Welcome to the University Counselling Service. We're here to listen, to understand, and to help you think through any problems you're experiencing - whether large or small.
If you would like to arrange a counselling session, please book via the appointment booking page.
We offer one session at a time, rather than a series of sessions - but we encourage you to return if and when you'd find it helpful. It's a bit like buying a coffee or going for a haircut - you can make use of our service at the time you need us.
University Counselling Service Appointments
Information about the University Counselling service and what we offer can be found below.
- Students living in the UK, or based at the Doha campus
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You can see a counsellor in-person or online.
In-person sessions are offered at:
- University Counselling Service Building at 5 Dunbar Street (Old Aberdeen)
- Polwarth Building (Foresterhill)
You can select the location of your appointment on our booking site.
If you would prefer to meet with your counsellor online, please select that option when you book, and we will send an invite for an MS Teams meeting to your University of Aberdeen email address.
- Students currently based outside of the UK
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The Counselling Service cannot offer counselling if you are residing beyond the legal jurisdiction of the UK because of the different rules and regulations regarding licensing, insurance, training and qualifications of counsellors and therapists.
If you are living outside of the UK, you can still access the Student Helpline provided through an external partner of the University of Aberdeen. The Student Helpline offers immediate free-of-charge support and advice, as well as the opportunity to arrange to speak with a counsellor.
The Helpline is available 24/7, 365 days a year.
- Outside of UK phone: 00353 15 180 277
- Student Helpline WhatsApp: Text "Hi" to 00353 87 369 0010
Please also check out the extensive range of specialist or online resources as well as our suite of self-help guides.
University Counselling Service: Further Information
- About your counselling session
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What is counselling?
Counselling is a talking therapy which gives you the opportunity to explore issues which are causing you concern or distress. The Counselling Service can give you the space to find a new perspective on a problem or think about options for change. We won’t tell you what to do but we will listen to you and help you find a way forward.
What will my counselling session be like?
Your counsellor will welcome you to the building, or to the online session - and once you're comfortable, you can start by telling them what has prompted you to arrange a session. If possible, we suggest that you identify in advance one main issue that you'd like to talk about in the session with your counsellor.
Your counsellor will listen to you, and maybe ask some questions - and working together, the two of you will try to make sense of how you've been feeling. Your counsellor may help you to come up with some practical ways to make a difference to your problem, if appropriate - or you might prefer to just talk and know that someone has really listened. What we want from counselling may vary, so it could be useful to identify this before your session.
How long will my counselling session last?
Each session lasts for 50 minutes and has definite start and end times (these will be in your booking email). If you arrive late, we still have to finish your session at the planned end time. If you arrive more than 20 minutes late, the session may be too short for any real therapeutic work to take place, and so your counsellor might advise you to book a session on another day instead.
What happens after my counselling appointment?
We encourage you to take some time to reflect on the work you and your counsellor have done together in your counselling session. There could be some ideas or techniques for you to put into practice, which might help you to better manage your issue. You may want to take some action regarding your situation (for example, speaking with your personal tutor, or contacting your GP). You might realise you're able to think about things differently, once a little time has passed.
After that, if you decide you want to talk to someone again, please book a follow up appointment.
You can choose to see the same counsellor again, or you might like to book a session with another member of the counselling team. It's important that you felt you connected well with your counsellor - so if that didn't happen, please consider choosing another of our counsellors to speak with if you're planning to return.
How many appointments can I book?
We offer you one appointment at a time, which may be all you need - we encourage you to take a bit of time to think things over after your sessions, and see how you feel. We don't limit the number of sessions you can access, for as long as the sessions are helpful to you. Some students come to see us once, some come once a week, some come once every few months... We aim to be available when you need to talk.
Who are the counsellors?
We are a team of professionally trained and qualified counsellors. Between us, we have a range of different approaches, different training and different specialisms. All of us have a huge amount of experiences of working with a wide variety of clients, bringing all kinds of issues and difficulties. As a service, and as individual practitioners, we abide by the Ethical Framework outlined by the various professional bodies we are registered with (e.g. the British Association for Counselling and Psychotherapy (BACP)).
Multilingual counselling
We can currently provide counselling in the following languages: Cantonese, Doric, English, Hindi, Malay, Mandarin, Manglish, Polish, Scots, Singlish, Spanish and Urdu.
Couples' counselling
We can provide couples' counselling, and see you and your partner together, as long as one of you is a registered student.
Counsellor Gender Preference
At the moment we only have female counsellors in our team, if it is important to you to see a counsellor of another gender, we can help with signposting to other services.
Cancellations
Please give us as much notice as you can if you need to cancel or reschedule your appointment - you can email your counsellor at the email address they'll send you after you've booked a session. We have limited counselling spaces, and we'd ask that you let us know if you can't attend so that we can offer your space to another student.
If your counsellor needs to cancel your session, for example if they are unwell, we will text and email you to let you know as soon as possible before the time of your session.
Confidentiality
The fact that you've seen a counsellor is a private matter, and is kept private within the university;s Student Support Services (which the University Counselling Service is part of). Your attendance at counselling will not show up in your academic records, or your medical records with your GP.
All counsellors are required by their professional body to review their clinical work with an appropriately qualified external supervisor to ensure you are given the best possible help; they may choose to discuss your session with their clinical supervisor.
The content of your session is also private, and will not be shared or discussed outside of the University Counselling Service unless in rare circumstances where we are very worried about your safety or the safety of others. If your counsellor believes you post a significant risk of harm to yourself or others, we will take action to minimise the risk and keep everyone safe.
We will always try to talk with you about this first, but your counsellor may need to inform your GP and/or other professionals if this situation arises, even if you do not give consent for the information about you to be shared in this way.
We are sometimes required by courts of law, the police, or by clients themselves to share information about a client. This may include requests for client notes and files. We would always aim to involve you in any decisions we make and act in accordance with your wishes. Without client consent, we only release information in these circumstances if required to do so by a court of law. This applies even after you have left University.
You can read our privacy notice here.
- Workshops for Students and Staff
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The Counselling Service offers workshops to students and members of staff throughout the year. These are facilitated by experienced qualified counsellors from the University Counselling Service.
ANXIETY
- As a student do you struggle with anxiety regarding your studies, your research, or in general?
- Are you a staff member who experiences general anxiety to do with work or your personal life?
Join us for an informative 90-minute workshop, where you will learn the biology behind anxiety and the tools to help deal with it.
SELF ESTEEM
- Do you struggle to believe in yourself?
- Do you beat yourself up with a negative mindset towards self?
Join us for this interactive workshop as we talk through the negative pitfalls of this way of being and offer tools and strategies of challenging the critical narrative.
PROCRASTINATION
- Do you struggle with procrastination with your studies or in the workplace?
- Do you put things off and find it hard to prioritise the jobs you need to do?
Join us as we offer a step by step approach, which will empower you in helping yourself.
BE READY WORKSHOP
As a new or already existing student do you feel Ready to start or maintain your university journey?
For most people, the new-found level of independence that university brings is a whole new experience. Surprisingly, one of the most challenging parts of university life is mastering the basic real-life skills of day-to-day living to be able to perform well at the academic level.
Would you like a safe confidential space to explore these skills, so that you can prepare yourself for the challenges of this new learning environment?
If you do not feel Ready yet, join us for our 90-minute Be Ready Workshop, which will offer you some practical tools and strategies to enable yourself to be better prepared to pursue your goals!
Please click on the link below to find out about any upcoming workshops.
- In Crisis
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Our appointment-based protocol means we have very limited scope to attend to any Crisis or Emergency.
If you are in Crisis or in an Emergency, please go to the Accident and Emergency Department of your local Hospital OR dial 999 and ask for an Ambulance.
Alternatively, please contact your GP Practice and ask for an Emergency Appointment.
When your GP Practice is closed, please telephone NHS 24 on 111. NHS out-of-hours
University of Aberdeen Student Helpline - available 24 hours a day and offers free-of-charge counselling by arrangement.
Helplines include:
- Samaritans Tel: 116 123 (freephone 24 hours) or Email: jo@samaritans.org (response time: 24 hours)
- SHOUT provides free, 24/7 crisis support across the UK. If you are experiencing a mental health crisis and need support, you can text SHOUT to 85258
- HopeLine UK Tel: 0800 068 4141 or Text: 07786209697 or Email: pat@papyrus-uk.org (10am - 10pm weekdays; 2pm - 10pm weekends; 2pm - 10pm bank holidays)
- Breathing Space Tel: 0800 838587 (freephone Mon - Thurs 6pm - 2am & Fri 6pm - Mon 6am)
- Nightline Instant Messaging only (8pm - Midnight term time)
- Rape Crisis Grampian Tel: 01224 590932 (local number, Mon - Thurs 9am - 5pm)
- Rape Crisis Scotland Tel: 08088 010302 (freephone daily 6pm - midnight)
- About Us
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The Counselling Service Team
All our counsellors are professionally trained, attend external supervision and work to the Ethical Framework of their professional body.
Head of Counselling & Specialist Support: Anna Shea
Administration Coordinator: Nicky Mann
Administration Assistant: Harriet Cropper
Counsellors:
- Ania Perlinski
- Felicity Dutton (term-time ~ MS Teams)
- Gaby Valecillos
- Gidget Wong (term-time ~ Cantonese & Mandarin speaking on MS Teams)
- Jacquie Simpson
- Janie Keddie (term-time)
- Namrata Labroo
- Rhona Gough
- Sha'yo Lai
How much does it cost?
The service is free of charge.
Confidentiality
Everything you talk about with your counsellor stays within the Counselling Service.
The Counselling Service works closely as a team, and share tasks and collaborate with each other to ensure smooth operations. We may consult with each other about your engagement with us so we can offer you the best possible support. This means the confidentiality loop covers the whole counselling team but, importantly, does not extend outside this team, without your consent or unless we have serious concerns about your wellbeing.
Our professional body, the British Association for Counselling & Psychotherapy, requires all counsellors to have regular supervision with a qualified external supervisor. This may mean that the work between you and your counsellor may be discussed, in confidence, between your counsellor and their supervisor.
We do not pass any information to anyone else, including other University Departments, unless we have your permission to do so. This means we will not even confirm or deny your visit to a counsellor, without your consent.
However, rarely, there may be exceptional circumstances when the counsellor, or the Counselling Service, feels it is necessary to act without your permission, although we would seek to explain this with you first, if this was feasible or appropriate. At such times, the importance of preserving client trust and autonomy will be weighed against the importance of reducing the risk to you or to other people.
Privacy Notice
The PDF here explains how the Counselling Service collects and uses personal information.
Who we are
The Counselling Service is part of the University of Aberdeen Student Support Service.
The organisation responsible for your personal information in terms of data protection legislation is the University of Aberdeen.
Information we collect
At first contact
- Your name, Student ID, University email address and your UK-based mobile phone number. This allows us to contact you with, and allows us to keep track of, appointment details.
At your counselling appointments
- Your personal details: your student status, campus location, school, academic level, year of course, nationality, gender, year of birth.
- Information to facilitate the therapeutic work, which may include, reasons you contacted the Counselling Service, presenting issue, relevant personal and family background, past/present coping, relevant medical history, GP details, social support, solution opportunities and therapeutic aim. This information may or may not be recorded, but will allow the Counsellor to frame the counselling appointment and consider action plans and/or referral options.
- Your signed consent for the Counselling Service to handle your personal information. Your signature may be used as verification for any future request for information from the Counselling Service.
- Basic case notes to summarise what you have talked about in your appointment. This will summarise key facts to help the counsellors to remember what you discussed and to record any risk concerns. This does not provide evidence of fact, rather it represents a brief summary of what you talk about and discuss with the counsellor.
- Your attendance records and e-mails or potential telephone communications.
Information we receive from external organisations
- We may receive referral letters, psychological reports, requests for information and concerns about your mental wellbeing from external organisations, including the NHS, Police, Social Services, other statutory services, voluntary sector, and individuals within the community.
Why we collect this information
The Counselling Service collects and uses your personal information to provide and operate a counselling service.
Our legal basis for processing your personal information is that counselling is a task carried out in the public interest by the University. We also process your personal information on the legal basis of your consent, particularly for the information you volunteer and with your permission to share information.
Disclosing your information
The Counselling Service does not routinely share your personal information with any third parties without your consent.
With your consent, we will share your personal information with other support services, such as the University's Student Advice & Support Office, your GP or other healthcare providers. At your request, we will also provide letters that evidence your attendance at counselling.
We may disclose information without your consent in exceptional circumstances, such as where immediate action is required for significant welfare concerns. In those cases, we will share personal information with emergency services and other support services. We will also share your personal information when required to do so by law.
Counsellors are bound by the Ethical Framework for the Counselling Professions from the British Association for Counselling & Psychotherapy (BACP) July 2018.
How long your information is kept
Your personal information is destroyed securely 7 years after your last contact with the Counselling Service, and in accordance with the University retention policy.
Your rights
You have rights to obtain a copy of your personal information, and to ask us to correct inaccurate or incomplete personal information.
Under certain conditions, you also have rights to ask us to restrict the way we use your personal information, to object to the way we use your personal information, to erase your personal information or to provide you with a portable electronic copy of personal information.
If you have any questions about how UCS handles your personal information, or your rights under privacy laws, you can contact us in the following ways:
Head of Service
University Counselling Service
University of Aberdeen
Telephone: 01224 272139
Email: counselling@abdn.ac.uk
Data Protection Officer
University of Aberdeen
Telephone: 01224 272596
Email: dpa@abdn.ac.uk
If you are dissatisfied with the way your personal information has been handled, you have the right to lodge a complaint with the Information Commissioner. The Information Commissioner’s Office can be contacted via their website at www.ico.org.uk/concerns/
BACP Ethical Framework
All members of the University Counselling Service adhere to the Ethical Framework for the Counselling Professions established by the British Association for Counselling and Psychotherapy (BACP).
Feedback
The Counselling Service welcomes feedback.
- Letter of Support Requests from Students
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In some instances we can write a ‘letter of support’ for students who attend our Counselling Service, and who may be experiencing emotional or psychological difficulties where these might be adversely affecting their studies. We can write one letter per semester.
Who should I speak to about my difficulties?
The Counselling Service always encourages you to get in touch with the appropriate Academic personnel as soon as difficulties are impacting on your studies; this may include Personal Tutors, Regents, Course Coordinators, Programme Coordinators, School Administrators. Making contact early allows for more potential flexibility and options regarding how best to resolve the situation.
What can the Counselling Service write in a letter and what is not possible?
We can verify the dates when you attended counselling and, if you are happy to do so, include the main presenting issue that you brought to counselling. But you are under no obligation to verify the nature or purpose of counselling – that is your choice.
We cannot make or confirm any medical diagnosis, which can only come from your GP, Doctor or other medical healthcare professional. As counselling is subjective, and based on what you discuss with your Counsellor, we cannot provide evidence of what you have or have not experienced. We can only refer to what you have told us.
Do I need to see a Counsellor?
We cannot provide a letter of support if you are not known to the Counselling Service. Counselling is rarely appropriate if you are only seeking a ‘letter’. However, students often find counselling can help to explore options and coping resources. The fact that you are seeing a Counsellor does not necessarily mean your circumstances are unusually distressing or extreme.
How long does a letter take to write?
We aim to draft this for you within a week. However, at peak times it may take longer.
How do I receive my letter?
We will email you a draft copy for your approval. Once you have confirmed approval, we will email you a signed PDF copy. You may wish to upload the letter to ‘My Aberdeen’, as appropriate. For security reasons, we only email letters to your University email address.
Who will read the letter?
We email you the signed PDF copy so that you can choose who you want to receive the letter. Once we have sent you the PDF signed copy, the onus for distributing the letter rests with you. The Counselling Service is not responsible for who reads the letter after we have sent it to you or any consequences of so doing.
Can I request a letter more than once?
You can, but we will only write one letter per semester unless your circumstances have changed.
- External Mental Health Support Resources
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If you are looking for some support outwith the university, you will find a selection of external resources on the Your Wellbeing webpage
- Self-Help Guides
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We have produced a number of Self-Help Guides which you can view here.
NHS Grampian also have a selection of self-help leaflets which you can view here.