Aurora is a Chartered Clinical Psychologist whose work is collaborative and transparent. Her therapeutic style is warm and welcoming.
Book a sessionAurora works at South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust and in private practice. She has worked in the NHS across various specialist services with a range of psychological difficulties; she has carried out research and delivered teaching, and she has undertaken further specialist training, including Perinatal Clinical Psychology Training. Aurora works work with a wide range of difficulties: stress, anxiety (including Obsessive Compulsive Disorder), trauma and historical experience of abuse, mood issues and depression, low self-esteem and low self-confidence, bereavement and grief, emotional dysregulation and personality problems, antenatal and postnatal struggles, identity issues, adjustment and life transitions (including difficulties adjusting/transitioning to parenthood), communication difficulties in relationships, chronic illness, parenting struggles, family issues, couple conflict, neurodevelopmental conditions (including ADHD and Autism) and neurodiversity. Aurora offers interventions informed by different therapeutic models and is completing specialist training to become accredited with the British Association for Behavioural and Cognitive Psychotherapies (BABCP). Aurora’s stance is to integrate principles from different therapeutic models recommended by the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) Guidelines. These include Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT), third-wave CBT approaches, and Psychodynamic and Systemic models. She is an Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR) trained Therapist. She is an Accredited Positive Parenting Programme (Triple P) Provider ~ Special Interests ~ Aurora's clinical specialities are Perinatal and severe psychological presentations - her PhD focused on Psychosis and her Clinical Doctorate on Mania. She is particularly interested in working with clients in the perinatal period, both antenatally and postnatally, the parent-infant interaction, and perinatally-related losses.