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Preparing Naturopathy Students for Placement in Mental Health Contexts: A Proactive Tutorial Intervention at Southern Cross University (Practice Report)
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Preparing Naturopathy Students for Placement in Mental Health Contexts: A Proactive Tutorial Intervention at Southern Cross University (Practice Report)

Carrie Thomson-Casey, Isabel Halse, Gareth Vanderhope and Andrea Bugarcic
SSRN, Vol.Series Paper No. 54
Southern Cross University Scholarship of Learning and Teaching Research Paper Series, Elsevier
01/06/2026
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Abstract

naturopathic education mental health trauma-informed care clinical placement scope of practice vicarious trauma self-regulation health professional students
Naturopathic students undertaking clinical practicum placements in community health settings face a distinct preparatory challenge when serving people with chronic and severe mental illness, substance use disorders and associated socioeconomic adversity. Australian research identifies that undergraduate naturopathic education curriculum should include mental health literacy. And yet, international literature confirms that non-psychologist health professionals frequently report insufficient preparation for complex psychosocial presentations, a pattern extending across medicine, pharmacy, and allied health disciplines. This practice report describes a proactive, tutorial-based pedagogical intervention developed at Southern Cross University (SCU) for Master of Naturopathic Medicine students prior to a practicum placement at a community service. The intervention was developed in response to feedback from the initial student cohort who reported feeling overwhelmed and underprepared following their first contact with the clients. A structured tutorial drawing on trauma-informed care (TIC) frameworks, self-regulation principles, vicarious trauma prevention, and scope-of-practice clarification was developed and integrated into subsequent pre-placement preparation curricula. This report describes the initiative, its theoretical grounding, delivery, and reported outcomes, and reflects on its applicability to comparable health professional education contexts.

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