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Creating a Therapeutic Milieu in an Acute Psychiatric Setting. Presented by: Dr Laura Dannahy. “The creation of the atmosphere of a therapeutic (milieu) is in itself, one of the most important types of treatment which the hospital can provide” World Health Organisation (1953).
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Creating a Therapeutic Milieu in an Acute Psychiatric Setting Presented by: Dr Laura Dannahy
“The creation of the atmosphere of a therapeutic (milieu) is in itself, one of the most important types of treatment which the hospital can provide” World Health Organisation (1953)
Defining a Therapeutic Milieu • Creation of a supportive and nurturing interpersonal environment for both service users and staff • Multidisciplinary effort • Teaches, models and reinforces constructive interaction • Promotes strategies for symptom reduction, increasing adaptive behaviours and reducing subjective distress • Encourages service user participation in decision-making and collective responsibility for ward events • Creation of time & space for staff to learn and reflect
Our Service • The Department of Psychiatry in Southampton is an Inpatient psychiatric unit serving an inner city area in Hampshire • It has 3 wards: • 25-bed Male Acute Admission Ward • 25-bed Female Acute Admission Ward • 9-bed Psychiatric Intensive Care Unit (PICU)
Ethos of Inpatient Psychology Service • Establishing a culture of acceptance, validation & optimism, based on DBT-informed principles • Centred around the service user • Focused on promoting effective coping strategies • Recognition of the need to support the multidisciplinary team working in this area
Working with Clients: DBT in an Inpatient Setting • Working with Service users: • Individual therapy (formulation / commitment work / therapy) • Individual Skills Training • Emotional Coping Skills Group • Working with Staff: • Staff training & support • Input to care planning • Clinical Discussion Meetings • Reflective Practice
Assessment • Individual Work • -Formulation • Engagement • Motivation to change • 1:1 Therapy (CBT/ DBT / ACT) ECS Group 1:1Skills Training Weekly Consult Meeting, Reflective Practice, Clinical Discussion Meeting, Ad-hoc supervision & support Training & Education Across MDT Skills generalisation / coaching on ward Links with Community Teams Discharge Audit & Evaluation Referral Pathway
Working with Service Users:The Emotional Coping Skills Group • 6-session rolling programme (bi-weekly) • Aims: enhance skills, improve motivation, encourage generalisation of skills • Focus on crisis survival core skills: • Mindfulness • Distress Tolerance • Emotion Regulation
Evaluation of the ECS Group • Audited via pre & post therapy questionnaires: • Clinical Outcomes in Routine Evaluation (CORE; Barkam et al., 1998) • Mental Health Confidence Scale (MHCS; Carpinello, Knight, Markowitz & Pease, 2000) • Living with Emotions Scale (LWES)
Diagnostic Groups Gender Preliminary Data
Working with Staff: Training Programme Aims: • Gain an understanding of borderline personality disorder • Increase skills in assessing risk, presenting problems and providing treatment • Increase staffs’ level of perceived competence • Decrease level of fatigue
Understanding BPD Formulation – biosocial model Devising a care plan – target hierarchy Validation Behavioural theory Chain analysis Emotional coping skills – Mindfulness Distress Tolerance Training topics – 8 sessionsService users involved
Evaluation of Training Programme • Self-report measures being used to evaluate the effectiveness of training with the following aims: - • Explore the relationship between staff attitudes towards BPD and stress & burnout • Examine whether the training programme has an impact upon attitudes towards BPD, development skills and staff stress levels
Self-report measures include: - • Attribution Questionnaire (Markham & Trower, 2003) Examines participants’ attributions of the causes of behaviour, level of sympathy with the patient and optimism for change using six scenarios. • Borderline Personality Disorder (Kennedy, unpublished) This is a 16-item questionnaire used to measure attitudes towards working with people with BPD. General Health Questionnaire (Goldberg & Williams, 1988) Measures psychological distress
Self-report measures cont. • The Mental Health Professionals Stress Scale (Cushway, Tyler & Nolan, 1996) This is a 42 item measure grouped into seven subscales of sources of stress at work: workload; client related difficulties; organisational structure and processes; relationships and conflicts with other professionals; lack of resources; professional self-doubt and home/work conflict
Results • Preliminary results available in November 2007
Working with Staff:Reflective Practice Reflective Practice involves: “ the critical analysis of everyday working practices to improve competence, promote professional development, develop practice-generated theory, and help professionals make sense of complex and ambiguous practice situations” Cowdrill & Dannahy, 2007
Topics For Reflection • One hour weekly sessions for all staff • Direct Clinical Practice: working with Clients • Functional Aspects of work • Self-Reflection
Challenges & Solutions • Support from hospital management (e.g. Modern Matron) • Support from ward managers: to ensure involvement of staff members • Terms of Reference, describing aims, requirements & expectations. • Promoted & viewed as integral part of working life of the ward • Timing of sessions negotiated: handover periods
Ongoing Challenge • Cognitive Behaviour Therapy has a great deal to offer in-patient services • It provides the theoretical background, pragmatic clinical tools and philosophy for developing therapeutic milieu • Need to be creative and adaptive for the ever changing environment of the psychiatric hospital • Involve service users in order to provide a high quality mental health service that meets individual needs.
Contact details and references • Dr Laura Dannahy Laura.dannahy@hantspt-sw.nhs.uk • Dr Vivia Cowdrill viv.cowdrill@hantspt-sw.nhs.uk Forthcoming book chapter Reflective Practice, by Vivia Cowdrill& Laura Dannahy in Cognitive Behaviour Therapy for Acute Inpatient Mental Health Units: working with clients, staff and the milieu. Edited by Isabel Clarke & Hannah Wilson. Routledge
References cont. • Bohus, M., Haff, B., Simms, T., Limberger, Schmakl, C., Unckel, C., et al (2004) Effectiveness of inpatient dialectical behavioral therapy for borderline personality disorder: a controlled trial Behaviour Research and Therapy 42, 467-499. • Swenson, C.R., Sanderson, C., Dulit, R.A., & Linehan, M.M. (2001) The application of dialectical behavior therapy for patients with borderline personality disorder on inpatient units Psychiatric Quarterly, 72, 307-324