mapping the routes to recovery: nta resources to support implementation of psychosocial...
TRANSCRIPT
Mapping the Routes to Recovery:NTA resources to support implementation of psychosocial interventions
Luke Mitcheson, Clinical Team, NTA
Drugs and Alcohol Today Exhibition, London
29th April 2009
Structure of talk
• Psychosocial interventions; what and why?
• NTA products
• Toolkit
• Psychosocial Interventions Resource Library
• ITEP / BTEI
• Implementation
What is a psychosocial intervention?
“Interactions between clinicians and service users to elicit changes in substance use behaviour (cognition &
emotion), grounded in psychological theory”
The therapeutic relationship and process of key-working:• Includes skills to do assessments, care-plans, the TOP, structuring
sessions, using ITEP / BTEI Maps
Formalised interventions and programmes:• Contingency management, motivational interviewing, relapse
prevention, motivational and cognitive elements of BTEI
Why psychological treatment / interventions?
• Treatment is relational – how we talk, and are with clients influences outcomes
• NICE 51 / ORANGE: Core to all treatment and for some substances the only treatment
• Can be integrated with other approaches such as pharmacological stabilisation and detoxification
• Adaptable to abstinence and harm reduction goals
• Relevant to specific issues at different points in recovery journeys
• Congruent with both acute and chronic care models of care
• Instilling hope and repairing damaged lives
• Building social capital – the “ecology of addiction recovery”
Why do we need these products?
• Workforce has rapidly expanded
• Workforce skills are variable
• Practice and skills of supervisors variable
• Training often delivered at a dose which is unlikely to be effective and not resourced to develop specific skills
• Key-working ill-defined
• Pressures on time
• Geographical variation in access to suitably qualified therapists able to deliver treatment for co-occurring psychological problems
Toolkit
Psychosocial interventions in drug misuse: a framework and toolkit for implementing NICE-recommended treatment interventions
Structure and Interventions covered by the Toolkit
High Intensity
Formal therapies delivered by a specialist psychological therapist
Behavioural Couples Therapy
CBT for specific co-existing psychological problems (anxiety / depression)
Low Intensity
Delivered by key-workers, may have an aspect of self-help
Motivational interviewing and contingency management
Guided self-help and behavioural activation for anxiety and low mood
Elements of toolkit
Competencies of staff to undertake specific interventions; generic, basic, specific techniques and meta-competencies
Training curricula
Supervision competencies
Example protocols
Adherence measures
Audit tools for implementation
Why use the low / high intensity IAPT structure?
• Establishes a common language with Improving Access to Psychological Therapies (IAPT) services
• Incorporates the same interventions for common mental health problems
• Introduces and brings stepped care back home
• Provides a structure for thinking about care-pathways through treatment
• Helps to target and manage resources
• Same goals of social inclusion and employment
Why a competencies framework?
•Compatible Skills for Health / DANOS and with the NHS Knowledge and Skills Framework (KSF)
•Variation in therapist competence is a significant contributor to variance in outcomes
•Competences not always stated in treatment manuals
•Identifies and incorporates the essential foundations of psychosocial interventions
•Enables flexibility and adaptation at the level of work with individual service users
•Provides a framework around which other products can be clearly developed to support implementation (supervision and training)
Generic competences in psychological therapyThe competences needed to relate to people and to carry
out any form of psychological intervention
Basic competencesBasic intervention-specific competences that are used in
most sessions
Specific technical competencesSpecific intervention competences that are employed in
most sessions
Meta-competencesCompetences that are used by therapists to work across all
these levels and to adapt the intervention to the needs of each individual service user
Toolkit Intervention competencies model (adapted from Roth and Pilling, 2007a)
Competencies 1
• Generic competences
• Employed in any psychological or psychosocial intervention
• Often referred to as ‘common factors’ in psychological therapy
• e.g. establishing a positive relationship with the service user, establishing good relationships with relevant professionals or gathering background information
• Basic competences
• Establish the structure for the effective delivery of both high and low-intensity interventions
• e.g. establishing the MI approach, plan and review homework assignments, knowledge of family approaches to drug misuse and mental health problems
Competencies 2
• Specific techniques / competences
• Core technical interventions employed in the application of a specific intervention (e.g. specific MI techniques or information-giving specific to behavioural activation)
• Represent common techniques within each therapeutic modality (especially CBT e.g. Eliciting cognitions)
• May vary according to the nature of the presenting problem (e.g. the use of re-living experiences in the treatment of PTSD)
• Metacompetences
• Used to guide practice and operate across all levels of the model
• Awareness of why and when to do something (and when not to do it)
• Make links between theory and practice in order to plan and adapt an intervention to the needs of individual service users
• Difficult to observe directly but can be inferred from therapists’ actions
Psychosocial Interventions Resource Library (PIRL)
• An evolving web-based resource of manuals and treatment protocols
• Consistent with Orange Guidelines (2007) and NICE clinical guideline 51 (NICE, 2007)
• Resources identified through the resource locator which lists them by drug misused, client group and intervention
• Resources are also categorised according to whether they are:
• Evidence-based (group 1)
• Expert consensus-derived (group 2) - includes some commissioned by the NTA
PIRL Resource Locator
Drug misused: Alcohol Cannabis Stimulants
Client group: Adolescents Adults Families Parents
Intervention: 12 step facilitation CBT Community reinforcement Contingency management Family interventions ITEP/BTEI Motivational interviewing Relapse prevention
ITEP and BTEI manuals
• ITEP (the International Treatment Effectiveness Project)
• BTEI (the Birmingham Treatment Effectiveness Initiative)
• Culmination of three year programme of activities and research
• Survey of organisational functioning using the ORC and CEST questionnaires
• Training in mapping interventions
• Evaluation of the training
• Implementation of interventions in treatment services
• Follow-up of impact of training and organisational changes
What is node link mapping?
• Presents visual and spatial relationships between ideas and tasks
• Uses simple cognitive principles and problem solving techniques
• Not a new theoretical technique but a way of recording and communicating ones that already exist e.g. motivational interviewing and relapse prevention principles
• Not prescriptive, offers substantial key worker and client freedom
• A way to structure and review sessions
Mapping: A Visual Representation Strategy
© 2007
BENEFITS OF MAPS
Provide a workspace for
exploring problems
Improve Therapeutic
Alliance
Focus attention on the topic at hand
Train clearer and more systematic
thinking
Create memory aids for client and
worker
Provide a method for getting “unstuck”
Provide easy reference to earlier
discussions
Useful structure for clinical
supervision
Implementation
• Lessons learnt
• Conditions for quality service provision
• Stepped-care and care pathways
• Tasks of key-working
• New developments from the NTA
Lessons from ITEP / BTEI implementation – a virtuous circle?
Conditions for improving provision of psychological therapies
SettingSkills
Culture
Appropriate care pathways, facilities and
quality assurance systems
Clinical leadership,
communication
Training, CPD, supervision
QUALITY OF PROVISION
Definition of Psychological Mindedness (Conte et al 1996)
• Ready access to feelings
• Willingness to understand oneself and others
• An interest in the meaning and motivation of thoughts, feelings and behaviour
• Valuing discussion of problems and motivation to change
Stepped Care(adapted from Wanigaratne 2002)
Engagement
Stabilisation
Maintenance
Aftercare
Motivational Interviewing
Contingency Management
Low intensity CBT for Common Mental Health Problems
Behavioural Couples Therapy
High intensity CBT for Common Mental Health Problems
KEYWORKING
In-pat stabilisation out-patient methadone maintenance
Basic and enhanced treatment pathways
Discretepsychosocial for drugmisuse
CBT fordepression
Tasks of key-working
Related NTA work streams
Strategic Improving quality not just quantity of treatment Focus on long term recovery outcomes Improving workforce competencies
Guidelines / products New commissioning guidelines New keywork guidance CM implementation trial findings
Summary
• There is always a psychological element to the treatment of drug problems
• Psychosocial interventions are integral to acute care and recovery orientated treatment systems
• Services need to be commissioned to provide these psychological treatments for drug addicted people including those for co-occurring common mental health problems
• Service managers need to set up governance structures to support the practice of delivering psychological treatments
• Workers may benefit from adopting a competency based approach to developing their practice and using the resources presented today