Vitaliy Havryliuk
Years of experience: 10
Works with: Individuals, Organizations
If you feel overwhelmed by life, struggling with uncertainty, helplessness, or a lack of direction, and are seeking mean…
Find a specialist
Years of experience: 10
Works with: Individuals, Organizations
If you feel overwhelmed by life, struggling with uncertainty, helplessness, or a lack of direction, and are seeking mean…
Years of experience: 10
Works with: Individuals, Couples, Teenagers
Psychological trauma, stress, anxiety, fears, emotional dependence in relationships, age-related personal crises, burnou…
Years of experience: 24
Works with: Individuals, Couples, Families, Teenagers
Individual and group psychotherapy. Working with children: psychological counseling, therapy, and diagnostics for psycho…
Years of experience: 31
Works with: Individuals, Organizations
Neurotic disorders, phobias, panic attacks, anxiety, psychosomatic conditions (including vegetative-vascular dystonia),…
Years of experience: 15
Emotional difficulties, fears and phobias, panic attacks, mental health concerns, depression, life crises, intrusive tho…
Years of experience: 15
Dependent relationships: addressing patterns in relationships with a partner (difficulties finding a partner, challenges…
Supervision is a form of professional support for psychologists, psychotherapists, and counselors, where a more experienced colleague helps analyze complex cases, ethical dilemmas, difficulties in the therapeutic process, and professional burnout. Supervision is an important part of a specialist’s development and maintaining the quality of work with clients.
Supervision is beneficial for both beginners and experienced psychologists, psychotherapists, crisis counselors, coaches, and students of psychological disciplines. It is especially valuable when a specialist experiences professional uncertainty, emotional exhaustion, or feels "stuck" in their work with a particular client.
Supervision sessions can be conducted individually or in a group. The psychologist describes the situation they are struggling with, and the supervisor helps look at the process from a different perspective, identify blind spots, the therapist’s reactions, and possible directions for further work. The format can be .
Yes. During supervision, the psychologist does not disclose the personal data of clients, and the process itself is based on professional ethics and confidentiality. The goal of supervision is not to evaluate the specialist, but to support their professional development and help them better understand the therapeutic process.
Personal therapy focuses on the psychologist’s own inner experiences, emotions, and life experiences. Supervision, on the other hand, primarily concentrates on working with clients, professional skills, boundaries, ethics, and analysis of the therapeutic process.