BHA: 'Gay cure' therapist loses appeal against the British Association of Counselling and Psychotherapy

Wednesday, 23 May 2012 8:05 AM

Lesley Pilkington, a psychotherapist who was found guilty of ‘professional malpractice’ for using the techniques of ‘conversion therapy’ (a bogus form of treatment which is supposed to make gay people become straight) has lost her appeal against the British Association for Counselling and Psychotherapy (BACP).

Mrs Pilkington was found guilty of malpractice last year after trying to convert a gay client to heterosexuality, with the BACP describing her practice as ‘negligent’, ‘dogmatic’ and ‘unprofessional’. The British Humanist Association (BHA) welcomes the BACP’s decision.

The complaint against Mrs Pilkington which started this case was made by the award-winning journalist Patrick Strudwick, who was investigating therapists who claim to be able to ‘treat’ homosexuality. Mr Strudwick, who is gay, received two counselling sessions from Mrs Pilkington in 2009, in which she used the techniques of ‘conversion therapy’ (also known as ‘reparative therapy’) in an attempt to make him become heterosexual. The treatment, which also involved praying to God to make Mr. Strudwick straight, failed. As well as attempting to ‘cure’ Mr Strudsick’s homosexuality, Mrs Pilkington also suggested that he had been sexually abused as a child.

The BACP said that ‘the appeal panel is unanimous that Mrs. Pilkington failed to exercise reasonable care and skill and was thus negligent.’ The panel also said it was ‘entirely wrong’ for Mrs Pilkington to suggest that Mr Strudwick had been sexually abused as a child, and that this ‘falls below the standard to be expected of a reasonably competent practitioner.’ The BACP have suspended Mrs Pilkington’s accreditation, and have ordered her to submit a report between 4 and 12 months from now, in which she will have to demonstrate that she has changed her practice to meet the BACP’s requirements. Mr Strudwick said that ‘I am delighted that the BACP has upheld their original decision. Mrs Pilkington’s therapeutic practices have been held up to scrutiny and found to be fundamentally flawed.’ He also said that ‘this case sets a vital precedent. I urge anyone involved in this harmful practice to take note of this case and desist. Love needs no cure.’

Pavan Dhaliwal, the BHA Head of Public Affairs, commented, ‘treatments which attempt to “cure” homosexuality are morally objectionable because they carry the implication that homosexuality is a disease. They also lack any foundation in scientific fact, having been condemned by the UK Council for Psychotherapy, the British Medical Association and the Royal College of Psychiatrists, as well as in the recent judgement by the BACP. These so-called treatments can also be extremely harmful, especially when they are applied to vulnerable individuals.’

Therapies which claim to be able to ‘cure’ homosexuality now lie completely discredited. In addition to the case of Mrs Pilkington in the UK, there is also the case of Dr Robert Spitzer in the US. Dr Spitzer, a highly influential figure in modern psychiatry, claimed in a study in 2001 that homosexuality could be cured, but he has recently retracted his views, admitting that his study was ‘fatally flawed’. The BHA now calls on all who have supported anti-gay ‘conversion therapies’, such as the former Archbishop of Canterbury Lord Carey, the former Bishop of Rochester Rt Rev Michael Nazir-Ali, and the lobby group Christian Concern (all of whom supported Lesley Pilkington) to retract their views.

 

Notes

For further comment or information contact Pavan Dhaliwal, Head of Public Affairs at pavan@humanism.org.uk or on 0773 843 5059.

The BHA’s previous article on Mrs Pilkington’s case:
http://www.humanism.org.uk/news/view/729

The website of the British Association for Counselling and Psychotherapy:
http://www.bacp.co.uk/

Patrick Strudwick’s original article in the Independent:
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/this-britain/the-exgay-files-the-bizarre-world-of-gaytostraight-conversion-1884947.html

Patrick Strudwick’s follow-up article in the Guardian, written after Lesley Pilkington was found guilty of professional malpractice:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/may/27/gay-conversion-therapy-patrick-strudwick

In a recent article about Boris Johnson’s decision to prevent a homophobic advert from appearing on London’s buses, the UK Council for Psychotherapy condemns ‘reparative therapy’:
http://www.psychotherapy.org.uk/article1567.html

Doctors at the British Medical Association declare that gay conversion therapies are harmful:
http://www.pinknews.co.uk/2010/07/02/doctors-declare-gay-cure-therapies-harmful/

The Royal College of Psychiatrists’ statement on sexual orientation:
http://www.rcpsych.ac.uk/pdf/RCPsychposstatementsexorientation.pdf

An article in the Guardian about Dr Robert Spitzer’s retraction of his previous claim that ‘reparative therapy’ can ‘cure’ homosexuality:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2012/may/19/psychiatrist-admits-gay-cure-study-flawed

A group of clerics, including the former Archbishop of Canterbury and the former Bishop of Rochester, write to the BACP in support of Mrs Pilkington:
http://www.pinknews.co.uk/2012/01/30/ex-archbishop-of-canterbury-backs-gay-cure-therapist/

Christian Concern’s articles on Mrs Pilkington:
http://www.christianconcern.com/cases/lesley-pilkington

The British Humanist Association is the national charity working on behalf of non-religious people who seek to live ethical and fulfilling lives on the basis of reason and humanity. It promotes a secular state and equal treatment in law and policy of everyone, regardless of religion or belief.

Disclaimer: Press releases published on this page are from key opinion formers who promote their organisation's activities by subscribing to a campaign site within politics.co.uk. politics.co.uk does not endorse, edit, or attempt to balance the opinions expressed on this page. The content of press releases are wholly the responsibility of the originating company or organisation.

Related stories

Comment: Gay marriage opponents should not be tolerated

Ian Dunt: 'Traditionalists are not being persecuted. They are protesting their inability to persecute others.'

Opponents of gay marriage claim they should be free to discriminate. Nothing could be further from the truth.

comments comments

Pickles demands return of Christian Britain

Pickles: "This is the politics of division."

Eric Pickles has become the latest minister to demand a return of Christianity in Britain's public life, as he outlined a new community cohesion strategy today.

comments comments

Comment: The case for independent abortion counselling

Philippa Taylor is head of public policy at the Christian Medical Fellowship.

Too often vulnerable women are left on a conveyor belt toward abortion.

comments comments

Gays have more rights than Christians, report finds

Religion: More sinned against than sinning?

Gay people have more rights than religious believers due to equality legislation, a parliamentary group found today.

comments comments

Comment: Ban those trying to 'cure' gay teens

Richard Heller is an author and journalist and a former adviser to Denis Healey.

Any attempt to change the sexual orientation of a child is futile and cruel and abusive – an outright ban is needed.

comments comments

Tatchell and Welby sit down for Britain's weirdest dinner party

Welby: 'You see gay relationships that are just stunning in the quality of the relationship.'

The new Archbishop of Canterbury plans to sit down for a face-to-face meeting with gay activist Peter Tatchell in what could mark a distinct break with the Anglican Church's past approach to the issue.

comments comments

Brown firm on assisted suicide

Gordon Brown remains firm on assisted suicide

The government has no intention of legalising assisted suicide, Gordon Brown has made clear.

Cardinal threatens pro-abortion politicians

Cardinal O'Brien threatened pro-abortion politicians

Cardinal Keith O'Brien has urged Catholics to withhold their vote from pro-abortion politicians, calling the practice an "unspeakable crime".

Doctors vote down Christian demands

The motion to allow faith sharing was defeated

Doctors have voted down a Christian motion which would have allowed them to "share their faith" with patients.

Abortion row moves to Westminster

MPs vote on abortion counselling

MPs will vote whether to restrict abortion access this week, as another senior religious official says MPs who support abortion rights cannot fully participate in the Catholic Church.

Press Releases

BHA hits out at 'scaremongering' over humanist marriages

BHA: Parliament to vote on giving legal recognition to humanist marriage today

BHA: New 2011 English and Welsh Census figures on religion released

GALHA and BHA support International Day against Homophobia and Transphobia

Government opposes cross-party move to give legal recognition to humanist marriages

Strong case for assisted dying made in final day of Nicklinson/Lamb Court of Appeal case

Spelling, Punctuation and Grammar (SPAG) Test

2013 Shelley Lecture - Is Literature Good for Us?

One Life presented by the BHA choir

Blackham Lecture 2013: How do we raise moral children? Stephen Law presents...

More Articles ...

Twitter

Join the conversation at #opinion_formers

Related Opinion Former Press Releases

BHA: Hearings begin in ‘Christian persecution’ cases at European Court of Human Rights

Today the European Court of Human Rights will begin chamber hearings in the the cases of four practicing Christians’, who complain that domestic law failed to adequately protect their right to manifest their religion.

BHA: New Catholic School won't discriminate on faith but "gays not encouraged"

The first ever Catholic state school in England or Wales which cannot select up to 100% of its pupils on the basis of their faith, if oversubscribed, has opened today. St Michael’s Catholic Secondary School in Camborne is a Free School, and therefore is not allowed to select more than 50% of its intake with reference to faith. However, this positive development has been blighted. Read more here.

BHA: Prayer cannot cure HIV: churches’ deadly “miracle cures” must be stopped

Pastors prescribing prayer to “cure” people with HIV have been criticised as ‘irresponsible’ by a former Health Minister and the British Humanist Association (BHA) today has said more needs to be done to protect people from dangerous and false claims by evangelical churches which encourage people with HIV/AIDS to stop taking their medication.

Special event coverage

ESRC logo

Festival of Social Sciences: Celebrating the Social Sciences

Evidence-based policy should not be a radical concept. It needs to be celebrated.

ESRC logo

Festival of Social Sciences: 2 languages: 2 brains, 2 minds, 2 cultures?

As part of the ESRC Festival of Social Sciences, the Deafness Cognition And Language Research Centre (DCAL) hosted an event exploring the powerful benefits of bilingualism in spoken and sign languages, for hearing and deaf people alike - benefits that reach hearing and deaf people alike.

Opinion Former Events

BSIA: Information Destruction Exhibition & Conference 2013

Following the great success of the BSIA's Information Destruction Conference and Exhibition in May 2012, we are pleased to annouce that the event is returning again in June 2013. This one-day conference and exhibition is aimed at key decision makers in organisations that carry out the secure destruction of confidential material.