Let's Talk About CBT

BABCP

Let's Talk About CBT is a podcast about cognitive behavioural therapy: what it is, what it's not and how it can be useful. Listen to experts in the field and people who have experienced CBT for themselves. A mix of interviews, myth-busting and CBT jargon explained, this accessible podcast is brought to you by the British Association of Behavioural and Cognitive Psychotherapies. www.babcp.com

  1. 12/19/2025

    Let's talk about…loneliness and how CBT can help

    In this episode, Helen is joined by Jackie and Professor Roz Shafran to explore loneliness through both lived experience and clinical psychology perspectives. Jackie shares her personal journey with anxiety, bereavement, and loneliness, describing how these experiences affected her mental health and led her to seek CBT support. She reflects on what helped, what was challenging, and how strategies such as goal setting and connection building continue to support her today. Roz Shafran, Emeritus Professor of Translational Psychology at UCL, offers a clear and compassionate overview of how loneliness is understood in research and clinical practice. The conversation explores the difference between loneliness and social isolation, how loneliness can affect people at different stages of life, and what effective interventions can look like. The discussion covers stigma around loneliness, access to support and why loneliness deserves to be taken seriously. Jackie and Roz also share practical advice for anyone who recognises themselves in the discussion and is considering reaching out for help. Resources & Support: If you or someone you know needs urgent help, reach out to Samaritans at 116 123 (UK) or visit samaritans.org We have more information on how you can find help and support on our Mental health support services page here: https://babcp.com/what-is-cbt/mental-health-support-services-information/https://babcp.com/what-is-cbt/mental-health-support-services-information/ The loneliness umbrella study mentioned by Roz is: Solmi, M., Veronese, N., Galvano, D., Favaro, A., Ostinelli, E.G., Noventa, V., Favaretto, E., Tudor, F., Finessi, M., Shin, J.I., Smith, L., Koyanagi, A., Cester, A., Bolzetta, F., Cotroneo, A., Maggi, S., Demurtas, J., De Leo, D. and Trabucchi, M. (2020). Factors Associated With Loneliness: An Umbrella Review Of Observational Studies. Journal of Affective Disorders, [online] 271, pp.131–138. doi:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jad.2020.03.075. Find more information about CBT- www.babcp.com Find our sister podcasts and all our other episodes in our podcast hub here: https://babcp.com/Podcasts Have feedback? Email us at podcasts@babcp.com Follow us on Instagram & Bluesky: @BABCPpodcasts Credits: Music is Autmn Coffee by Bosnow from Uppbeat Music from #Uppbeat (free for Creators!): https://uppbeat.io/t/bosnow/autumn-coffee License code: 3F32NRBYH67P5MIF This episode was produced by Steph Curnow

    40 min
  2. Let's talk about…CBT and the menopause

    10/17/2025

    Let's talk about…CBT and the menopause

    In this episode, Helen Macdonald talks with CBT therapist Sally Tribe about the impact of menopause and how Cognitive Behavioural Therapy can help. Sally shares her own experience of perimenopause, describes the wide range of symptoms people can experience, and explains how CBT can support those affected. The discussion covers the biological, psychological, and social aspects of menopause, the importance of awareness in workplaces and healthcare, and what reasonable adjustments and compassionate understanding can look like. They also talk about the latest guidance from NICE, how to access CBT through the NHS or private routes, and why no two menopause experiences are the same. Useful Information The British Association for Behavioural and Cognitive Psychotherapies (BABCP) is the lead organization for CBT in the UK. Find a NHS Talking Therapies service here Read the article by Sally on the menopause here Get in Touch If you have any questions or suggestions for future episodes, please email the Let's Talk About CBT team at podcasts@babcp.com. You can also follow us on Instagram and BlueSky at @BABCPPodcasts. Remember to rate, review, and subscribe to the podcast wherever you get your podcasts. You can also listen to our sister podcasts: Let's Talk About CBT - Practice Matters and Let's Talk About CBT - Research Matters. Credits: Music is Autmn Coffee by Bosnow from Uppbeat Music from #Uppbeat (free for Creators!): https://uppbeat.io/t/bosnow/autumn-coffee License code: 3F32NRBYH67P5MIF This podcast was edited by Steph Curnow

    38 min
  3. Let's Talk About…Access to Mental Health Services for Refugees and Asylum Seekers (World Mental Health Day 2025)

    10/10/2025

    Let's Talk About…Access to Mental Health Services for Refugees and Asylum Seekers (World Mental Health Day 2025)

    It's World Mental Health Day 2025, and this year's theme is 'access to services - mental health in catastrophes and emergencies'. The theme highlights the importance of people being able to protect their mental health in times of global instability. In this special episode of Lets' Talk about CBT, Helen Macdonald speaks with Kerry Young, a consultant clinical psychologist specialising in PTSD, particularly among asylum seekers and refugees. They discuss the impact of trauma on mental health, the challenges faced by asylum seekers in accessing mental health services, and the importance of community support. The conversation also touches on the role of interpreters in therapy, barriers to accessing services, and positive developments in mental health support for asylum seekers. Useful Information The British Association for Behavioural and Cognitive Psychotherapies (BABCP) is the lead organization for CBT in the UK. For those interested in supporting or learning more, Kerry suggests looking up: Freedom from Torture, the Helen Bamber Foundation, Breaking Barriers, Host Nation and The Refugee Council More information from the European Association for Behavioural and Cognitive Therapies can be found here Find translated health information from Doctors of the World here and translated mental health information from the Royal College of Psychiatrists here Links to services by region: Find a NHS Talking Therapies service here Wales: https://sanctuary.gov.wales/refugeesandasylumseekers/healthandwellbeing#  https://www.mentalhealth.org.uk/our-work/programmes/refugee-programmes/refugee-and-asylum-seekers-wales Scotland: https://scottishrefugeecouncil.org.uk/health/#Mentalhealthsupport Northern Ireland: https://www.mentalhealth.org.uk/our-work/research/journey-wellbeing-refugees-transport-and-mental-health-northern-ireland Ireland: https://www.hse.ie/eng/about/who/primarycare/socialinclusion/intercultural-health/mental-health-supports/ Get in Touch If you have any questions or suggestions for future episodes, please email the Let's Talk About CBT team at podcasts@babcp.com. You can also follow us on Instagram and BlueSky at @BABCPPodcasts. Remember to rate, review, and subscribe to the podcast wherever you get your podcasts. You can also listen to our sister podcasts: Let's Talk About CBT - Practice Matters and Let's Talk About CBT - Research Matters. Credits: Music is Autmn Coffee by Bosnow from Uppbeat Music from #Uppbeat (free for Creators!): https://uppbeat.io/t/bosnow/autumn-coffee License code: 3F32NRBYH67P5MIF

    32 min
  4. 08/11/2025

    Let's talk about…Low Intensity CBT

    Ever heard of low Intensity CBT and wondered what it was all about? Or what it would be like to receive it? In this episode of Let's Talk about CBT, Helen talks to Laura Stevenson-Young, a cognitive behavioural therapist and Director of Low Intensity CBT Clinical Training at Newcastle University and Emily who shares her lived experience of low intensity cognitive behavioural therapy. Together, they explore what low intensity CBT is, what it's like to receive it, and how it can empower people to take control of their mental health. Emily talks candidly about the challenges that led her to seek help, including grief, anxiety, fertility concerns and low self-esteem. She describes the impact of low intensity CBT on her life, and the practical tools she still uses today. Laura explains how this type of therapy works, who it's for, and why it can be so effective. Resources & Support Find an NHS Talking Therapies service: https://www.nhs.uk/nhs-services/mental-health-services/find-nhs-talking-therapies-for-anxiety-and-depression/ More about CBT and BABCP: https://www.babcp.com Find our sister podcasts and all our other episodes in our podcast hub here: https://babcp.com/Podcasts Have feedback? Email us at podcasts@babcp.com Follow us on Instagram & Bluesky: @BABCPpodcasts Credits: Music is Autmn Coffee by Bosnow from Uppbeat Music from #Uppbeat (free for Creators!): https://uppbeat.io/t/bosnow/autumn-coffee License code: 3F32NRBYH67P5MIF This episode was produced by Steph Curnow Transcript: Helen: Hello, and welcome to Let's Talk About CBT, the podcast where we talk about cognitive and behavioural psychotherapies, what they are, what they can do, and what they can't.  I'm Helen Macdonald, your host. I'm the Senior Clinical Advisor for the British Association for Behavioural and Cognitive Psychotherapies. Hello and welcome. Today, I've got Emily and Laura with me and we're going to be talking about low intensity CBT, what that is and what it's like to be on the receiving end. But first, I'm going to ask you both to introduce yourselves. Emily? Emily: Hi, yeah, thank you for having me. I'm Emily, I live in Yorkshire with my fiancé. And in November 2022, I reached out to my local mental health service for a number of reasons, which I'm sure we'll cover in this podcast. I began with a four-week introduction to CBT program, which was in a group setting online. That was in December. And then by January, I began my CBT therapy and yeah, it was one of the best things I've done. Helen: Thanks, Emily. And Laura. Laura: Hi, Helen. Thanks for having us and Emily. So, I'm Laura Stevenson-Young. I'm a cognitive behavioral therapist and Director of Low Intensity CBT Clinical Training at Newcastle University. So this means that I train practitioners to deliver low intensity CBT interventions for many different types of mental health problems, namely depression and low mood, generalized anxiety disorder, panic, OCD and some other problems that can really affect the quality of people's lives such as stress or sleep difficulties and long-term health conditions. So I trained as a low intensity CBT therapist, mostly known as a Psychological Wellbeing Practitioner or PWP for short, well over a decade ago. And I then went on to further CBT training and became a clinical trainer in low intensity CBT. So this is probably really going to come out today, but I'm a real advocate for low intensity CBT, the practitioners who deliver it. I'm so passionate about the work that they do and how they empower people to manage their own mental health within NHS Talking Therapies. Helen: Thanks Laura. So Emily, you said there were a number of things that led to you reaching out to the local mental health services. And I wonder if you're willing to tell us a bit more about what was going on? Emily: Yeah, of course. Yeah. I mean, kind of looking back, I should have done it a lot earlier than I did. It was kind of a lot of things building up over probably a couple of years. My mood definitely was low after losing my granddad and then with different job roles, kind of things to do with that, it was an ongoing thing. And then in 2022, that's when I'd gained a lot of weight, I was losing a lot of confidence, and I was letting a lot of stress at work get on top of me, which then had an impact on my relationship. And then obviously we were just coming out of lockdown as well. So I think that had a massive impact on my mental health. It was definitely, there was a lot of low mood and also anxiety around all I wanted to do was see friends and family, but the thought of doing that was actually making me incredibly anxious and busy places were making me anxious, new surroundings were causing kind of panic attacks. We'd gone on a trip and we were getting on a plane kind of in 2022 and I had a full panic attack getting on the plane. And there was nothing within my brain that was pinpointing what exactly it was. But I think...overriding the kind of that sadness and that anxiety there was a lot, it was around, I looked in my notes when I knew that we were doing this podcast and on the 12th of January I'd written in my notes as I was about to start my CBT I'm scared because I might not have control over what the future will bring and that might in my head was asserting so health wise I'd had some news regarding I was diagnosed with PCOS and an underactive thyroid, which both have a big impact on fertility and kind of me and my partner were trying to conceive and every single month it was like you were failing at being a woman really because it wasn't happening for us. That's still an ongoing thing now, that's not kind of changed but my mindset has changed off the back of...having CBT and I kind of went into counselling after that as well. And my mindset then has started now. I'm learning to deal with different things in a more logical way instead of going with them thoughts and thinking that that's it kind of thing, if that makes sense. Helen: Thanks, Emily. And it sounds like there was a combination of all sorts of really difficult things going on. I mean, you've talked about your physical health, you've talked about what was going through your mind, you were talking about the way that you were feeling. There's an awful lot that was going on for you there. And thank you for sharing that with us. And I'm just sort of really curious to hear about what it was actually like having that low intensity CBT? I'm going to come back to Laura and ask her to explain a bit more about what that really means. But from your experience of being on the receiving end, what was it like? Emily: Yeah, I think it's so, you're thinking ahead and a lot of my thoughts was always, I kept thinking, I shouldn't be doing this, I'm taking that away from someone else who needs this more than me. I could go and talk to my friends and family about this, of how I was really feeling or my partner, even. And there's only so much I think that you're comfortable to open up and tell your friends and family and speak about and but actually talking through everything and kind of making them thoughts in my head a lot more logical and combating them unhelpful thinking styles that I was doing, what just helped me so much and kind of rationalizing everything in my brain. And I think with my CBT therapist, she spoke a lot about negative automatic thoughts with me. It's every time there was something that was happening my immediate thought was the complete, the most negative response to it. So combatting that was a big thing for me and speaking about that. Helen: Thanks, Emily. And I mean, if I can just come to Laura now, Emily's just spoken really clearly about lots of stuff to do with thinking, negative automatic thoughts, thinking logically and so on. Can you say a bit more about that from the perspective of somebody who delivered those kind of interventions? Why is that helpful? What's that about? Laura: Hmm, it's a good question I guess. So in Emily's case the therapist was working with her on how she was thinking about herself and her difficulties and there lots of ways to work with thinking and negative thoughts in CBT. So you can work on the content of thinking, what our thoughts actually are and what they're saying or the process of thinking which is how we engage with the process of those thoughts. And I guess the most common way a low intensity therapist will engage with negative thoughts, particularly in low mood presentations and people with confidence issues is content, usually through means of reality testing or a CBT therapist might call it cognitive restructuring. Because for many of us, and we'll all resonate with this, is that we can make assumptions of what others think about us, we can have untrue and negative appraisals about ourselves and our situation. So, for example, others think badly of me or I'm terrible at my job or like Emily said, I'm failing as woman and things will never get better. And our mind can really convince us of these things that aren't true. And even sometimes if there is some truth to our negative thoughts and maybe things aren't going so well, still having all or nothing thinking or having a hundred percent conviction in these negative thoughts is really unhelpful. So it's more helpful to balance our negative thoughts with evidence sort of against their truth, if you like. And this is really important because in any CBT format, whether low or high CBT, we're trying to help the person feel emotionally better through cognitive and behavioral change. If we could tell ourselves to stop feeling sad or anxious, well, I guess we would simply do it and I probably wouldn't have a job. But because that's not possible, we have to relieve our distress and emotions through how we're thinking and what we're doing that are worsening those problems. So cognitive therapy and working with thoughts can really help people pay attention to alternative facts and

    37 min
  5. Let's talk about…the Mental Health Jedi

    07/10/2025

    Let's talk about…the Mental Health Jedi

    In this episode, Helen Macdonald speaks with Chris Frederick- advocate, suicide survivor, founder of Project Soul Stride, and self-described "Mental Health Jedi." Chris shares his deeply personal journey, from childhood trauma and racial adversity to becoming a mental health advocate and what helped his recovery- and the things that didn't. Resources & Support: If you or someone you know needs urgent help, reach out to Samaritans at 116 123 (UK) or visit samaritans.org Brent Recovery College- https://www.cnwl.nhs.uk/services/recovery-and-wellbeing-college The Listening Place- https://listeningplace.org.uk/ James' Place- https://www.jamesplace.org.uk/ Find more information about CBT- www.babcp.com Find our sister podcasts and all our other episodes in our podcast hub here: https://babcp.com/Podcasts Have feedback? Email us at podcasts@babcp.com Follow us on Instagram & Bluesky: @BABCPpodcasts Credits: Music is Autmn Coffee by Bosnow from Uppbeat Music from #Uppbeat (free for Creators!): https://uppbeat.io/t/bosnow/autumn-coffee License code: 3F32NRBYH67P5MIF This episode was produced by Steph Curnow Transcript: Helen: Hello, and welcome to Let's Talk About CBT, the podcast where we talk about cognitive and behavioural psychotherapies, what they are, what they can do, and what they can't.  I'm Helen Macdonald, your host. I'm the Senior Clinical Advisor for the British Association for Behavioural and Cognitive Psychotherapies. Today I'm speaking with Chris Frederick. I'm absolutely delighted to have him here with me in the studio. He's going to share about his personal history and some difficult experiences that he had in his earlier life. How he ended up looking for help with his mental health and some of the things that helped as well as some of the things that were less helpful and how he's then started using his lived experience to help inform professionals, services and members of the general public about what helps and what helps people to access the kind of support that they need. He's also going to tell us how he ended up being known as the mental health Jedi. Chris, would you just like to introduce yourself and tell us a bit about who you are? Chris: So my full name is Chris Frederick. Born and bred in London, currently living in northwest London. I guess I like to introduce myself. Firstly, is I'm a suicide attempt survivor. I think it's important to get that out there. I'm an advocate and founder of Project Soul Stride, which we'll touch on a little bit later. And, also I'm a mad Star Wars fan. Helen: Oh, fantastic. And you've just mentioned a couple of things, really important things about your background and who you are. Is there anything else that you'd be happy to tell people listening today about your background and challenges or barriers that you've experienced? Chris: I mean I guess if I backtrack to the story that, that brought me to that point, very quickly in the barriers, because they might be things that listeners would identify with. I'm a twin, I'm 55. Growing up for us in the early seventies was a tough time. We lived as a small family of four in a flat in a council estate in Wembley and due to the pressures that my father and my mother who were very young, they were only 19 and 18, and they'd not long been in the UK from the Caribbean. So they themselves were carrying their own baggage, their own trauma, their own legacy and that transferred, I guess, onto us as young children. My father was a very strict, sort of military type figure. A beautiful looking man- if you put a picture of Muhammad Ali at his prime and my father at his prime, they could almost be twins, brothers, because that's how you know, he was tall, statuesque, beautiful green eyes, but on the downside, he had a heavy hand. And you know what I mean by that Helen, he had a heavy hand. He was quite, he was an intimidating character. And that manifested itself in negative behaviour in the house, physical abuse of various descriptions. And we grew up watching and witnessing and being victim of that as we grew up, and this is all within a black community. And then we moved at the age of 11, we upped sticks and moved to Chislehurst, which was a suburb of Kent. So imagine now we've moved from an all sort of majority ethnic community to now an ethnic minority community where we were the only black family on the street. Elms Street Avenue number 60, remember it well. Went to Kenmore Manor, and I remember for the first three years we were two of only five non-white pupils in the entire school. So without going into too much detail, you could also now begin to identify with the certain trends, the recurring themes, the racism of course, the pressures from my family. My parents eventually split up and divorced. My relationship with my twin eventually split. And so we ended up the complete, the family was completely fractured and still is today. And you bundle all that up. I started to experience mental ill health probably at the age of 19. And I'll tell you what it was, it was alopecia. Because I used to have, I used to have, if you could see me now, I've bald hair. and I started to feel there were bald patches appearing in the back of the scalp. So I went to the doctors and you said, oh, you've got alopecia. we could inject you with steroids, give you some cream. I said, well, what's the underlying reasons? And he goes, oh, it's stress. you. What can we do? What can I do to overcome that? And again, that was in the late eighties so talking about counselling and therapy again wasn't really part of the dialogue back then. Right. And then at the alopecia came back 10 years later. So I was beginning to realise I had some problems. And then I took off to Asia, lived there for 20 years, had an amazing time, an amazing experience. Again, suffered racism, but of a completely different type in China, Beijing, Singapore, Hong Kong as a black man, very few in number, but I didn't let that deter me. I had a very good career. I had a lot of experience and beautiful people, travelling a lot. But it all came to a head. It all came to head, and it's something that I called the ripple effect because it almost as if there was an author I spoke to last year, he when he heard my story, he said, I'm sorry to say this, Chris, but it almost sounds as if it was inevitable that you would reach breaking point and attempt to take your life, based on everything that you told me and that ripple that had gone through, the desperation for wanting to find love, family, belonging, identity, all the things that have become so precious to me now manifested itself when I lost my last job in Singapore in 2018, and I tried to commit suicide later that year. And then that was the time for me to leave Asia. After nearly 20 years, I realised that I needed to close the book on that era of my life. And I moved to Los Angeles and then a few months later moved to London, and then I attempted suicide again a couple of years later during Covid. So, you know, I've looked into the precipice, I've looked into the darkness, and twice I wanted to disappear from the world. Helen: And Chris, I'm really grateful to you for sharing so openly about what's happened to you and just such, such a combination of difficult life events and the circumstances that you were living in. And I mean, I will say that the show notes will have links to help and more information for people who may experience similar things or be concerned about risks and safety. But I'm really grateful for you to sharing so openly and you've said that all of these things really have brought you to where you are now. Tell me a bit about how you went from what sounds like a real, you said looking into the abyss, to accessing something that made a difference to you, or how you got the right kind of support, the right kind of help. Chris: So I mean, if I tell you, Helen, that when I got admitted into Ealing Hospital after my second attempt, at that moment in time, it was like, oh, finally I'm about to get some help. Finally, I'm about to be recognised as an individual who needs support from the NHS. And then through that whole process of being in the hospital, the psychiatric team at the hospital were very good, they were very helpful. The clinical psychologist came to see me. She spoke to my mum separately and said, okay, we need to help your son. And when I got discharged, I got put into the hands of the community mental health team, the Brent Community mental health team, and they were smashing. They'd come around two, three times a week. They'd make sure I was taking my medication. And then I started to ask them, okay, where do we go from here because I've got you guys for about a month. I'm really concerned what happens then. I just don't want to keep falling back into these bad habits. So they started to say, okay, firstly we're going to start to give you some information, some literature and then we're going to start to talk to you about what was then, Helen, IAPT, now Talking Therapies. I said to them, look, I don't know if I'm ready to go into therapy quite yet. I'd like something just to, just as a teaser, just to start giving me a little bit of confidence, a little bit of awareness of even how to talk or be around people who might have experienced this stuff. So they said, we've got the solution for you, the Brent Recovery College, the CNWL Brent Recovery College. I said, oh, that sounds interesting what do they do? Oh, they've got a curriculum of courses, and you go online, and they've been facilitated by lived experience, peer support trainers. You are going to be in classrooms of about 12 people, they've all got experience of mental illness. They're all there like you. They want to see other people on the screen. They want to connect with people whilst learning new skills. And I said, I've been a lifelong learner this sounds just a ticket for me to get things going. And when I spok

    40 min
  6. Let's Talk About…Digital CBT and Cultural Connection

    05/28/2025

    Let's Talk About…Digital CBT and Cultural Connection

    In this latest episode of Let's Talk About CBT, host Helen Macdonald is joined by two international guests- Tafi Mazikana and Sherrie Steyn who share their journey from CBT service user and therapist to CBT innovators. Tafi, originally from Zimbabwe, opens up about his experiences with anxiety while working in a high-pressured job in finance and how a digital CBT intervention through IAPT (now known as NHS Talking Therapies) changed his life. He talks candidly about the cultural stigma around mental health, what it was like to try therapy for the first time, and his realisation that CBT is about learning practical, empowering skills. We also hear from Sherrie, a clinical and community psychologist from South Africa and co-founder of the Vimbo Health app along with Tafi. She reflects on her friendship with Tafi, the surprising conversations that sparked their collaboration, and the importance of culturally adapted therapy. Together, they describe how Vimbo Health was developed to meet the unique challenges and needs of people in South Africa, particularly in terms of language, cultural metaphors, accessibility, and affordability. They explore how therapy can be made more relevant and relatable, from replacing metaphors like "three-legged stools" with potjie pots to tackling barriers like mobile data costs and mental health stigma. Whether you're a therapist or someone curious about accessing help in a different way, this conversation shines a light on how CBT can be tailored, inclusive, and transformative. Resources & Links: Learn more about Vimbo Health: https://www.vimbohealth.com/ Information on CBT and how to find a therapist If you or someone you know needs urgent help, reach out to Samaritans at 116 123 (UK) or visit samaritans.org Find our sister podcasts and all our other episodes in our podcast hub here: https://babcp.com/Podcasts Have feedback? Email us at podcasts@babcp.com Follow us on Instagram & Bluesky: @BABCPpodcasts Credits: Music is Autmn Coffee by Bosnow from Uppbeat Music from #Uppbeat (free for Creators!): https://uppbeat.io/t/bosnow/autumn-coffee License code: 3F32NRBYH67P5MIF This episode was produced by Steph Curnow Transcript: Helen: Hello, and welcome to Let's Talk About CBT, the podcast where we talk about cognitive and behavioural psychotherapies, what they are, what they can do, and what they can't.  I'm Helen Macdonald, your host. I'm the Senior Clinical Advisor for the British Association for Behavioural and Cognitive Psychotherapies. I'm absolutely delighted today to have some international guests for you. And in a moment, I'm going to ask, Tafi and Sherrie to introduce themselves. We're going to be talking with them about the experience of having CBT and then some really exciting developments that have happened since. But first, let's start with some introductions. Tafi, would you like to tell people who you are? Tafi: Yes, definitely. Thank you, Helen, really a pleasure to be with you today on this podcast. So I'm Tafi Mazikana and I'm Co-founder and CEO of Vimbo Health, a metal health app that's operating mostly out of South Africa. My background as I've shared, is not as a practitioner. My background is as a patient, of CBT who became very curious, perhaps too curious. So I was living in the UK working in banking and finance, and I was just very lucky to come across the services of IAPT which allowed me to self-refer in this area of mental health. I never knew that one could actually reach out and do something, so that was game changing in itself. But I was offered to have a digital CBT intervention, which was very transformative for me but obviously just left question marks as someone born and raised in Africa to say, well, who's thinking about the African context? Because, as I'll share later, there are things and ways of thinking and speaking that are different and I was just curious about who is going to think about that. And so became more and more involved, in this area of CBT, and in particular digital CBT. Helen: Thank you so much, Tafi. There's lots that we're going to talk about there. Before we start that though, Sherrie, can I ask you to introduce yourself please? Sherrie: Hi Helen. Thank you for having me. My name is Sherrie Steyn and I am from South Africa. I'm actually very fortunate to be from the East coast, so the sunny side, and my background is in clinical and community psychology. I tend towards the behavioural types of psychology. So I've done some ABA or as we call it VBA now and of course a special interest in CBT. So having done that clinical and community psychology, I then went on to do one of the allied CBT training courses through UCL. So I was very fortunate, to have done that. And that's a little bit about my background and, yes, I'm also the co-founder and CSO of Vimbo, I like to say I'm the science, because it sounds cool and yeah, just very happy to be here and share some of our experiences with you today. Helen: Thank you so much. So if I can come back to you, Tafi, I wonder if you would be willing to just tell our listeners a little bit about what it was that made you actually reach out to access CBT. Do you mind telling us a bit about what was happening for you that meant that you were seeking some help? Tafi: Yeah, absolutely. I think what I with hindsight realise is that it was difficulties that built up gradually over time and came to a point where they sort of caught me off guard. At the time that I reached out for help, I was working in the banking sector there in London on very stressful, large projects, which brought on a lot of anxiety, but I traced back my difficulties to over 10 years ago in terms of when those little moments of a negative self-talk, which started as innocent, and then grew into something of its own life, sort of started to happen and without the right tools then entering into that professional world, I do think I was at a disadvantage. I had some great tools in terms of being quite active and taking part in sports and exercise. So that's amazing but definitely what I came to realise is that I was actually lacking other tools that could have helped me to not get into a situation where I'm feeling like I'm in a lot of difficulty. So yeah, so I always describe it as, for me, in my case, not one thing in particular, but I feel like a gradual buildup of life just happening or that negative thinking pattern becoming something of its own. Helen: And I think it's quite important to notice that, that it doesn't have to be some one particular dramatic event or something key that changes. It might be a combination of things or a buildup over time. So can I ask you a bit about when you did access the CBT, what did you actually get? What happened in CBT for you? Tafi: Yeah, so I think for me, I grew up in Zimbabwe in Africa, and there isn't a tradition of seeking help. So for us, therapy is something that we saw in movies, we know that movie characters in Hollywood have therapists and get help. Or we associated it with people who we knew in the community who are undergoing inpatient care. And those are the forms of help that we knew to be there. Things that are not related to us in terms of early intervention, it is more something that happens when you are at the stage of acute care, which is inpatient. So essentially when I reached out for help, I was a bit sceptical of what was offered because it didn't fit the moulds of what I thought help looked like. And when I chose the route of going for the self-guided digital option that I was given there. I was, again, sceptical because it was not what I thought therapy looked like.  I chose it because it was, it felt like a lower barrier because I was still quite afraid to talk about my feelings and to talk about my thoughts and experiences. But yeah, but, needless to say, I was actually shocked and quite impressed at how effective it was. And so that, that introduced me into the idea that help is something you don't have to wait until you are at that acute phase of need. But also, it taught me that CBT is about, in my opinion, I guess I'm not a practitioner, so please take it with a bit of salt, but it taught me that CBT is about building skills, which is quite a positive thing. It's actually quite empowering is what I learned then, and I think that's what resonated the most with me and got me hooked onto this form of help. Helen: Thank you. And I just wanted to emphasise that there's several things that you've said there. I mean, firstly, you're coming from perhaps a cultural context that's less familiar to some of us. I suspect a lot of our listeners will be in the UK, although there are people from elsewhere. But that experience of really not being used to talking about feelings will be very familiar to a lot of our listeners, that sense that it's got to be really bad before you seek help, I think will also be something that people out there might feel. And yet what you've said, it was an earlier intervention, and it wasn't nearly as bad as it might have been.  So I just wondered if I can talk to Sherrie for a moment and ask about what it was like for you, getting to know Tafi and,from the CBT therapist's point of view. Sherrie: Well, I think what the first thing that strikes me is that Tafi and I socialised fairly regularly. We were a bit younger in those days. So the socialising honestly did tend to focus on large groups, at the pub, at a museum, at a place, and even when we do have dinner time, so if Tafi would come over and just hang out and have a meal, you are still so preoccupied with the day to day that unless someone brings something to you, you might not actually know what's going on. Whilst all this was going on, I had no clue what Tafi was going through. So the first time we actually really got talking about this was when he was visiting me, so after he had completed his treatments and we were hanging out on the balcony that I'm

    45 min
  7. Let's talk about…. mental fitness in sports

    04/14/2025

    Let's talk about…. mental fitness in sports

    In this episode of Let's Talk About CBT, Helen Macdonald speaks with Phil Cooper, mental health nurse and co-founder of the charity State of Mind Sport, and Ian Knott, former professional rugby league player and State of Mind presenter. Phil shares how State of Mind was born out of tragedy and developed into an award-winning mental fitness programme, now reaching thousands of athletes across the UK and beyond. Ian talks candidly about his experience of severe injury, depression, and suicidal thoughts after retiring from sport, and how CBT helped him to rebuild his life. We hear how sports settings are being used to break down stigma, encourage conversations, and promote mental health support—particularly among men—and how brief interactions and powerful personal stories can save lives. Resources & Links: State of Mind Sport website Information on CBT and how to find a therapist If you or someone you know needs urgent help, reach out to Samaritans at 116 123 (UK) or visit samaritans.org Find our sister podcasts and all our other episodes in our podcast hub here: https://babcp.com/Podcasts Have feedback? Email us at podcasts@babcp.com Follow us on Instagram & Bluesky: @BABCPpodcasts Credits: Music is Autmn Coffee by Bosnow from Uppbeat Music from #Uppbeat (free for Creators!): https://uppbeat.io/t/bosnow/autumn-coffee License code: 3F32NRBYH67P5MIF This episode was produced by Steph Curnow Transcript: Helen: Hello, and welcome to Let's Talk About CBT, the podcast where we talk about cognitive and behavioural psychotherapies, what they are, what they can do, and what they can't. I'm Helen MacDonald, your host. I'm the senior Clinical Advisor for the British Association for Behavioural and Cognitive Psychotherapies Today what we've got for you is an episode about mental health, mental fitness and sports, and I've got Phil and Ian here to talk to me today. Phil, will you just introduce yourself? Phil: My name's Phil Cooper. I'm a mental health nurse by background. I used to work as a nurse consultant in mental health and drug and alcohol misuse. I love sport. And, for some strange reason or quirk of random chaos, I became to be one of the co-founders of State of Mind Sport charity that focuses on mental fitness. Helen: Thank you, Phil. Ian, please, will you introduce yourself? Ian: My name's Ian Knott. I'm a former rugby league professional and I currently am a presenter for State of Mind. I talk about my story, my lived experience of having to retire through a serious injury and then developing mental illness. So I talk about that. Helen: Thanks very much, Ian, and I'm sure our listeners will want to hear more about that later in this episode. Firstly though, can I ask Phil to tell us a bit more? Phil, will you tell us about State of Mind and how it came to be and what it does? Phil: Sure State of Mind Sport began unfortunately on the back of a tragedy within the sport of rugby league, where a Great Britain Rugby League international called Terry Newton, unfortunately took his own life in September, 2010. Sent great shock waves, I think, through the whole sport for such a high profile player. At the time there was relatively little support or mental health support for players at that time. I suppose as a mental health nurse who loves rugby league and sport, I read a league paper on a Monday morning, somebody wrote an article saying how the NHS and the sport should get together to try and prevent suicide. Also, somebody also wrote a letter, again a mental health professional, called Malcolm Rae and Ernie Benbow had written the article and I saw this and thinking, wow, this is Monday morning, I shall write these two individuals- checked with my chief exec, of course, because obviously you have to be doing all these things- and then invited them to a meeting we were going to have in good old health style a conference, that soon changed when we invited a couple of players such as Ian, and they suggested, why didn't we ask the governing body for a round of fixtures to promote mental health at that time or mental fitness. I then found myself in the strange position being ferried to Hull Kingston Rovers Ground to be presented before all the chief execs of all the top divisions with clubs to say, this is a really good idea. It's free. So the sport love that bit and, we'll deliver a session to your players before the season and then a round of fixtures themed around that. So we had a State of Mind round in 2011 and player bought into it. There was very little support, as I said, and they began to talk about it on social media. They wore t-shirts in the warmup before the round of fixtures, but crucially, they knew what it was about, and they were all bought in. Things have grown massively since that time, which has been great for us. And also promoting mental fitness in rugby league, one of the toughest sports on the planet. Helen: Thank you Phil. So can you tell us a little bit more about what you really mean by mental fitness? Phil: Certainly, okay. I think language is crucial, as I'm sure all your members will realise and will think about on a regular basis. So for me, to get into a situation of encouraging men or engaging men into something that will help them, if I say, if I used to say, well, we'll come in and deliver a mental health session for you into a local grassroots sports club. I can imagine the reaction would be flipping heck, I'm not going into that. However, when you can make the case that actually you are going to go to training for physical fitness, what a lot of athletes will tell you that the mental fitness is perhaps the most important aspect of being a professional sports person or being the best sports person you can be. So therefore, if we go in and say, well, we're going to try and improve your mental fitness, men tend to sort of buy into that, especially if you go to them in their grassroots club, they wouldn't come to me in a community mental health team, but they would certainly go training two nights a week in their local club. And you have a captive audience potentially, especially when the weather's bad and they can't train on the pitch. And the coaches will want something different to either entertain or, keep the players focused on what they want to achieve. So State of Mind deliver mental fitness sessions so we look at anxiety and depression using a GAD-7 and a PHQ-9, as I'm sure your members will be very familiar with and again, we deliver that in a style that's not sat down in front of somebody asking them to fill in a questionnaire with a pen or online or whatever. So we'll do that. We will have two presenters usually. So Ian being one of those, I might have been the clinical dude once or twice with Ian, of course, and I'll ask him about how he's been feeling over the last few weeks using a PHQ-9 or a GAD-7. He'll tell me some strange answers, which he never used to tell me what they were going to be, I would then ask the audience how anxious or how low in mood Ian was based on those answers. So you keep all the information away from your audience, but you involve them to use all the different learning styles, so audio visual, kinaesthetic, all of those learning styles to get to as many of those people as possible. So we've been doing that for 10 years. Hundreds of thousands of people have attended sessions, which is ridiculous when I think back, but also numerous people have told us that they changed their mind about taking their own life and that's the sort of thing that keeps you going every week. And going to wherever we're going of a Tuesday or a Thursday evening, or even as I found myself in a dressing room last Saturday, so before a football match, just talking to players. So all of those things, we do mental health first aid. You can look on stateofmindsport.org if you really want to know. I don't want to want too much about that, but that's what we do. And we go to people where they are. We try to engage people where they are. Helen: And I'm hearing you are reaching a huge number of people, probably people who wouldn't easily go and look for help, like perhaps men in maybe more traditional settings where we don't talk about mental health or mental fitness as you put it. That's really important. But also this work is saving lives and that seems to me as a really important piece of work that's happening here. And I wonder if I can ask Ian to come in now. And Ian, you said, about your lived experience and that's what's brought you into working with State of Mind Sport. Can you talk a bit about your experiences? Ian: So my kind of story started in 2004 while playing for Leigh Centurions. At the time I probably had about 12 years I think at professional rugby. I played at the highest-level barring international level, and after 12 years of playing at the highest level, I dropped down division to play for Leigh Centurions And at the time, Leigh were making a massive push to get into Super League. I never played in Super League before, and halfway through the season, I can remember we played against Halifax away from home, and I ran with the ball, and I got tackled and there was nothing wrong with this tackle at all, but I felt these god awful pains in my lower back and it felt like my leg was, I don't know, it's like tingling and my foot was in like a bucket of water or something like that. So it felt, which was strange because we are really hot summers day. So obviously I came off reluctantly, because we are a bit stupid, old rugby players, we do play with injuries. But I did come off, and then a couple of days later the pain got worse, so I got sent for a scan. And I got told in no certain terms had a very large disc prolapse at the bottom of my back. So they said you can't play, you need to obviously get treatment and then you'll be okay for the next season. So I went back and had a meeting with the club, and we all came to the sensible conclusi

    44 min
  8. Let's Talk about CBT: A solid return on investment

    04/07/2025

    Let's Talk about CBT: A solid return on investment

    In this special episode celebrating World CBT Day 2025, we explore this year's theme: CBT: A Solid Return on Investment. Host Helen Macdonald, Senior Clinical Advisor at BABCP, is joined by a range of voices reflecting on the impact, value, and future of CBT. We hear from: Dr. Adrian Whittington, National Clinical Lead for Psychological Professions at NHS England, about the rollout and outcomes of NHS Talking Therapies. Dr. Stirling Moorey, BABCP President, on the historical development of CBT and its increasing relevance and recognition over the decades. Nic, a former CBT client, who shares how therapy helped him manage anxiety linked to a long-term health condition. Dr. Saiqa Naz, past president of BABCP, who discusses her personal journey into CBT and her commitment to inclusion, diversity, and working with underrepresented communities This episode offers a rich blend of lived experience, clinical insight, and future vision, showing how CBT continues to be a wise investment for individuals, services, and society as a whole. Further information and links: Visit BABCP to learn more about CBT Find support via NHS Talking Therapies Discover more about World CBT Day Find our sister podcasts and all our other episodes in our podcast hub here: https://babcp.com/Podcasts Have feedback? Email us at podcasts@babcp.com Follow us on Instagram & Bluesky: @BABCPpodcasts Credits: Music is Autmn Coffee by Bosnow from Uppbeat Music from #Uppbeat (free for Creators!): https://uppbeat.io/t/bosnow/autumn-coffee License code: 3F32NRBYH67P5MIF This podcast was produced by Steph Curnow Transcript: Helen: Hello, and welcome to Let's Talk About CBT, the podcast where we talk about cognitive and behavioural psychotherapies, what they are, what they can do, and what they can't.  I'm Helen Macdonald, your host. I'm the Senior Clinical Advisor for the British Association for Behavioural and Cognitive Psychotherapies. Welcome to this special episode of Let's Talk about CBT celebrating World CBT Day. World. CBT Day takes place every year on the 7th of April, and this year's theme is CBT: A Solid Return on Investment.  In this episode, we're exploring just what that means- I will be speaking with Adrian Whittington, who's the National Clinical Lead for Psychological Professions at NHS England and with Stirling Moorey, who's our current BABCP President about how CBT has developed over time and the importance of continued investment in it. We'll also hear a personal story from Nic, who is a former client of Stirling's, who shares how CBT helped him manage anxiety and improve his quality of life.  Finally, I sit down with Saiqa Naz who is past president of BABCP to talk about her journey into CBT from starting out in the Improving Access to Psychological Therapies services, to completing a clinical psychology doctorate, and how she embodies the idea of CBT being a real return on investment. We hope you enjoy this episode and the range of voices reflecting on the impact and value of CBT.  Let's get started! Here's my conversation with Adrian and Stirling…. Adrian, would you introduce yourself please? Adrian: Yes. Hi. I am Adrian Whittington. I'm National Clinical Lead for Psychological Professions at NHS England, which means within England I'm the professional lead for psychologists, psychological therapists, and psychological practitioners. Helen: Thank you, Stirling, please introduce yourself. Stirling: Hi, I'm Stirling Moorey. I am currently the president of the BABCP and I'm a retired psychiatrist and really have been around in the CBT world since 1979. So, Adrian is speaking about CBT today and in the UK particularly and I'll just give a bit of a view of what it's been like to be in the CBT world for this length of time. Helen: Thank you very much. And so Stirling, if we come to you first, that's a long career- you must have seen a lot of developments over the years. Tell us a bit about what you've seen and how things have developed. Stirling: Indeed, I mean, so right at the very beginning when I was a medical student, cognitive therapy was just being invented. And so we had BT, Behaviour Therapy, but not the CBT that we have today. And so it was quite sort of revolutionary. The behaviour therapists look down their nose a little bit at it, the psychoanalytic therapists very much looked down their nose, and I remember at one point talking to a psychoanalyst who told me that being a CBT therapist was a bit like playing a tin whistle compared to being a concert violinist. I think things have changed since then. So, over the years, what's happened is that really from the work of pioneers like Isaac Marks in behaviour therapy, Aaron Beck in cognitive therapy, for the first time psychotherapists started to actually address what evidence do we have that this works? And using randomised control trials. And this has been really powerful. It was revolutionary at the time because people thought you couldn't manualise therapy but Beck and others managed to do that. I think that's been the legacy of that, is that the services that are recognised to be really effective and are spread out across the UK that Adrian will talk about, have resulted from us gathering evidence that CBT works. The other thing that's happened is that really up until the early 2000s, we were using CBT in a lot of contexts in the UK, evidence accumulating that it was effective for anxiety disorders, depression, but other things like eating disorders, psychosis, long-term conditions, various things but they were all being delivered within a hodgepodge of services really. And I remember when the IAPT services that Adrian will be talking about, were about to be developed, my chief executive in my trust said this is amazing, it's like moving cognitive therapy from being a cottage industry into therapy mills as he called them. So, we have therapy mills across the UK, which are proving very effective in helping people with anxiety and depression. And it was that revolutionary input of David Clarke and Lord Layard who said, actually, we can work this out as a way to deliver therapy effectively and efficiently, not just in these services here and there, but across the whole country. So there's been so much change and now CBT is there for everyone. I suppose just finally thinking about what its impact in public consciousness has been, although people maybe have heard of it and maybe witnessed people who've received it, there've been some subtle changes, I think in our perspective on the world that have been influenced by CBT. I think people from the behavioural side now are recognising that a lot of our behaviour is learned in our everyday life. We have habits and people notice they have bad habits and go to podcasts to try and get them to rid them of their bad habits. And people are really aware of cognitive bias- it's there in the media all the time, that recognition that our thinking is not always that rational and straight, for good or ill. And then the third thing is there's a new wave of CBT that's come along that's called the third wave of CBT is really looking at how we can look in and just be aware and notice our thought processes. And so the whole field of mindfulness is very popular these days. So CBT, I think even if people aren't aware of what CBT is as a therapy, it has perfused our consciousness. Helen: Thank you very much, Stirling. That sounds like a whole symphony orchestra, not just a tin whistle from what you've been saying during your career. And thank you because that perspective of many years in the field and how things have developed, it leads us nicely to speaking with Adrian about, you mentioned IAPT, which stood for Improving Access to Psychological Therapies. I'm going to hand over to Adrian to ask him a bit about that project, how it came about and what happened. Adrian: Absolutely. Thanks Helen. Well, of course I'm a relative newcomer to the field having been trained as a psychologist 30 years ago and done my additional CBT training, I think 19 years ago, including under Stirling's tutelage as one of my training supervisors. So, it's great to join this session today with Stirling. So, NHS Talking Therapies as it is now was called Improving Access to Psychological Therapies is really something we're very proud of and feel as a sort of world leading program in implementing psychological therapies at scale. As Stirling's mentioned, David Clark and Lord Richard Layard were instrumental in founding the service and arguing successfully for its initial funding and have really been sort of fundamental to its success ever since. It's received investment every year, under every government since 2008 in the UK and it is just an England service so it's important to also remember there's other parts of the UK that don't have the same sort of service at the moment. It really makes a public promise, which is that it will deliver NICE guided psychological treatments. So NICE are our evidence-based, practice guidelines in, in the UK and, sort of established by independent panels of experts for each type of condition. So it makes a public promise, it will only deliver NICE recommended treatments, psychological treatments, that the therapists that deliver them will be fully trained and properly supervised and that it will publicly reveal its outcome data, anonymised, of course, but for the whole country so that we can see at a national scale, but also locally, how the service is performing, and the service can learn and the best performers can show what they're doing that's being so successful, to produce the best outcomes and other services can, can seek to learn from that and implement some of the same strategies. So we now have a sort of situation where for a number of years, the service has met its objective of 50% of those who coming into the service, are recovering completely from anxiety or depression and about two thirds, i

    59 min

Ratings & Reviews

4
out of 5
48 Ratings

About

Let's Talk About CBT is a podcast about cognitive behavioural therapy: what it is, what it's not and how it can be useful. Listen to experts in the field and people who have experienced CBT for themselves. A mix of interviews, myth-busting and CBT jargon explained, this accessible podcast is brought to you by the British Association of Behavioural and Cognitive Psychotherapies. www.babcp.com

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