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DIALOGUE “For the word (and, consequently, for a human being) there is nothing more terrible than a lack of response” ( Bakhtin , Speech genres, 127). OPEN DIALOGUE: Clients voices as resources. Jaakko Seikkula Val Jackson . Psychotic behavior is response.
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DIALOGUE “For the word (and, consequently, for a human being) there is nothing more terrible than a lack of response” (Bakhtin, Speech genres, 127)
OPEN DIALOGUE: Clients voices as resources Jaakko Seikkula Val Jackson
Psychotic behavior is response • A strategy to manage difficult experiences • Hallucinations include real events in one’s life • Experiences that do not yet have words
Hypothesis • Longstanding psychotic behaviour is perhaps more an outcome of poor treatment in two respect - treatment starts all too late - non adequate understanding of the problem leads to a wrong response
Tornio Jyväskylä
Origins of open dialogue • Initiated in Finnish Western Lapland since early 1980’s • Integrating systemic family therapy and psychodynamic psychotherapy • Systematic family therapy training for the entire staff – since 1989 • Whole service approach
MAIN PRINCIPLES FOR ORGANIZING OPEN DIALOGUES IN SOCIAL NETWORKS • IMMEDIATE HELP • SOCIAL NETWORK PERSPECTIVE • FLEXIBILITY AND MOBILITY • RESPONSIBILITY • PSYCHOLOGICAL CONTINUITY • TOLERANCE OF UNCERTAINTY • DIALOGISM
IMMEDIATE HELP • First meeting in 24 hours • Crisis service for 24 hours • All participate from the outset
SOCIAL NETWORK PERSPECTIVE • Those who define the problem should be included into the treatment process • Psychotic stories are discussed in open dialogue with everyone present
FLEXIBILITY AND MOBILITY • The response is need-adapted to fit the special and changing needs of every patient and their social network • It does not exclude other therapies but integrates them into the process
RESPONSIBILITY • The one who is first contacted is responsible for arranging the first meeting • All issues are openly discussed and all decisions are made in the meetings
PSYCHOLOGICAL CONTINUITY • An integrated team, including both outpatient and inpatient staff, is formed • The meetings as often and as long as needed • The same team both in the hospital and in the outpatient setting • In the next crisis the core of the same team
TOLERANCE OF UNCERTAINTY • To build up a scene for a safe enough process , team work essential
DIALOGISM • Everyone has a voice, including the psychotic experiences • New words and joint language for the experiences, which do not yet have words or language • Impact of medication on dialogue at the point of crisis
Outcomes (Aaltonen et al., 2011 and Seikkula et al, 2011): • DUP declined to three weeks • about 1/3 used antipsychotic drugs • 84 % returned to full employment • Few new schizophrenia patients: Annual incidence declined from 33 (1985) to 2-3 /100 000 (2005)
OPEN DIALOGUE IN ACUTE PSYCHOSISFigure 1. Means of hospital days at 2 and 5 years follow-ups 2-5 years
OPEN DIALOGUE IN ACUTE PSYCHOSIS Table 3. Psychotic symptoms at 5 year follow-up compared to neuroleptic medication during the first 2 years / % Rating of symptoms Neuroleptics 0 1 2 3 4 Total ------------------------------------- Not used 85 9 3 3 0 100 Used or cont. 58 17 8 17 0 100 ------------------------------------- Total 80 10 4 6 0 100 Chi-square 5.93; df=3; p=.145 (NS)
UK • A lot of interest but challenging for the present structure of MH services. • Needs to be adapted to local services - projects in other countries, parachute project in New York city. • Leeds trial – replicated could produce a series of case studies.
REFERENCES Seikkula, J. & Arnkil TE (2007). Sociale nettverk i dialog. Oslo: Universitetsforlaget. Seikkula, J. & Arnkil, TE (2006) Dialogical meetings in social networks. London: Karnac Books Bakhtin, M. (1984) Problems of Dostojevskij’s Poetics. Theory and History of Literature: Vol. 8. Manchester: Manchester University Press. Bakhtin, M. (1990) Art and Answerability: Early Philosophical Essays of M. M. Bakhtin, trans. Vadim Liapunov. Austin: University of Texas Press. Bakhtin, M. (1993) Toward a Philosophy of the Act, trans. Vadim Liapunov. Austin: University of Texas Press. Iacoboni, M (2008) Mirroring People: The new science of how we connect with others. Farrar, Straus and Giroux Carman, T. (2008). Merleau-Ponty. London:Routledge. Hermans, H. & Dimaggio, A. (2005).Dialogical self in psychotherapy. Stern, D.N. (2004). The present moment in psychotherapy and every day life. NY: Norton