PsySSA Membership for 2020 is now open – Renew your membership now!

PsySSA Membership for 2020 is now open – Renew your membership now!

PsySSA is taking a leap this leap year by providing you with some incredible new membership benefits!
 

Over and above PsySSA’s comprehensive list of membership benefits, in 2020, PsySSA members will receive free access to the Mental Health Matters Magazine which is a distinctive high quality Journal for health care professionals; free access to PsySSA’s online MyCPD platform with new opportunities to obtain CEU points and free listing and regular referrals through the recently renovated PsySSA Directory of Psychology Professionals. If that’s not enough, PsySSA members will be eligible for attractive discounts for PsySSA’s highly anticipated 26th Annual Psychology Congress.

PsySSA is, indeed, “us” – “we” are PsySSA and we welcome your engagement!
* Please Note: Renewal rates only apply to members who held active memberships in 2019. All other applicants are required to re-register.

Why Join PsySSA?

PsySSA written response on the National Health Insurance (NHI) Bill

PsySSA written response on the National Health Insurance (NHI) Bill

Thank you for the opportunity for members of the Psychological Society of South Africa (PSYSSA) to comment on the NHI Bill.  These comments follow on from our previous submission to the NHI White Paper, dated 25th May 2016.  The process of gathering comments from our members for this submission began at our recent annual PsySSA Congress, held in Johannesburg from 3-6 September 2019, during a roundtable debate on the implications of NHI for mental health care. An ad hoc committee led the subsequent process of gathering comments from all of PsySSA’s structures in order to compile our current position statement and comments on the Bill. Read more…

Download a copy of PsySSA’s response to the NHI Bill

Psychologists from around the world pledge to apply their science to help stem climate change

Psychologists from around the world pledge to apply their science to help stem climate change

LISBON, Portugal – Prof Saths Cooper was among the leaders of psychological associations from more than 40 nations on five continents who met here and pledged to apply psychological science to combating global climate change.

“It was a great honor and responsibility to be invited to participate in this historic summit,” said Cooper. “As the science of behavior, psychology has much to say about what people can do to help prevent and mitigate the impacts of climate change and how to develop strategies to cope. We pledged to encourage leaders in government, academia, health and business to use more psychological science in designing policies to promote sustainable preventive and corrective behaviors.”

Participants at the first International Summit on Psychology’s Contributions to Global Health issued a proclamation on collaboration, committing the 43 signatories to use their professional, scientific, educational, cultural and applied resources “to achieve progress on matters of utmost importance for which psychology offers the greatest contribution.” Their initial efforts will focus on the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goal 13: Take action to combat climate change and its impacts.

They also signed a referendum citing the “overwhelming agreement among climate scientists that climate change poses a serious global threat, is occurring faster than previously anticipated and is contributed to by human behavior.”

Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa, president of Portugal, addressed the summit, praising the psychologists for taking on the challenge of global climate change.

“You chose the right subject because it’s a global subject,” he said. “We must have a global response to it. There is not a single country, not even a superpower, that can address alone this issue.”

During the meeting, from Nov. 14-16, participants developed plans for advocacy, media campaigns and research to meet the goals laid out in the proclamation and resolution. They agreed to continue to work together to put these plans into action in their respective countries.

Among the countries represented from 5 continents at the summit were Australia, Brazil, Sweden, Cuba, Jordan, Mexico, Nigeria, South Korea, Nepal, and Uganda. The summit was co-presented by the American Psychological Association and the Order of Portuguese Psychologists.

For more information on the summit, visit https://www.psychologyandglobalhealth.org/

PsySSA Student Division Mentorship Programme Awards Ceremony, 14 November 2019

PsySSA Student Division Mentorship Programme Awards Ceremony, 14 November 2019

The PsySSA Student Division hosted its third annual Mentorship Programme Awards Ceremony at the PsySSA Offices tonight, 14 November 2019.

The Mentorship Programme was established in 2017 by current Chairperson, Mr Muhammed Yaeesh Cassim. It has been accredited by SAQA at an NQF level 5.

The Mentorship Programme aims to provide students with an opportunity to enhance their academic writing skills whilst exposing students to various domains within the field of psychology. The programme seeks to encourage a holistic understanding of psychological perspectives, with particular emphasis on the African narrative. It is currently the only nationally run Mentorship Programme, being hosted in Gauteng, Kwa-Zulu Natal and the Western Cape. To date, the programme hosts over fifty students. Furthermore, the mentorship team is proud to announce that in 2020, the programme will extend its reach to the Free State and Limpopo.

Congratulations to the mentees for successfully completing our Mentorship Programme. The following Provincial Awards were achieved by Gauteng:

  • Academic Growth Achievement – Sharni Mpho Ngakane
  • Personal Growth Award – Nikita America Dalpate Ambaramo

The Mentorship Programme is entirely voluntary, and we appreciate every hour the participants have dedicated. Gauteng won two national awards:

  • Highest Academic Achievement – Marguerite Bergman
  • Mentorship Executive Award – Vanessa Stratford

 

Special Thanks to:

PsySSA President, Professor Garth Stevens, for attending the awards and for his address on ‘Experiences of Mentoring’.

PsySSA Executive Director, Ms Fatima Seedat, for attending the awards and presenting the provincial awards

2018 Mentee of the Year, Ms Matshepo Setlaleleng, for her address.

Gallery