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NHS Grampian development of MBT interventions for people with BPD

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NHS Grampian development of MBT interventions for people with BPD

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    1. NHS Grampian development of MBT interventions for people with BPD Dr Linda Treliving, Consultant psychiatrist in psychotherapy, Head of GSPS, Chair of SPDN

    3. Local context NHS Grampian Psychological therapies steering group, a multidisciplinary committee which advises to the Clinical Management Board has a strategic overview of the development of psychological therapies for NHS Grampian.

    4. Local context GSPS service provision is focussed on Tier 3 and 4 complexity of patients. Tier 3 is defined as patients with complex mental health problems, most likely long standing and recurrent, significantly impairing quality of life and daily functioning Tier 4 patients have severe mental health problems with significant impairment of functioning

    6. Borderline personality disorder

    7. General approach and management 1. establish and maintain the therapeutic alliance while managing risk maintain flexibility establish conditions to make the patient safe

    8. General approach and management 2 tolerate intense anger, aggression and hate promote reflection set necessary limits

    9. General approach and management 3 understand the dynamics and monitor relationships between service user and staff thereby reducing the potential for splitting monitor countertransference feelings to understand the patients communication and difficulties use a consistent approach.

    10. The chaos and disorder that characterises the internal world of the individual with BPD can impact on attempts of the professionals and agencies involved to engage effectively.

    11. Effective ingredients of treatment (Bateman and Tyrer) 1. to be well structured; 2. to devote considerable effort to enhancing compliance; 3. to have a clear focus, 4. to be theoretically highly coherent to both therapist and patient, 5. to be relatively long term; 6. to encourage a powerful attachment relationship between therapist and patient, 7. to be well integrated with other services available to the patient.

    12. Grampian Specialist Psychotherapy Service psycho dynamically based out patient service offers assessment, consultation and treatment to patients in Grampian ( pop.540,000). 2 centres providing this service are based in Aberdeen and Elgin. offers multidisciplinary training and supervision at undergraduate and post graduate level

    13. Process of referral to Psychotherapy Department, Aberdeen. Referral Referrals are accepted from all Community mental health teams.(250 -300 per year) Referrals are discussed at the weekly referral meeting Decisions are made to either progress the referral, discuss with referrer or make further enquiries. Eligibility criteria Aged 18 years upwards Males and females

    14. Referral accepted Patient sent an SCL 90 * Department questionnaire ( biographical details) SAE. On return of the questionnaire the patient is sent an assessment appointment.

    15. Symptom Check List 90, (SCL 90) Derogatis et al 90-item self-report checklist measures psychological distress Symptom measures of : Somatization Obsessive-compulsive Interpersonal sensitivity Depression Anxiety Hostility Phobic anxiety Paranoid ideation Psychoticism

    16. SCL 90 Global Indices Global severity index : (GSI) Number of symptoms reported combined with the intensity of perceived distress – best single indicator of current level of distress Positive symptom distress index: (PSDI) Average level for the symptoms that were endorsed – measure of symptom intensity Positive symptom total: (PST) Number of symptoms endorsed (regardless of level of distress) - a measure of symptom breadth

    17. CSA Men Pre & Post Treatment

    18. Referral accepted Patient sent an SCL 90 Department questionnaire ( biographical details) SAE. On return of the questionnaire the patient is sent an assessment appointment.

    19. Assessment All clinical staff participate in the assessment process and attend a supervision group Patients attending the department for first assessment are asked to complete a PDQ4 ( self report questionnaire for personality disorder) and a CTQ ( self report questionnaire on early trauma).

    20. PDQ 4 PDQ-4 is designed to assess 12 personality disorders. http://www.pdq4.com

    21. PDQ 4 The total PDQ-4 score is an index of overall personality disturbance. Controls generally score 20 or less. Patients in therapy generally score between 20-30. A total score of 30 or more indicates a substantial likelihood that the patient has significant personality disturbance

    22. PDQ 4

    24. Assessment The assessor can refer into any component of the therapeutic programme where the patient is accepted without further assessment but offered an introductory appointment with therapist. Assessment letters to referrers are structured under specific headings including psychodynamic formulation, risk assessment and management suggestions.

    26. Standard 14: There is a record of a diagnosis or diagnoses Criterion 14 a The care record shows: • the diagnosis or diagnoses • information on how the diagnosis or diagnoses was reached following evidence based guidelines or established diagnostic criteria where available. • confirmation that the diagnosis or diagnoses has been explained to the service user and informal carer. • post-diagnosis support is offered.

    28. The Therapeutic programme Mentalization based therapy for Borderline personality disorder. b. Group therapy c. Individual Brief therapy Longer term therapy (1-2 years))

    29. a. Mentalization based therapy for Borderline personality disorder 1 day programme for 6 month therapy. Intensive Outpatient programme.

    30. Hub day 10 patients start each 3 months, 2 groups are always running at any one time. retains the broadest principles of the therapeutic community. whole day is considered a therapeutic intervention, including lunch and social time

    32. Hub day timetable

    33. Morning group

    34. Psychoeducation conducted by 2 clinical staff covering aspects of mentalization principles crisis plans, managing self harm managing emotions

    35. Structured Clinical Interview for DSM IV diagnosis II (SCID) led by 2 clinical staff conducted as a group evaluating self and using others perspectives of self to consider DSM IV axis 2 criteria.

    36. Psychodrama psychotherapy conducted by trained and accredited psychodrama psychotherapist and co facilitated by other member of clinical team. introduces patients to the important mentalising task of role reversal. may be used as a medium to do some more focused therapeutic work. forum for patients to consider what they might do once the Hub Day Programme ends.

    37. Mentalization based therapy group conducted by a Mentalization based therapist and co facilitated by other member of clinical team.

    38. Staffing

    39. MBT Intensive outpatient programme Once weekly individual MBT sessions of 50 minutes Once weekly group MBT sessions of 1 ½ hours. Therapists for group and individual meet each week for supervision/discussion.

    40. MBT Intensive outpatient programme 8 patients Slow open group 18 months attendance time frame expected to attend individual and group sessions

    41. Mentalization based therapy for BPD

    43. MBT perspective BPD is conceived of as a disorder in the self structure brought about through environmentally induced distortion of psychological functioning, which decouples key mental process necessary for interpersonal and social function

    45. Mentalization based therapy Evidence based intervention for BPD MBT is delivered by generic mental health professionals MBT is a manualised treatment Skills training delivered over 3 days Continuing supervision by psychodynamically informed trainer.

    46. Internalised persecutory sense of self ……when alone feels unsafe and vulnerable because of the proximity of a torturing and destructive representation from which he or she cannot escape because it is experienced from within the self.

    47. The result? Patients with BPD react in desperate manner to changes in relationships with clinging, apparent aggression, cries of abandonment, refusal to separate and acts of self harm.

    48. Suicide attempts are often aimed at avoiding the possibility of abandonment: they seem to be a last-ditch attempt at reestablishing a relationship. The child’s experience may have been that only something extreme would bring about changes in the adults behavior and that the caregiver used similar measures to influence the child’s behavior. Suicide

    49. Lack of Mentalisation Stability is maintained through ; - mental isolation not knowing, - acts of aggression justified by perceived threat, - inaccurate representations of interpersonal interactions, - projective mechanisms that force mental states onto the other and thus prevent its genuine perception

    50. Lack of Mentalisation …adults who act violently, impulsively, inconsistently and with emotional volatility show reduced mentalising capacities and are protecting an unstable sense of self.

    51. Treatment Strategies The overall goals of treatment are to stabilise the self-structure through the development of stable internal representations formation of a coherent sense of self, capacity to form secure relationships. identification and appropriate expression of affect.

    52. Identification of affects To continually clarify and name feelings To understand the immediate precipitant of emotional states within present circumstances To understand feelings in the context of previous and present relationships To express feelings appropriately, adequately and constructively within the context of a relationship to the day hospital team, the individual session and group therapy To understand the likely response of the team member involved in an interaction

    53. A Mentalising Stance This is an ability to continually question the internal mental states both within the patient and the therapist Why is this patient saying this now? Why is the patient behaving like this? Why am I feeling as I do now? What has happened recently in the therapy or in our relationship that may justify the current state?

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