation in mental health practice, and no assurance that people in need of art therapy services will be able to receive them from appropriately trained and qualified professional art therapists.
Is licsensure of Art Therapy needed to protect public health and safety? Can untrained Art Therapy really be harmful?
Art therapy recognizes the power of art and art-making to stimulate memories and reveal emotions. Understanding how art interacts with a client’s psychological disposition, and how to safely manage and interpret the reactions different art processes may evoke, are competencies that must be gained through substantial experiential learning that is unique to art therapy master’s degree training. The use of art as therapy thus carries risk of harm if applied beyond the competence of the practitioner.
Recent advancements in understanding the brain and its functions have increased public awareness of how the process of art-making can influence neural pathways and lead to improved physical and mental health. This has encouraged other mental health practitioners to include art materials and art therapy methods within their practice and influenced creation of growing numbers of training programs that appear to involve art therapy. The result has been to add to the public’s confusion about what are therapy involves and the level of training required for effective practice of art therapy. This presents two distinct sources of potential harm to public health and safety that can be addressed through licensure and regulation of art therapists.
Individuals using art therapy methods and art materials in their mental health practice without appropriate or adequate clinical training pose significant risk to the emotional stability of their clients. Potential risks include misinterpreting or ignoring assessments the practitioner has not been clinically trained to diagnose or treat, or eliciting adverse responses from clients that they are not properly trained to interpret or treat. The potential for harm is magnified where a client has a vulnerable psychological predisposition.
Researchers have warned mental health practitioners for several decades about potential ethical implications of using art in therapy. Writing in the Journal of Counseling & Development, Hammond and Gantt (1998) cited the likely lack of preparedness of non-art therapists for powerful reactions often evoked by art and art materials, and uncertainty about how to use artistic processes to bring such reactions under control, to stress that no mental health professional should provide therapy services beyond his or her scope of practice. The authors cautioned that “other therapists challenge ethical and legal boundaries when they attempt to make an interpretation to the client or make a generalization about the meaning of the art to others.”*
Potentially more serious is the threat of public harm presented by growing numbers of university-based and online programs claiming to provide certificate training, and even master’s degrees, in areas that appear very much like art therapy. These programs typically require minimal on-sight coursework, and often only online self-instruction, that do not include anything approaching the extensive coursework, clinical training, supervised practice and national credentials required of professional art therapists. Individuals with this limited training are opening clinics and advertising therapeutic services and workshops in states across the country. These programs and practitioners add to the public’s misunderstanding of art therapy and the level of specialized education and clinical training required for safe, effective, and ethical practice of art therapy.
Recent examples of these programs include:
• Brandman University (part of the California based- Chapman University System) offers an Art4Healing certificate program directed to “counselors, teachers, therapists, medical professionals, artists and others interested in learning the Art4Healing method and using the exercises in their own work with children and adults suffering from abuse, illness, grief and stress.” The certificate program requires only 45 hours of on-site workshops at the University’s Art & Creativity for Healing studio.
• The University of Florida has initiated a Master of Arts in Arts in Medicine program which offers a fully on-line, 35-credit master’s degree program to train artists to work in hospital settings. The University also offers a graduate certificate program in Arts in Public Health.
• Art & Creativity for Healing, Inc. provides certification for individuals to serve as facilitators to conduct workshops in the Art for Healing Method that are designed “to share art as a tool for self-expression and self-exploration.” Facilitator training is provided through self-paced DVD programs in the Arts 4 Healing method that, for $1,200, “includes comprehensive training manuals and teaching methods.”
• The Global Alliance for Arts & Health (GAAH) recently created a national Artists in Healthcare Certification program to attest for hospital administrators that artists who do artwork activities with patients in hospital and other healthcare have a minimal level of knowledge and competency to work in healthcare environments. Certification involves passage of a national examination, with no specific training or prior experience in healthcare required to sit for the examination.
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*Hammond, L.C. & Gantt, L. (1998, Summer). Using Art in Counseling: Ethical Considerations.Journal of Counseling & Development, 76, 271-276.