Current through Register Vol. 39, No. 6, September 16, 2024
Minimum qualifications have been established for personal and
family counseling service staff to promote competence and accountability in the
delivery of personal and family counseling services and to ensure that
recipients will be protected from non-professional untrained practitioners who
represent themselves to the public as qualified marriage and family
counselors:
(1) Counselors operating
independently as private practitioners must meet the requirements in at least
one of the following categories:
(a)
Graduation with a master's degree from an accredited school of social work,
eligible for or holding membership in the National Association of Social
Workers, eligible for or holding membership in the Academy of Certified Social
Workers, and five years of full-time experience in agencies providing
supervision by professionally trained social workers, of which two years were
consecutively in one agency under such supervision while giving direct service
and using the method or methods to be used in private practice;
(b) Graduation with a doctoral degree in
psychology from an accredited educational institution, two years of subsequent
professional experience as a psychologist at least one of which involved
providing direct services and using the method or methods to be used in private
practice; and licensed as a practicing psychologist under the laws of North
Carolina;
(c) Licensure and
registration in North Carolina as a nurse, graduation from an accredited
master's program in psych-mental health or behavioral science and five years of
full-time clinical experience in agencies providing supervision by qualified
psychiatric nurse practitioners, of which two years were consecutively in one
agency under such supervision, while giving direct service and using the method
or methods to be used in private practice;
(d) Graduation with a master's degree from an
accredited educational institution in a related behavioral science field,
mental health discipline or theology and eligible for or holding membership in
the American Association of Marriage and Family Therapists, or the American
Group Psychotherapy Association, or the American Association of Pastoral
Counselors and five years of full-time experience in agencies providing
supervision by professionally qualified individuals as defined in Subparagraph
(3) of this Rule, of which two years were consecutively in one agency under
such supervision while giving direct services and using the method or methods
to be used in private practice;
(e)
A privately practicing psychologist delivering this service must also be
licensed at the practitioner level in compliance with
G.S.
90-270.11.
(2) With supervision, counselors may practice
within a public (including department of social services) or private service
agency if they meet the requirements in at least one of the following
categories:
(a) master's degree from an
accredited school of social work and two years of advanced full-time social
work experience in a professional counseling program under the supervision of a
qualified professional as defined in Subparagraph (3) of this Rule;
(b) master's degree from an accredited
educational institution in an appropriate behavioral science field, mental
health discipline or theology and three years of advanced full-time social work
experience in a professional counseling program under the supervision of a
qualified professional as defined in Subparagraph (3) of this Rule.
(3) Personal and family counselor
supervisors must meet the qualifications in one of the following categories:
(a) graduation with a master's degree from an
accredited school of social work, eligible for holding membership in the
Academy of Certified Social Workers, and five years of full-time experience in
agencies providing supervision by professionally trained social workers, of
which two years were consecutively in one agency under such supervision while
giving direct service and using the method or methods to be used in private
practice;
(b) graduation with a
doctoral degree in psychology from an accredited educational institution, two
years of subsequent professional experience as a psychologist at least one of
which involved providing direct services and licensed as a practicing
psychologist under the laws of North Carolina;
(c) licensure and registration in North
Carolina as a nurse, graduation from an accredited master's program in
psych-mental health or behavioral science and five years of full-time clinical
experience in agencies providing supervision by professionally qualified
psychiatric nurse practitioners, of which two years were consecutively in one
agency under such supervision, while giving direct service and using the method
or methods to be used in private practice;
(d) graduation with a master's degree from an
accredited educational institution in a related behavioral science field,
mental health discipline or theology and eligible for or holding membership in
the American Association of Marriage and Family Therapists, or the American
Group Psychotherapy Association or the American Association of Pastoral
Counselors and five years of full-time experience in agencies providing
supervision professionally qualified of which two years were consecutively in
one agency under such supervision while giving direct services and using the
method or methods to be used in private practice.
Authority
G.S.
143B-153;
Eff. February 16,
1977;
Readopted Eff. October 31, 1977;
Amended Eff.
July 1, 1990; July 1, 1982;
Pursuant to
G.S.
150B-21.3A, rule is necessary without
substantive public interest Eff. May 20,
2017.