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Aims:. To examine the use of the telephone in mental health careTo identify the evidence baseTo examine some recent research and service deliveryTo explore the practicalities of delivering GSH or therapy by telephone. Why the telephone?. Increases access for those with physical/ psychological, so
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1. Scheduled telephone interventions - from guided self help to therapy: An accessible approach to engaging with service users and their families Karina Lovell
School of Nursing, Midwifery and Social Work
2. Aims: To examine the use of the telephone in mental health care
To identify the evidence base
To examine some recent research and service delivery
To explore the practicalities of delivering GSH or therapy by telephone
3. Why the telephone? Increases access for those with physical/ psychological, social or economic difficulties who are unable to attend scheduled clinic appointments
Increases equity and access for those who live in geographical areas with poor psychological provision
4. Telephone has been used to deliver the following Collaborative care of depression
Guided self help
Minimal interventions
Full therapy
5. Mental health problems Depression (mild, moderate and major)
OCD
Agoraphobia
Depression in multiple sclerosis
Agoraphobia
Panic disorder
6. Evidence base The use of the telephone to deliver therapy has been found to be:
Superior to no treatment/wait list (Swinson, 1995)
Superior to treatment as usual (Simon, 2004)
Superior to a to an alternative psychotherapy by telephone (Mohr,2005)
Equal and similar to face to face delivered therapy in some studies (Griest, 2002; Lovell,2005)
Less superior to face to face in GSH (Palmer,2002)
7. Current work RCT which compared CBT delivered by face to face with telephone
Pilot study of young people and their families with OCD in specialist setting
Telephone clinic for those unable to access scheduled clinic appointments in primary mental health care
Telephone clinic in partnership with the National Phobic Society
Systematic review of therapy delivered by telephone
8. 23/08/2012 A comparison of face-to-face therapist contact vs telephone contact in the treatment of OCD Karina Lovell, Gillian Haddock, Debbie Cox, Chris Jones, Rachel Garvey, David Raines, Chris Roberts, Sarah Hadley,
Funded by NHS Executive NE
9. Design and hypothesis A randomized controlled equivalence trial comparing exposure therapy and response prevention delivered either face-to-face or by telephone.
Hypothesis
(i) Exposure therapy and response prevention delivered by a therapist either face-to-face or by telephone will result in equivalent clinical outcomes in the treatment of OCD,
11. YBOC’s
12. BDI
13. Client satisfaction 0-32 (CSQ) mean scores
14. Clinical significance (total sample)
15. Clinically significantly improved (by group)
16. Conclusions Equivalent clinical outcome between CBT delivered face to face or by telephone
No difference in costs except for therapist time costs
CBT was delivered by telephone in 40% less therapist time than face to face contact.
Equivalent high levels of user satisfaction
It offers services another option of increasing access
17. Cognitive Behaviour Therapy for OCD:A Pilot Study of Telephone CBT with adolescents and their families Cynthia Turner, Karina Lovell, Isobel Heyman and Annabel Furth
18. Aims of the pilot Establish feasibility and likely success
Determine acceptability
Improve access to and availability of CBT
Help eliminate geographical inequalities
19. CY-BOCS Results
20. Sample qualitative responses from parents “...because we don’t live locally, it made the treatment accessible.”
“We appreciated the flexibility. Our son moved abroad for work, left home and school, and was able to continue TCBT through this. He has always found change difficult & TCBT helped him through major changes in his life.”
“The telephone sessions have worked incredibly well for us. The help & support from our therapist has been great. We’ve felt fully involved and able to do things to help our child. TCBT has helped us to cope & look to the future.”
21. Innovations in clinical practice: Working in Partnership with a National User Group -Delivering CBT via the telephone Karina Lovell and Nicky Lidbetter
22. Aims To develop a CBT telephone service in partnership with the National Phobic Society
To offer a CBT service to those people who are unable to access scheduled clinic appointments (for geographical, psychological and social reasons).
23. Progress so far Service commenced in May 2005
Requested by 59 People
Number of mental health workers delivering CBT by phone (n=11)
Currently been evaluated using patient centred measures
Future plans – to conduct some in-depth interviews with people receiving the service, and to evaluate on a larger scale
24. Delivering telephone interventions in Primary Care Referrals taken from clinicians when patients unable to attend scheduled clinic appointments
Reason for referrals are agoraphobia (with or without substance abuse), disability, work commitments etc
Future plans – to formally evaluate
25. Practical application Calls should always be scheduled
Emphasise that it is an appointment and ask client to prepare (ie questions, feedback, diaries ready etc)
Agree a code for when client is unable to talk eg ‘Mary’ ‘Mum’ ‘Dad’
Most patients want appointments between 6-8pm
26. Conclusion There is an emerging evidence base for the use of the telephone to deliver therapy
It offers an accessible delivery system to those unable to access scheduled clinic appointments
It is acceptable to patients
It is less clear whether it is acceptable to clinicians or service providers
27. ‘Most of all we need to understand why the telephone, after being part of our lives for so long, has met with so much suspicion and so many irrational assumptions, and why there is so little evidence on how best to use this simple piece of communication technology ‘(Toon, Editioral, BMJ, 2002).
28. Thanks for listening
Karina.Lovell@manchester.ac.uk