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TheEuropean Association for Psychotherapy (EAP) is aVienna-based umbrella organisation for some 430 Europeanpsychotherapist organizations (including 33 national associations, 18 European associations and 80 EAP accredited training institutes) from 43 countries with a membership of more than 120,000 psychotherapists.[1] Individual members may also join the organisation directly rather than through one of its member organisations.
The EAP has sponsored much of the European effort from the mid-1990s toward the professionalisation of psychotherapy and the formation of pan-European training standards, ethics and guidelines. Currently, it has representatives from 41 different countries and 30 different 'modalities' of psychotherapy.
In 2014, the European Skills, Competences, Qualifications and Occupations (ESCO) accepted that a psychotherapist (currently listed as a sub-sub-set of 'psychologist') is different from a psychologist.[2]
A submission to theEuropean Commission to establish the Common Training Framework for the Profession of 'Psychotherapist' was initiated in 2021.
The current President of EAP is Irena Bezić (Croatia);[1] the general secretary of the EAP is Tom Warnecke (UK)[3]
The association is based on the Strasbourg Declaration on Psychotherapy of 1990 whereby the EAP promotes the need for high standards of training on a scientific basis, and fights for free and independent exercise of psychotherapy in Europe.[4] Important activities include:
Publication of theInternational Journal of PsychotherapyISSN 1356-9082, a professional journal with 3 issues per annum.[8]