Johanna Hazan
Therapist, Coach and Dietary Counsellor
About Johanna
Johanna Hazan began her career working as an educator, youth worker and workshop leader. She worked in the third sector spending a number of years with Westminster Council (London, UK) Youth and Family Services, as well as some time in the commercial sector at the London Science Museum. Alongside this, Johanna also worked independently developing and running her own series of workshops, classes and courses which were commissioned by local government departments, charities and also private clients. These ranged from creative workshops for children aged 6-16 years, encouraging the exploration of themes such as identity and culture, to semester-long courses for service users on a methadone project, exploring ideas around renewal, 'starting again', self esteem building and transformation.
In 2010 Johanna was hired to be part of the founding team of a not-for-profit social enterprise start-up that integrated life coaching into a model of rehabilitation for young offenders. Whilst in this role Johanna was privileged to receive sponsorship to take a coaching course, where she learned not only the core skills of Life Coaching as a therapeutic practice, but also studied the benefits of Organisational Coaching and the Coach-Manager model.
After an extremely successful launch, Johanna moved on to take up a new position at a long-established charity who support minority students in the United Kingdom and Ireland. Whilst there Johanna was responsible for internal and external communications and helped to train staff and facilitate information exchange and conflict resolution. She also mentored a number of students ad managed a small team of staff and volunteers, making use of the organisational coaching skills she had previously acquired.
Outside of working hours Johanna volunteered as a coach and mentor for young women with emotional and behavioural issues, often working with people suffering from addictions, eating disorders, depression, low self-esteem and self-harm.
Before moving to Israel in 2015, Johanna had the privilege of working as Head of Pastoral Care for Gateways, an inspiring organisation that offers alternative educational opportunities to young people excluded from, or at risk of becoming excluded from mainstream education. Johanna coached a number of the students as well as teaching staff. She was also responsible for liaising with social workers and educational institutions, managing referrals and maintaining case management.
Inspired to broaden her therapeutic skills and to develop her methods for working with clients, Johanna studied Narrative Therapy at the Jerusalem Narrative Therapy Institute (and is very enthusiastic about this extremely effective model of psychotherapy) and Nutrition and Lifestyle Coaching at the Institute of Health Sciences, UK and Ireland. She now primarily uses these two discourses when working with clients in private practice, though also draws upon techniques from coaching, especially transformative behavioural methods such as NLP and the utilisation of goal setting and action steps. Johanna is also familiar with and supportive of the 12 step approach to addictions treatment and will happily support clients who choose this model of recovery, through their course of treatment.
Johanna now works predominantly in private practice, specialising in addictions, eating disorders (including nutritional counselling where scientifically back meal planning is a part of treatment), adolescents, processing identify issues, developing self esteem, feelings of being 'other' and issues around becoming religious or departing from religion. Johanna also works with the AZ House, a 12 step-based addictions treatment facility based in Jerusalem and Midrashet Rachel, a women's Jewish educational institute also in Jerusalem.
In 2010 Johanna was hired to be part of the founding team of a not-for-profit social enterprise start-up that integrated life coaching into a model of rehabilitation for young offenders. Whilst in this role Johanna was privileged to receive sponsorship to take a coaching course, where she learned not only the core skills of Life Coaching as a therapeutic practice, but also studied the benefits of Organisational Coaching and the Coach-Manager model.
After an extremely successful launch, Johanna moved on to take up a new position at a long-established charity who support minority students in the United Kingdom and Ireland. Whilst there Johanna was responsible for internal and external communications and helped to train staff and facilitate information exchange and conflict resolution. She also mentored a number of students ad managed a small team of staff and volunteers, making use of the organisational coaching skills she had previously acquired.
Outside of working hours Johanna volunteered as a coach and mentor for young women with emotional and behavioural issues, often working with people suffering from addictions, eating disorders, depression, low self-esteem and self-harm.
Before moving to Israel in 2015, Johanna had the privilege of working as Head of Pastoral Care for Gateways, an inspiring organisation that offers alternative educational opportunities to young people excluded from, or at risk of becoming excluded from mainstream education. Johanna coached a number of the students as well as teaching staff. She was also responsible for liaising with social workers and educational institutions, managing referrals and maintaining case management.
Inspired to broaden her therapeutic skills and to develop her methods for working with clients, Johanna studied Narrative Therapy at the Jerusalem Narrative Therapy Institute (and is very enthusiastic about this extremely effective model of psychotherapy) and Nutrition and Lifestyle Coaching at the Institute of Health Sciences, UK and Ireland. She now primarily uses these two discourses when working with clients in private practice, though also draws upon techniques from coaching, especially transformative behavioural methods such as NLP and the utilisation of goal setting and action steps. Johanna is also familiar with and supportive of the 12 step approach to addictions treatment and will happily support clients who choose this model of recovery, through their course of treatment.
Johanna now works predominantly in private practice, specialising in addictions, eating disorders (including nutritional counselling where scientifically back meal planning is a part of treatment), adolescents, processing identify issues, developing self esteem, feelings of being 'other' and issues around becoming religious or departing from religion. Johanna also works with the AZ House, a 12 step-based addictions treatment facility based in Jerusalem and Midrashet Rachel, a women's Jewish educational institute also in Jerusalem.