Presentation of CPLOL
by Dietlinde Schrey-Dern,
President of CPLOL 1999-2005
Edited 2003
Introduction
CPLOL was
founded 15 years ago by 9 professional organisations representing speech and
language therapists in different European countries. The delegates of these
professional organisations of the European Community met in Paris on the
suggestion of Jacques Roustit, President of FNO (Fédération
Nationale des Orthophonistes),
France, in order to discuss a new proposal to encourage collaboration at an
European level. In a very short time the Standing Liaison Committee of
Speech and Language Therapists, today known by its french initials CPLOL
(Comité Permanent de Liaison des Orthophonistes/Logopèdes) was formed.
Members of CPLOL
The
constitutional charter was signed the 6 march 1988 in Paris by
representatives of the following countries: Belgium, Denmark, France,
Germany, Greece, Italy, Luxembourg, Spain and the United Kingdom. The
representatives of the nine founder countries were quickly joined by others
so that in March 1989 already 15 organisations representing the 12 member
states of the European Community at that time, had become members of CPLOL.
With the enlargement of the E.U. in January 1995 CPLOL welcomed the
professional associations from Austria, Finland and Sweden who were observer
members prior to this.
Currently all
countries of the E.U. are represented in CPLOL. Beside the full members
there are also professional associations as observer members: Cyprus,
Estonia, Norway and Switzerland. At the moment many associations of the
eastern European countries are interested to join CPLOL. Lithuania, Poland
and the Czech Republic have already applied for membership; Malta and
Slovenia have been informed of the conditions for membership by the E.C.
Aims and objectives
Having a look
at the main objectives fixed in the Constitutional Charter of March 1988,
one gets an idea about the mutual respect and the spirit of cooperation and
European solidarity. The founder members of CPLOL were convinced that the
creation of a European umbrella organisation of Speech and Language
Therapists would facilitate to influence the development of the profession
on the European level. The initiative of the E.U. to harmonize
professional statutes and to promote the free movement of professionals in
Europe has been welcomed, at the same time the representatives thought
that it would be important to influence the drawing up of the General
EU-directives regulating the free movement of professionals and the
recognition of professional qualifications. In this context the evolution
of training and professional practice in the member states is also very
important as well as the promotion of collaboration of professionals
in the European Community.
Freedom of
movement, the co-ordination of conditions for practice, the equivalence of
qualifications and the harmonisation of legislation,
these objectives demand specific engagement by the CPLOL member
organisations as well as the Executive Committee of CPLOL on the European
level. CPLOL has to study regulations and decisions made by the European
authorities affecting Speech and Language therapy and to provide expert
advice in Speech and Language Therapy to any political, parliamentary or
administrative authority.
The
Organisation of scientific congresses promotes directly the exchange of
scientific knowledge. The publication of a scientific and professional
journal of CPLOL belongs to one of the first dreams of the founder members
of CPLOL and has not yet been realized. The harmonisation of standards and
quality of initial training and continuing education is one of the bases to
describe the conditions for the recognition of professional qualifications.
The objectives determine the fields of competence where CPLOL has to stress
its activities: Research and documentation, scientific congresses,
professional practice, education and prevention.
Core documents
In the
beginning of CPLOL the very first step has been to establish CPLOL among the
member associations and that meant to work out basic documents to have a
common point of reference.
Since 1988
many core documents have been developed by the CPLOL-member organisations,
respectively by their representatives.
Already in
April 1989 the first version of the CPLOL-statutes was adopted by the
G.A. Until today this first version has been changed 8 times. This reflects
the ongoing discussion of the CPLOL-delegates and shows the interest to
adapt the statutes to the needs of an organisation that has changed a lot
from its beginnings. In this context belongs also the drawing up of the
internal regulations describing the different tasks of the delegates,
the members of the E.C., the elections procedure and financial regulations.
Due to the
engagement of Athena Frangouli, treasurer of CPLOL at that time, the Code
of Ethics had been realized in a very short time: from 1992 to 1993; the
code describes personal responsibility, professional conduct, responsibility
towards clients, colleagues and the community, confidentiality and also
ethical guidelines for research.
The first
basic document, CPLOL has started to work on, has been the Professional
Profile. In October 1990 the definition of a speech and language
therapist and its role and function has been adopted at the G.A. in London.
The G.A. of Cologne in 1994 added the description of the kind of disorders;
the chapter on competences and attitudes of an SLT was adopted by the G.A.
in Lisbonne in 1997. The change of the professional profile during these
years is due to the fact that in the Commission Professional Practice and in
the Commission Education surveys had been carried out upon the Speech and
language Therapy and initial Training in the E.U. The results of these
surveys worked out on the basis of questionnaires helped the delegates to
define the kind of disorders and the description of the competences and
attitudes of a SLT in practice.
The
guidelines for Minimal standards of initial training, adopted in Naples
1998, have been worked out on the basis of the European wide survey on
initial training and on the basis of the IALP guidelines that have been
published in 1995.
The
engagement for Prevention started in CPLOL in 1994 and is a symbol
for a more public-orientated activity of the organisation. The first
European day of Speech and Language Therapy in November 1996 has been a
great succes. The Prevention report, published in 1999, represents a first
survey upon the state of practice in the area of prevention in Europe. The
guidelines for Prevention, started in 2000 and carried out on the
basis of the WHO-definition, had been adopted in Helsinki in 2001.
Scientific
congresses
Since 1992
five scientific congresses have been organised in different European
countries: Athens (1992), Antwerp (1994); Lisbonne (1997); Paris (2000),
Edinburgh (2003). Today the organisation of CPLOL congresses is quite
professional. A scientific committee, 6 experts from different European
countries, work out the call for Papers, make a selection of interventions
on the basis of specific criteria and work out the program in cooperation
with the E.C. of CPLOL. Specific congress rules are regulating the
responsibility of CPLOL and the member association hosting the congress.
This development is due to the fact that the scientific committee evaluates
the carrying out of the congress with the aim to facilitate the organisation
for the next host associations and to improve the quality of the program.
Functionning of
CPLOL
With the
enlargement of the E.U. in the following years, CPLOL will also increase its
membership. We have to be prepared to the fact that there will be up to 25
countries represented in CPLOL. The functioning of CPLOL, i.e. the
organisation of General Assemblies, commissions and working group meetings,
will therefore have to meet this challenge through changes in order to
enable us to further development built on our work and that of our
predecessors. Therefore the financing of CPLOL has to change in the future.
CPLOL needs to get regularly European funding for the organisation of the
scientific congresses and for the realisation of European projects. The
prevention projects already represent a first step in this direction.
Perspectives
Today the
most important aspect of the engagement of CPLOL is to establish CPLOL as
the professional umbrella organisation of speech and language therapists in
the European Community. That means that the European Parliament and the
Commission in Brussels recognize CPLOL as the acknowledged professional
expert in all matters relating to our profession, and whose advice is sought
and respected.
To reach this
aim CPLOL has to continue with already ongoing activities and to further
develop specific activities that could help to establish the organisation in
the European community as a respected and valued consultation body.
Due to the
fact that the E.U. will have a constitution in the near future that will
influence the political, social conditions in every member state, the role
of CPLOL will also change. Having a look at the draft for the General
directive for recognition of professional qualifications in the E.U., the
European authorities have expressed their intention to involve the
professional bodies more directly in the recognition procedure than that has
happened before. The draft of the committee on legal affairs and internal
market of February 2003 says that „bodies representative of professional
associations should be allowed to establish common platforms“ … „with the
legal character of implementing provisions for the current directive“.
The central
condition to be recognized as a professional platform by the E.U. is that
CPLOL is officially recognized as Non-governmental organisation (NGO) by the
E.U. The application of CPLOL has already been examined by the Secretariat
General, NGOs Unit which had stated that CPLOL „could make a contribution to
the Council of Europe's activities for the rehabilitation and integration of
people with disabilities“.
The recognition
as NGO depends on the co-operation of CPLOL with the Council of Europe.
Therefore CPLOL started to intensify the contacts with European authorities
and organisations of health care professionals and disabled people like the
European disability Forum. The EDF is the European umbrella organisation of
disabled people.
Since 2002
CPLOL has intensified the contact with EDF the way that every information of
EDF which could be relevant for CPLOL-member associations is forwarded by
the President and General Secretary to motivate the member associations to
engage themselves in the EYPD 2003, so that the function of CPLOL as a tool
for information has been extended, too. The Newsletter of the European
Council of liberal profession, CEPLIS, is important for the actual
discussion about the General directive and informations concerning health
care. The actual activities of the members of the E.C. stress on the
political perspective as described.
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