It’s coming up to a year since we interviewed DeeAnna Nagel and Kate Anthony and discussed counselling in online environments broadly and in virtual environments more specifically. Over that time, the Online Therapy Institute has continued to grow. One example of this is the announcement of a five-hour course on online supervision.
Anyone who works in a counselling role will understand the importance of supervision as both a development and protective mechanism for a practitioner, let alone one working in an online environment. Additionally, a key plank of more widespread acceptance of online therapy is formalised governance mechanisms that provide peace of mind in regards to quality. Small steps like the ones taken here are helping to achieve just that.
The wider challenge is establishing e-health standards that ensure confidentiality, the ability to confirm practitioner credentials and good service navigation for face-to-face intervention when required. That sort of integration is potentially years off, but in the meantime counselling professionals are doing a great job of filling in the gaps.
If you’re involved in counselling in a virtual world environment, I’d love to hear from you to find out more about your work.
Update: an interview with the Online Therapy Institute in Second Life is now available:
I read everything I could get my hands on at the time to do with online relationships, virtual societies and even gaming communities that were developing international reputations and new cultures in cyberspace. I asked myself at the time ‘could this be the start of a new movement in human enrichment?’ and set forth to find out the good and the bad (and the down-right terrible) aspects of spending a lot of time engrossed in an online world, be it chat, gaming, shopping, finance, politics etc. Thus, my interests turned toward career aspirations to develop psychological research and an applied track record in the use of information communication technology and the use of other technologies in helping the ‘human condition’.
However, it is psychologically damaging both in psychosocial relationships, employment responsibility and accountability and can even affect our general health to a large degree. You might therefore say that although substance abuse and gambling are faster and






