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2. Personal Introduction . Doing R
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1. Motivational Practice: Online Learning Rick Botelho, BMedSci., B.M., B.S., MRCGP (UK)Professor of Family Medicine and Nursing
University of Rochester, NY You can use blended learning methods (workshops, online programs, telephonic coaching) to enhance your motivational skills. To begin this life long process, your can use the MHH online learning program to improve your own health habits before helping their patients. This learning process is based on the book, Motivational Practice.
You can use blended learning methods (workshops, online programs, telephonic coaching) to enhance your motivational skills. To begin this life long process, your can use the MHH online learning program to improve your own health habits before helping their patients. This learning process is based on the book, Motivational Practice.
2. 2 Personal Introduction
Doing R&D on creating blended learning methods and complex process innovations that focus on motivating changes in organizations, practitioners and patient behaviors
Adopting a post-modern pragmatic approach, using multiple theories and models that fit the needs of organizations, practitioners and patients
Consults with organizations to set up MHH Leader Teams to disseminate and evaluate motivational practice that helps individuals to create personal evidence about healthy behavior change
3. Motivational Practice: Promoting Healthy Habits & Self-care of Chronic Disease Second Edition 2004
4. Vision from the 4th century BC W.H.S. Jones, Hippocrates, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA (1923).
5. Vision for the Future Motivational interventions that promote healthful behaviors must become more individualized than the 21st century advances in the drug treatment of diseases.
6. Goals Learn about Motivational Practice
Experience a simulation of an online learning exercise
Role play skills development
7. Goal 1: Learn about Motivational Practice How does the evidence-based mindset handicap our progress in developing effective behavior change programs?
What is motivational practice?
Why is a paradigm shift needed to transform how health care settings develop effective programs?
Why do practitioners need to change their role in order to develop effective programs?
How can practitioners develop their motivational skills as part of life long process?
8. How Does the Evidence-based Mindset Handicap Our Progress?
9. Limitations Giving information and advice to patients about changing their unhealthy behaviors is equivalent to the placebo impact of nineteenth-century drugs. The use of this “drug” over and over again, when it is clearly not working, should be regarded as a
10. Move Beyond Superficial Scientific Evidence Outside-in Approaches
11. to Personal Evidence
What works for the individual patient. In other words, what does it mean to change.
12. Personal Evidence Means Moving Beyond Superficial Change Gaining knowledge
13. Doing emotional work to Deep Change
14. When evidence-based guidelines do not work, experience-based learning can help you and your patients move beyond the limits of:
Scientific evidence and surface change to develop
Personal evidence about deep change
Experience-based Learning
15. What is Motivational Practice?
16. Motivational Practice Involves using the following theories, models and concepts to help patients change
Transtheoretical model
Cognitive behavioral interventions
Self-efficacy
Motivational interviewing
Relapse prevention
Solution-based therapy
Self-determination theory
Patient-centered approach
These resources are integrated into a six-step model
17. Perceptions about risks, benefits and harms
Cognitive and emotional resistance
Cognitive and emotional motivation
Energy level and competing priorities
Confidence and ability
Motives and values
Motivational Practice
18. Motivational Practice Involves using the following theories, models and concepts to help patients change
Transtheoretical model
Cognitive behavioral interventions
Self-efficacy
Motivational interviewing
Relapse prevention
Solution-based therapy
Self-determination theory
Patient-centered approach
These resources are integrated into a six-step model
19. Micro-skills Development: A Stepped Approach
20. 20 Patients use a blend of methods to:
Create meaningful learning opportunities
Explore deep change
Make sense of their learning experiences.
This reflective process activates patients to optimize their health habits and/or self-care of chronic diseases.
What is Motivational Practice?
21. “Motivational interviewing is a directive, client-centered counseling style for eliciting behavior change by helping clients to explore and resolve ambivalence.”
MI is an epiphenomenon to the individual’s internal change process that is predominantly implicit during the practitioner-patient interaction.
Contrasting MI and Motivational Practice
22. Contrasting MI and Motivational Practice MP is an explicit, concept-driven process that provides individuals with learning exercises to generate reflective, meaningful and sense-making experiences. This learning process demystifies the role of the professional facilitator and helps individuals, families and communities learn skills for very day life. Individuals can access professional services when needed.
23. Contrasting MI and Motivational Practice Motivational Interviewing
Psychological Context
Single, sequential agenda
One-to-one interaction
Behavioral specialists
High touch
Inter-personal process
45-60 minutes
Limited sessions
Motivational Practice
Primary Care Context
Concurrent, complex agendas
Blended learning methods
Team/IT approach
High-tech, High touch
Intra-personal process
3-15 minutes
Ongoing partnership
24. Contrasting MI and Motivational Practice Motivational Interviewing
Reflective listening
Facilitator-dependent
Individualistic focus
FRAMES
OARS
MISC
Scientific evidence
Motivational Practice
Reflective learning
Concept-driven
Ecological approaches
Motivational principles
A Six-step Model
12 motivational variables
Personal Evidence
25. An intra-personal process that uses a blend of learning methods:
Reading
Journaling
Telephonic support
Online learning
Interpersonal support
family members & friends, peer counseling
lay health guides, health care professionals
Motivational Practice
26. Putting Motivational Principles into Practice Support Autonomy
Invite participation
Gain consent
Be nonjudgmental
Offer choice
27. Putting Motivational Principles into Practice
Understand patient’s perspective
Develop empathic relationships
Clarify roles and responsibilities
Clarify patients’ issues about change
Work at a pace sensitive to patients’ needs
Understand patients’ emotional resistance, perceptions & values
28. Putting Motivational Principles into Practice
Adopt a Positive Perspective
Focus on strengths & health rather than on weaknesses & pathology
Focus on solutions rather than on problems
Help patients believe that healthy outcomes are possible
Encourage patients to do emotional work (address dis-ease and negative emotions)
29. Putting Motivational Principles into Practice
Elicit patients’ problem-solving skills
Enhance patients’ confidence and ability
Increase supports & reduce barriers
Negotiate reasonable goals for change
Develop plans to prevent relapses
Use “failures” as learning opportunities
30. Why is a paradigm shift needed to develop effective programs?
31. Old-New Paradigm Old
Scientist as PI
Health advisors
Advice= change agent
Fixed process
Rational, linear
Teaching moments
Surface change
New
Patients as PI
Motivational Guides
Dialogue = change agent
Individualized process
Emotional, nonlinear
Learning opportunities
Deep change
32. Why do practitioners need to change their professional role?
33. Metaphors and Professional Behaviors Metaphors that shape our professional behavior toward patients are hidden to varying degrees because they are embedded in the words of our everyday language. Metaphors can act as weapons against change, as well as agents for change.
34. Aristotle
35. Hammer Metaphor When we have only been trained to use hammers (give health information & advice), we tend to see every risk behavior as a nail.
36. Nut and Bolt Metaphor Hammers do not work very well with a nut (risk behavior) rusted to a bolt (patient). Hammering away at patients may make things worst, and even damage the threads of the bolt so the nut never comes off.
37. Gardener Metaphor We are most effective in helping patients change when we work as gardeners; cultivating the soil, planting seeds, and fertilizing the ground.
38. How can practitioners develop their motivational skills as part of life long process?
39. A Model for Continuing Professional Development
40. Goal 2: Experience a simulation of an online learning exercise
Clarify your issues about improving one of your health habits
Rate your motivational scores
Make sense of your motivational score and reflect on what they mean to you
41. Clarifying Issues About Change: Using a Decision Balance
42. Chapter 6 from "Beyond Advice: Developing Motivational Skills" by R.J. Botelho 42 Benefits Continuum
43. Chapter 6 from "Beyond Advice: Developing Motivational Skills" by R.J. Botelho 43 Risk Continuum
44. Chapter 6 from "Beyond Advice: Developing Motivational Skills" by R.J. Botelho 44 Readiness for Change
45. Lower Resistance:Using Nondirect Interventions
Use simple reflection
Probe priorities
Use double-sided reflection
Explore the future
Acknowledge ambivalence
Emphasize personal responsibility and choice
46. Increase Motivation:Using Direct Interventions
Use benefit substitution
Bring the future to the present
Clarify values
Identify discrepancies
Use differences in motivational reasons
Reframe events or issues:
47. Make Plans for Change Overcome negative self-talk
Use your strengths
Take a time-out
Suppose a miracle happened
Find exceptions
48. Make Plans for Change Build your confidence
Increase your ability
Understand addictions
Selects goals
Prevent lapses and relapses
49. 49 Summary Practitioners need to learn how to change themselves before helping others
Practitioners need CPD opportunities to develop motivational skills through their careers
Self-directed and web-based, distance learning training programs can greatly reduce the cost for helping practitioners develop basic skills
Practitioners need mentors to develop advanced skills
A resource www.MotivateHealthyHabits.com