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The consultant, a licensed clinical psychologist for women and girls will provide clinical supervision of high-risk cases mainly under the case management component. The psychologist will conduct face-to-face/remote, one-on-one, for GBV Survivors exposed to high risks, vulnerabilities, and distress. In addition, the consultant will support case workers through coaching sessions via roleplay and using WHO & UNICEF EQUIP to build their competencies in managing complex GBV cases, strengthen survivor‑centered practices, and coping with behavioral problems when/if needed.
Deliverables:
- Conduct one-on-one for women and girls exposed to GBV‑related risks and vulnerabilities.
- Provide structured clinical assessments and clear case formulation: Assess the needs of the survivors on the cognitive, behavioral, and affective levels.
- Develop a consistent and survivor‑centered recovery plan with SMART objectives and active participation of the survivor in relevance to the need assessment with a logical and consistent timeframe that includes estimated dates for case evaluation, closure, and post-support check-up.
- Monitor and evaluate the progress towards recovery of survivors throughout the intervention.
- Maintain irreproachable levels of confidentiality and privacy in line with GBV guiding principles. Complete intake assessments, evaluations, recovery recommendations, reviews, follow-up, and other documentation for each consultation and as necessary in an organized and efficient manner and following a SOAPE structure.
- Submit reports and updates on the cases to the manager of the program, the Senior Case management officer, and the designated case worker after every session or field visit, including feedback, concerns, and recommendations for each survivor.
Timeframe, and Schedule:
Task 1: Delivery of specialized MHPSS consultations per survivor – Echo Project
- Location: North and Akkar
- Target: A maximum of 36 days till the end of June 2026, based on the need.
- with a minimum of 4 consultations per day and ensure that the minimum consultation time is at least 45 minutes.
- Timeframe: Between April 01, 2026 and June 30, 2026
Task 2: Delivery of one report/month on the child’s situation including feedback, concerns, and recommendations for each case
- Target: 1 report by the end of the service
- Timeframe: Reports should be submitted by end of contract
Payment Mode:
- Payments will be issued based on the number of days and sessions conducted during the month having one payment for each month covering the days completed during the respective month.
Key Working Relationships:
Position Reports to: Child Protection Quality and Implementation Manager and coordinates with the Case management officer
Position directly supervises: N/A
Other Internal and/or external contacts: MHPSS Technical Advisor
Requirements:
Education:
The qualified candidate must have a MA in clinical psychology.
A completed clinical training/practicum in a university center consisting of at least 100 hours of training under supervision and 300 hours of applied training.
Having:
§ Lebanese colloquium certificate for clinical psychologists.
§ License to practice the clinical psychology profession from the Ministry of Public Health.
§ N.B: A letter of recommendation from a senior clinical psychologist supervisor (holder of a doctorate and/or a scholar) and membership in one of the registered psychological associations of Lebanon is preferable.
Active registered member of the Lebanese Order of Psychologists.
Work Experience:
§ Minimum of 7 years of professional experience in MHPSS.
§ Skilled and experienced in evidence-based approaches to mental health (e.g., IPT, CBT, TF-CBT, EMDR).
§ Previous experience training MHPSS staff and supervising implementation is strongly preferred.
Experience working with GBV survivors in humanitarian settings.–
Demonstrated Skills and Competencies:
§ Ability to maintain confidentiality, respect, non-discrimination, and safety of beneficiaries always.
§ Ability to ensure safe confidential and survivor- centered services.
§ Excellent communication.
§ Ability to develop a consistent and acceptable improvement plan with clear objectives.
§ Ability to recognize mental health priority conditions as per the mhGAP.
§ Skilled in at least one evidenced-based psychotherapy approach.
§ Using different relaxation and stress management techniques.
§ Ability to develop rapport with the patient.
§ Interviewing skills.
§ Excellent interpersonal and problem-solving skills, creativity, and flexibility.
§ Experience providing clinical supervision or leading training is a plus.
§ Ability to work autonomously, take initiative and responsibly escalate issues.
§ Excellent coaching skills, including the capacity to provide structured feedback.
§ Ability to work in a multidisciplinary team.
§ Demonstrated cultural sensitivity, non-discrimination, and readiness to work with women, and girls from diverse backgrounds, particularly the most marginalized segments of the community.
§ Ability to adhere to ethical considerations and principles regarding work with vulnerable populations.
§ Candidate must be skilled in:
§ Developing person-centered, goal and strength-focused, recovery-oriented care plans.
§ Mental health in complex emergencies (IASC guidelines, Psychological First Aid, mhGAP…).
§ Biopsychosocial model in mental health.
§ Community-based approach in mental health.
§ Human rights-based approach in mental health.
§ Knowledge about the predictable stresses of humanitarian aid workers and the policies and practices needed to mitigate them.
§ Good digital literacy and knowledge of Microsoft Office and internet use.
Language Skills:
§ Ability to fluently communicate, read, and write in Arabic and English.
Working Environment:
The Consultant Clinical Psychologist for women and girls will not have dedicated office space at IRC but will have access to IRC premises for the purpose of meeting with relevant supervisees, when and as needed. The selected candidate must abide by the guidelines on delivering telepsychology interventions annexed to this ToR (Annex 1).
The consultant must be willing to travel to Akkar and North to conduct home visits, as 90 % of the consultations shall be in-person, and online clinical intervention shall be conducted due to emergency situations (roadblocks, pandemic… )
Annex 1
Guidelines on Delivering Telepsychology
Ethical Considerations
Humanitarian actors must abide by humanitarian principles and report any possible exploitation, abuse or degrading treatment, discrimination, harm, involuntary admission to institutions, forced medication, transgression of rights, and disregard to content being committed by family, community members, and other professionals.
Logistics Considerations
Each member of the MH staff (clinical psychologist, counselor…) must have a smartphone with a SIM card dedicated to the delivery of remote MH interventions. The smartphone and the application for telecommunication used (WhatsApp…) must be protected with strong passwords.
MH Intervention
1. The smartphone must be operational and connected to the internet network during working hours. After working hours, the smartphone can be turned off.
2. The MH staff will be contacting clients to ask about their preferences for receiving MH services, either in-person or remotely.
If remote intervention is the only option, then they will be asked if they agree to receive it.
3. If remote intervention was chosen, the MH staff needs to conduct an initial assessment to determine the suitability of this intervention.
Clients will be asked about their ability to use telecommunication technologies (mobiles, WhatsApp…) and their preference, the module that they prefer (Video call, voice call, voice messages, messages…), and if their living environment allows a basic level of privacy and secrecy (risks of distraction, privacy and secrecy breaches…).
The MH staff will also assess the clients’ characteristics (linguistic, cognitive, mental, physical, or sensory skills or impairments, age…). The process must be documented.
4. Then, the clients will be prioritized based on their MH status, risk of complications, and urgent need to receive MH intervention. The appointments will be organized based on priority.
5. For the first remote session:
· The informed consent is re-explained to the client mentioning the special considerations for this modality (role of the client in providing a private space away from distractions, risks and benefits, privacy of the data, disposing of data…).
· The boundaries for the intervention are set (working hours, when to reach the MH staff).
· Emergency planning including emergency contacts is discussed. The process must be documented.
· The MH staff develops agreements with clients to assume some role in protecting the data and information they receive from the MH staff (e.g., by not forwarding texts from the counselor to others).
6. During the remote intervention, the same ethical and professional principles applicable during the in-person intervention are upheld.
7. The MH staff must do its best not to compromise the professional relationship, ensure appropriate conduct, and respect professional boundaries. For example, the MH staff is prohibited from searching online for clients, connecting and interacting with them outside the professional frame, or checking their updates (WhatsApp status).
8. Telecommunication applications can be used to augment the in-person or remote intervention. The MH staff can share IEC materials, links, exercises, and toolkits… that respond to the clients’ needs and can be of benefit.
9. At the end of each remote session, the conversation is disposed of (deleted) after the MH staff takes notes of the session. Important documents shared via telecommunication such as images, reports, scans… must be exported and stored in the client’s file.
The MH staff has the duty to explain to the client the need to dispose of the conversation (possible privacy and secrecy breaches), yet it is up to the client her/himself to decide whether to dispose of it or not.
10. The MH staff monitors and regularly assesses the progress of the clients to determine if the remote intervention is still appropriate and beneficial.
If the remote intervention is no longer beneficial or presents a risk to the client’s emotional or physical well-being, the MH staff needs to discuss these concerns with the client, appropriately terminate their remote services with adequate notice, and refer or offer any needed alternative services to the client. The process must be documented.
11. If a client recurrently experiences crises/emergencies, which suggests that in-person intervention may be appropriate, MH staff must begin providing in-person intervention. The process must be documented.
12. The MH staff coordinates closely with the other staff members to ensure a comprehensive and holistic intervention that responds to the clients’ personalized needs (referral and IEC purposes).
13. If psychometric testing is needed:
· The MH staff needs to ensure that the integrity of the psychometric properties of the test and the conditions of administration are preserved.
· The MH staff needs to make appropriate arrangements to address the specific issues that may arise with diverse populations.
· The MH staff needs to specify that it was administered remotely.
14. Every step of the process must be documented.
15. For children who are not able to participate in the interview, the session will be with the main caregivers focusing on advice and exercises. For children who can participate in the interview and depending on the situation, a part of the session can be dedicated to the main caregivers to share recommendations and exercises.
16. Follow-up with IRC’s MHPSS technical focal point periodically.
PROFESSIONAL STANDARDS
All International Rescue Committee workers must adhere to the core values and principles outlined in IRC Way - Standards for Professional Conduct. Our Standards are Integrity, Service, Equality and Accountability. In accordance with these values, the IRC operates and enforces policies on Safeguarding, Conflicts of Interest, Fiscal Integrity, and Reporting Wrongdoing and Protection from Retaliation. IRC is committed to take all necessary preventive measures and create an environment where people feel safe, and to take all necessary actions and corrective measures when harm occurs. IRC builds teams of professionals who promote critical reflection, power sharing, debate, and objectivity to deliver the best possible services to our clients.
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