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Overview. BackgroundReflective practiceRole playsRecording workAssistant interviewer role plays. Psychiatrist in Acute Inpatient Unit. Requiring conversations with people who find conversations very difficult Limited volume of time for
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1. Reflective practice for psychiatrists working with people with acute psychosis Josephine Stanton
Andre Lange
Child and Family Unit, Starship
2. Overview Background
Reflective practice
Role plays
Recording work
Assistant interviewer role plays
3. Psychiatrist in Acute Inpatient Unit Requiring conversations with people who find conversations very difficult
Limited volume of time for ‘being with’
Conversations often meet other people’s agendas
Assessing for MHA reviews
Prescriber of medication
Head jailer
4. Doing this practice Very little guidance on how to do it
I feel very inexpert, trying to take up an expert role - registrars
People often don’t like seeing me and I can upset people - example
Am I doing bad as a psychiatrist?
I experience an anxiety in the pit of my stomach … a primitive fear that I can make something awful happen,
5. Reflective Practice None of us, or any piece of clinical work, is, or ever will be, perfect
We are all doing our best and we can all do better.
Interest and curiosity in possibilities
Valuing the work we are doing, the ideas, feelings, beliefs, experiences etc supporting the work we do
6. Gambling Game Malcolm Gladwell “Blink” 2005
Turn over cards from red or blue decks
Red a minefield
Blue – steady diet
50 cards – a hunch
80 cards articulate theory
10 cards palmar sweating and preference for blue
7. Accessing Intuitive Knowledge Acting on experience without awareness = much clinical work
Takes only 10 trials
Awareness of a hunch – 50 trials
Being able to articulate a strategy takes 80 trials
Reflective work access experiential learning
8. Recording work Always excellent learning
Consent issues with people in state of acute psychosis
Role plays
2 examples
Learning from each as interviewer and interviewee
11. Assisted Interview Role Plays Clinician who knows the person best takes up their role
Interviewer takes up clinician’s role and stops when they would value assistance
Interviewer and clinician in role of person as if behind glass wall – listening, noticing responses but not engaging with assistant interviewers
12. Assisted Interview Role Plays ctd People in role of assistant interviewers speak to clinician in the role of the person as if stepping into role of interviewer
Several people come up with possible next moves
Facilitator protects reflective space
Facilitator keeps assistant interviewers focused on offering potential contributions to the conversation, not talking about the conversation, person etc
13. Assissted Interview Role Plays ctd Potential interventions of facilitator might be, ‘How would you say that?’, “How would you use those ideas to inform a question/summary?’ ‘So you might want to say …’
Turn to the clinician in the role of the interviewer and ask which of the statements they were drawn to, found interesting
Interviewer takes that up and moves forward with it.
Repeat cycle and share learning
14. Learning from this Clinician in the role of the person – experiences being in the role, experiences receiving the interventions
Interviewer experiences allowing a feeling of wanting assistance and getting it
Assistant interviewers can experience putting thoughts into words, perhaps taking a risk, building on ideas of other assistant interviewers
15. Learnings from this - everyone Opportunity to experience vicariously receiving interventions
Opportunity to consider new possibilities
Valuing different understandings, approaches
16. Learnings, everyone Making more direct and concrete use of skills and resources in team
Useful for supervision, teaching, training, when team is ”stuck”
17. Learnings, ctd May serve as guidance for intervention,
eg:
understanding the person’s needs
structure of care
(as a result of adding experiential dimension)