Showing posts with label art therapy license. Show all posts
Showing posts with label art therapy license. Show all posts

Friday, January 03, 2025

Virginia Art Therapy Licensure Moves Forward!

Good news!

After 4 ½ years, the Art Therapy Licensure Regulations have finally been signed by Governor Youngkin. That now means there is a public comment period for the proposed regulation that will be open until February 14, 2025.  There will be a public hearing on January 25, 2025 and the Art Therapy Advisory Board will meet on March 28, 2025 to consider all the comments, vote on the final regulations, and then send to the Board to vote on in April 2025. Follow the links below to submit your comments!

https://arttherapy.org/news-virginia-licensure-regulations-have-been-signed-by-the-governor/

Submit a Comment on the Virginia Art Therapy Regulations



The public comment period for Virginia's Proposed Art Therapy Regulations opened on December 16 and will remain open until February 14. During this time, members of the public have the opportunity to provide feedback and support for the regulations, as well as attend a public hearing scheduled for January 24 at the Department of Health Professions in Henrico.

Members of the Virginia Art Therapy Association are encouraging art therapists and members of the public to write comments that support the regulation, share perspectives from art therapists or art therapy students in the state, or make sensible suggestions for change (if any).

Submit a comment.


Friday, June 26, 2020

The Art Therapy License is now DC Law

From PATA:

Exciting News!🗣



Art therapy licensure is now the law in DC! Thank you to our sponsors Chairman Phil Mendelson, Councilmember Vincent C. Gray, Councilmember Mary Cheh, and Councilmember David Grosso and to the support of Mayor Bowser. A special thanks to Bernie Demczuk for guiding us in this process and Michelle Palmer, Executive Director of the Wendt Center for Loss and Healing, for testifying on our behalf. Art therapists have served DC residents for a long time and this license will ensure that DC residents receive qualified art therapy for years to come. #dcarttherapy

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Sunday, December 29, 2019

Art Therapy Licensure Progress in Virginia

Great news from VATA on the licensure front for art therapy in Virginia. Only a month after the DC hearing for their license, the General Assembly will hear about the bill to make art therapists licensed in the Commonwealth of Virginia in January 2020. Here is the latest report:

"The 2020 General Assembly is fast approaching this coming January and we wanted to provide you all with an update on our efforts towards licensure.

We are so pleased to share that Senator Jennifer McClellan will be sponsoring our bill and presenting it to the General Assembly! The VATA licensure committee has been working closely with her staff preparing our bill to be presented in January.

We still need to continue gathering support from other legislators in both parties to help support our bill. We are asking all of you to please reach out to your local legislators and ask for their support of VATA's bill for art therapy licensure in the state of Virginia.

Please see some talking points below to share with your legislator:

  • The bill is being introduced by Sen. McClellan at the 2020 Virginia General Assembly
  • We need bipartisan representation to support the art therapy licensure bill
  • Passing this bill will increase access for specialized mental health care in VA
  • The VA Board of Health Professions has already approved art therapy licensure"


Thursday, October 18, 2018

Doctors, Patients Sing Art Therapy’s Praises. So Why Isn’t There More Support?

Many of us are working hard to raise more awareness about art therapy and bring about equality to our discipline among the mental health field. Unfortunately, it takes time and education, but I'm sure we will get there eventually. One way of doing that is through licensing, though it's much more than that. Part of it is understanding what art therapy is, clarifying the misconceptions about our field, and changing mindsets about what we do and the value art therapy has in treatment. It's helpful to have advocates for our field.


By ARACELI GOMEZ-ALDANA • OCT 18, 2018

Paulina Nieto, who grew up in Columbus, Indiana, was only 2 months old when she started to have heart problems due to a narrow artery.

“When I was about 6 months old, I had surgery to open the artery and that helped for a while until I started having problems again,” said Nieto.

She had her first heart transplant when she was two and her second when she was 16.

“That was something that was really scary because when I was younger I couldn’t remember anything,” said Nieto. “This time I had to go through the motions and the emotions. I can still remember going into the surgery room and having to wait there and not knowing if I was going to come out alive or not.”

Nieto is now 19 and healthy. She says art therapy, a psychotherapy that helps people express emotions through art, helped her get through the stress of that last surgery while at Riley’s Children Health in Indianapolis.

Art therapy is finding its place in the mental health profession, but most states including Indiana, don’t recognize it as its own profession. It’s often something licensed counselors use as a tool. But there’s been more of an effort to increase the number of art therapists in the state now that Second Lady Karen Pence has focused a spotlight on art therapy.

Pence, who’s from Indiana, helped to raise money to get two art therapists at Riley’s according to the New York Times. During her trip to Indiana this September, she visited Riley’s Art Therapy Studio to participate in an art therapy group session with some patients. They used syringes to paint on white canvases.

Riley’s art therapists use syringe painting to take the fear out of the medical syringes the patients often see.

For Nieto, one of her cardiologists, Dr. Randall Caldwell, suggested she try art therapy to help cope with the stress of undergoing a heart transplant.

“I started a couple of classes and we were just painting and talking about how I felt, just the emotions that I went through. I think it was a really beneficial way of letting my emotions out in a healthy way,” said Nieto.

Caldwell is the former director of The Riley Heart Center, and he’s noticed his patients who do art therapy have lower heart rates and blood pressure, and they are more relaxed. “There’re endorphins that are produced by these types of activities and you can decrease the use of synthetic drugs that help deal with pain.”

Emily Allbery is one of the art therapists at Riley’s, where the hospital offers art therapy to all patients. Allbery says she sees patients as young as two.

“They're here to get physically better but we also want to make sure emotionally they’re doing okay too,” said Allbery. “As they get older we are working on ‘what’s it like to have what we have? What’s it like to have a chronic illness?’ We are able to follow them as they grow older which is really great.”

Why Art Therapists Face Challenges

Art therapists are up against misconceptions that art therapy is like arts and crafts, or it’s as simple as taking some time to color or draw.

But one of the largest challenges is the lack of a state license, which makes it difficult for art therapists to bill insurance.

Eileen Misluk directs the graduate level art therapy program at the Herron School of Art and Design in Indianapolis. She believes Pence has helped to clarify some of these misconceptions, and she’s helped to advocate for licensure.

“I think Karen Pence has helped in that sense that she has brought this awareness, that it’s not just painting, not just making art. It goes on such a deeper level than that,” said Misluk.

According to Misluk, art therapists get around the billing hurdle by being trained and licensed as mental health counselors.  

“They are working a lot of times as a licensed mental health counselor who uses their training as an art therapist,” said Misluk.

But for the safety of the community, art therapists want a unique license to prove they have met the educational and clinical requirements.

This would afford them title protection, so that someone who passes themselves off as an art therapist could be fined if they don’t have the proper training.

But in Indiana, or in any other state in the midwest, the title “art therapist” isn’t protected. So someone could falsely say they are an art therapist and actually cause harm to a patient.

“There’s really nothing that states that they can’t do it. It is so dangerous,” said Misluk. “That has been our debate and we’ve tried with several different avenues to get them (state officials) to see this is, this could be scary.”

What’s Needed To Get Licensed

According to the Indiana Art Therapy Association, there are about 50 art therapists in Indiana. Misluk thinks there needs to be up to 250 art therapists in the state to make licensing possible.

She believes it’s going to take time to change Indiana’s lacks rules even with three universities graduating more art therapists.

That’s why Misluk is focused on educating the community and addressing misconceptions of art therapy.

“So whether you make great art by society standards or whether you happen to create stick figures, it’s the way of knowing that becomes the real therapeutic factor in art therapy,” said Misluk.

Nieto noticed those therapeutic benefits during her art therapy sessions.

“After my transplant I realized that life is just so beautiful. It’s so short,” said Nieto. “So, with every painting that I do, I try to put as many colors, bright colors as possible. I just love the brightness of life.”

Art therapy helped Nieto so much, she plans to study to become an art therapist.

“That’s something that I’m really looking forward to because being able to give back to the community in the same way that they did for me. I feel like that’s just kinda my life goal,” said Nieto.

Nieto hopes to one day return to Riley’s Children’s Health. She wants to use art therapy to help children through their recovery.

Editor's Correction: An earlier version of this story incorrectly stated that Eileen Misluk directs the masters of arts and art therapy program at the Herron School of Art and Design in Indianapolis. She directs the graduate art therapy program. This story has been updated to reflect this correction. 

This story was produced by Side Effects Public Media, a news collaborative covering public health.