New Utah Law Seeks to Crack Down on Life Coaches Offering Therapy Without a License
by Jessica Schreifels, The Salt Lake Tribune
This article was produced for ProPublica’s Local Reporting Network in partnership with The Salt Lake Tribune. Sign up for Dispatches to get stories like this one as soon as they are published.
Utah legislators this session took aim at life coaches who harm their clients’ mental health, but the law that the governor signed Wednesday stops short of prescribing minimum standards or ethical guidelines for the burgeoning profession.
Anyone can call themselves a life coach, which, unlike being a mental health therapist, does not require any kind of education, training or license.
In Utah, one state agency found that dozens of life coaches are advertising their ability to treat mental health issues even though the vast majority are not trained or permitted to work as therapists. State licensors say they field an average of one complaint each month about life coaches.
The new law strengthens existing regulations that forbid anyone who isn’t a licensed therapist from treating mental health conditions. By clearly defining what only therapists are allowed to do, licensors can more readily cite and fine life coaches who treat mental health, according to state Sen. Mike McKell, the bill’s sponsor.
But the new law does not designate any money to immediately hire more investigators to probe potential problems.
An investigation last year by The Salt Lake Tribune and ProPublica showed that about a third of the 43 Utah therapists whose licenses had been revoked or denied since 2010, or who allowed their suspended licenses to expire, appear to have continued to work in the mental health field. Some rebranded as “life coaches.”
McKell said the new law targets life coaches who had lost their therapist licenses because the state deemed them unsafe to work with patients.
Utahns have struggled to get mental health help, largely due to a shortage of available therapists, according to a recent report from the Utah Behavioral Health Coalition.
In that gap, life coaching has emerged as an unregulated alternative, according to the Utah Office of Professional Licensure........
