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Screening for Psychological Distress. Objectives of Session. To understand the principals of using the distress screening tool. To provide participants with an opportunity to practice using the distress screening tool. Who should undertake the DS?.
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Objectives of Session • To understand the principals of using the distress screening tool. • To provide participants with an opportunity to practice using the distress screening tool.
Who should undertake the DS? • The DS should only be administered by professionals at Level 2 and above competency • Level 2 practitioners must possess problem–solving skills and have at least one of the following: • Psychological Assessment Skills for UASC • Have attended DS training sessions • Those undertaking a DS should access consultation from Level 3 or 4 practitioners
When should DS be administered? • Undertake as part of the Early Intervention Framework at all the key points in a UASC journey i.e.: • At arrival • At FTT and dispersal • After significant change • At key asylum process moments • Other times when distress is apparent. • A quick screening tool to assess psychological needs from which care can be planned during • dispersal and in the new authority.
Principles of using DS • Explanation • Transparency • Normal process • Solution focused • Use of UASC's own resources • Assessment not therapy
Please circle the number (0–10) that best describes how much distress you have been experiencing in the past week including today. Problem list: Indicate if any of the following have been a problem to you in the past week. The Distress Screening Family: Bereavement Loss of contact with family Concern about family safety Emotional:Spiritual: Fear Loss of hope Anxiety Loss of spiritual Nightmares practices Hypervigilance Loss of spiritual community Physical: Unhappy with Fatigue how living life Constipation Loss of peace Sleep indigestion
The Distress Screening Solution Focused Care Plan: 0 – 5: UASC does not require additional EM&WB support. Watch, wait and see protocol to be maintained. Level 2 clinician required from a competencies perspective. 6 – 7: UASC requires additional EH&WB support based on the Early Intervention Framework and a level 3 clinician is required from a competencies perspective. 8 – 10: UASC requires additional EH&WB support and review based on the Early Intervention Framework and input from a level 4 clinician required from a competencies perspective. Solution process: Is sleep work required and been undertaken? Yes No Is re-feeding work required and been undertaken? Yes No Is hope work required and been undertaken? Yes No
Using the DS: Stage 1 • Explain what you are doing and ask the UASC if they are willing to go ahead • Show UASC DS & ask him/her to globally rate their distress over the past week • Ask them to tick any items that have been of concern to them over the past week, adding any concerns not on the form
Using the DT: Stage 1 • Ask the UASC to think about what is the most important concern contributing to their overall distress • Record this ranking (i.e. 1st) on the screening sheet • Then ask for the next most highly ranked concern. Work through main concerns in this way
Using the DS: Stage 2 • Record the scoring on the screening • From the problems list, see if any UASC Early Intervention work is required. • Refer the UASC to a relevant clinician according to scoring or ensure that this goes in the health passport to the new authority so that they can action a care plan.
Using the DS: Stage 3 • Summarise what you’ve discussed & what steps you will take, if any, & those others have agreed to take. • Ask UASC if they have any remaining questions/concerns. • Thank UASC and tell them DS will be placed in their case notes and/or in their health passport. • Take any actions you have agreed with UASC & inform other relevant parties
DS ratings • <5– UASC not exhibiting unusual signs of distress • ACTION - continue to monitor as per watch, wait and see protocol • >6 & <7– UASC is exhibiting non-urgent distress • ACTION - provide support within your skill-base, consult and/or refer to a Level 3/4 practitioners & continue to review progress • >8– UASC is exhibiting high levels of distress, pressing need for action • ACTION – use caseload supervision seek consultation with Level 3/4 practitioner, bring case to UASC Network, liaise with other relevant professionals if necessary e.g. if needs are financial, physical etc
Find a partner Partner A will take role of practitioner Partner B will take role of UASC Administer DS Then change roles 15 mins each. Now it’s your turn!
Summary of administration • This is part of a normal assessment • Be Transparent • Value the UASC's distress • Use a problem solving approach • Help UASC identify resources
Points to remember • When - At all key points in UASC. pathway, & if UASC express emotional distress • Who – min. Level 2 practitioners who have completed relevant training • Supervision – should be accessed from Level 3/4 practitioners • Support – score >4 & <6 provide support within your skill-base, consulting or ask for review with Level 3/4 • Referral– score >6 – discuss UASC with Level 3/4 practitioners or request for this as part of their care plan, bring to UASC Network, liaise with other professionals if necessary
Final point • We must remember: • The importance of identifying and managing emotional distress for UASC. • DS is a user-friendly tool that can simply and easily identify emotional distress • It gets quicker & easier to administer the more it is used!