Title: Early Intervention in PostDiagnosis Dementia
1Early Intervention in Post-Diagnosis Dementia
2"The Role of CMHNs in Post Diagnostic Support
Counselling Skills and Therapeutic
Opportunities."
3Making Links, Making Sense
- Aims
- To discuss issues of importance
- Link policy to practice
- Share best practice
- Key Theme
- Focus on the valuable contribution MH nurses make
in improving the older persons experience of
care.
4Issues of Importance
- Background
- PhD research intensive study of the experiences
of persons with dementia, GPs and old age
psychiatrists - Findings indicated that people with a new
diagnosis of dementia could be helped to come to
terms with their diagnosis by therapeutic
conversations - Development of a model of therapeutic tasks in
early dementia
5Background Study Context
- People with dementia
- Are rarely offered post diagnostic counselling
- Are marginalised by society
- Find it difficult to articulate their diagnosis
- Fear of being stigmatised
6Study Context (continued)
- Family and friends will not engage in
conversation about diagnosis - Leads to unexpressed emotion and difficulty in
later years - Lack of skilled listeners in the helping
professions - Nurses traditionally are the people most likely
to be working in the field of dementia
7Linking Policy to Practice
- Made a national priority by Scottish Government
in 2007 - HEAT target around early diagnosis and support
- National Review of Mental Health Nursing Rights,
Relationships and Recovery - Mental Health Delivery Plan
8Delivering for Mental Health
- Commitment 4
- We will increase the availability of
evidence-based psychological therapies for all
age groups in a range of settings and through a
range of providers - Targets
- Reduce the use of antidepressants (1)
- Reduce suicides (2)
- Reduce hospital readmissions (3)
- Early diagnosis and management (4)
9Rights, Relationships and Recovery Dementia
- Mental health services and mental health nursing
must make the support of older people with mental
health problems a priority. We need to make sure
mental health nurses are prepared and developed
for this - Support mental health nurses contribution to
delivering psychosocial interventions and
psychological therapies services using a stepped
approach to this development - Adopting strengths and recovery-focused models,
maximising self management and peer support - Develop and maximise roles and capability in
anticipatory care and early intervention - Recognising carers as partners and supporting
them in their caring rolethrough a strengths
based, relationship focused approach - Nurse consultants to lead the development of
mental health nursings contribution to older
peoples mental health services - Create a more robust climate of learning,
development, evaluation and research - Regular clinical supervision
- Capability Framework
10Mental Health Nursing Forum Scotland National
Awards for Good Practice in Mental Health Nursing
2008And the winner is..the Magnificent 7!
11Sharing Best Practice
- What needed to be done?
- Setting the scene
12Toms Story
- Diagnosed with Alzheimers disease 9 days before
Dot met him - Retired pharmacist
- Lived with wife
- 3 adult children
- Knew about research process
- They embarked on a pilot study together
13Collaborative Design
- New to have someone with Alzheimers disease
collaborating with the research design - Advised on where, when and how to gain
information (data collection) - Advised on people to speak with, and frequency of
meetings - Discussed the findings together
14Learning to Live with a Diagnosis of Dementia
- 4 Key Themes
- Struggling with the emotional impact
- Daring to talk about Alzheimers disease
- Re-authoring their story
- The challenge facing relationships
- Dealing with the aftermath issues to be faced
15Struggling with the Emotional Impact
- Influenced by previous knowledge and experience
- Fearfulness was most common emotion
16Fearfulness and Other Emotions
- Fear of the future
- Fear of loss of identity
- Fear of the judgement of others
- Bitterness - why me?
- Depression
- Anxiety around sharing their feelings
17Some of the things people said about their
emotions
- Im a bit apprehensive about the long term
prospect of thisthe thing that worries me is
that it is going to go on deteriorating and then
I will get to a stage when I dont know who I
amand I forget who my wife isits very scary
(Tom) - I worry about the long term and then I think
well, in the long term were all dead anyway!
(Ian)
18Some of the things people said about their
emotions
- People will be watching for the next big mistake
Im going to say the wrong thing or stupid
wordsthen they will put me in a categoryanyone
who knows will think less of meI am the one with
the stigma and I feel anyone who knows will treat
me differently (Janet) - Its very scaryyou just get dumped in the
dementia wilderness (Betty)
19Some of the things people said about their
emotions
- Just why have I got this blooming thing and
people I know older than me have nothing (Ian) - I have been very depressed - I felt that I might
have retreated into my shell and refused to come
out - I had closed the shutters down (Tom)
20Daring to talk about Alzheimers Disease
- Daring to tell
- To tell or not to tell
- Who should tell and who to tell
- The implications of telling
- The implications of not telling
- Reactions to the telling
- ITS GOOD TO TALK!
21Good to talk? What they said
- you tend to keep all the talk about it within
the family, they know that youve got it and
ignore it, so it is a help to talk about it!
(Betty) - it is good for youwe are talking, but ordinary
people, they dont really know about it (Ian) - Its very good to talk to somebodyyou feel you
must discuss it with somebody...I thought I was
going round the bend (Jenny)
22So What Needed to be Done?
- People with a new diagnosis
- Struggle with the emotional impact
- Dont get the opportunity to talk about it
- Find it hard to adjust their lives
- Cant always understand the change in their
relationships - How do they deal with the aftermath of
- their diagnosis and the issues that have to
- be faced?
23The Impact of a Diagnosis of Dementia the Need
for Emotional Processing
- Many professionals underestimate or ignore the
emotional impact of a diagnosis - In order to move on in a positive way, people
need to deal with their emotions meaningfully - People need more than written information
- How to take this approach forward?
24Therapeutic Tasks Modelof Early Intervention for
People with a New Diagnosis of Dementia
25The Therapeutic Tasks Model of Care -
Relationship Centred
- Exploring the possibility of life as normal
- Evaluating the usefulness of different sources of
information - Understanding the changing roles within their
families and wider social network - Understanding and dealing with the emotional
process
26Therapeutic Tasks (continued)
- Addressing deep philosophical questions such as
the possibility of loss of identity - Embracing and coping with social stigma
- Creating a new and different identity
- Telling and retelling their story
- Finding a way through the health system
27Working with Older People in Scotland A
Framework for Mental Health Nurses (NES2008)
28What Next
- The research project was complete
- It had generated new theories
- They matched with the priorities of the SDWG,
Alzheimer Scotland, Tayside MCND, Scottish
Governments Mental Health Delivery Plan (HEAT
targets 1,2 4), Rights, Relationships and
Recovery - Key need of people with dementia is the need for
early intervention (Clive Evers, Alzheimer
Society, July 2007)
29We Needed to Embed the Approach into Practice
- Joint project funded by Burdett Trust for Nursing
- 49,989
30!The Magnificent Seven!
- 7 RMNs working with people with dementia in the
community across Tayside were enrolled on the
COSCA Graduate Certificate in Counselling Skills
at the University of Abertay Dundee - Formed a learning set that met monthly for 6
months to further develop the 9 Therapeutic Tasks
Model of early intervention for people with a new
diagnosis of dementia
31The Nurses ExperienceWhats Different?
32Personal Growth
- Looking at myself
- I suppose one of the things that I struggled
with was looking at myself during the course, eh
you know, there was a great deal of focus on
knowing why you react in a certain way, what you
avoid doing and why you avoid doing it. - I learned a wee bit about my own avoidance
techniques and why perhaps I am uncomfortable
with certain conversations and that actually
allowed me to develop not only as a nurse but as
a person.
33 Looking after myself The ability to say
no sometimes (laughing)! That is one of
the things, you know, looking at what type
of person you were and what generally you did
and I was always the person that would oh
right Ill do this Ill do that and I
would be stressed because I had so much to
do. So I have started looking at that
and just feeling comfortable saying, well
actually I am doing x, y z, just now so I
really cant manage to take that on board
and not feeling bad about it.
34Personal Awareness
- At the heart of change
- Self-awareness is a fundamental characteristic
of the counselling process. - This can feel threatening at first however,
this unique experience has helped me to explore
my feelings and opinions - (exploring and knowing who you are)
- Realising that I was a rescuer, and that I have
been trying to rescue people I have been working
with - (exploring and acknowledging what you do)
35Awareness and Exploring?
- An awareness of the perceptions and feelings of
people with dementia - Realisation that there are huge emotional issues
attached to a diagnosis of dementia. In the past
peoples emotions have been glossed over, but
their emotions are so intense. I now practice in
a way that allows open discussion about their
perception of the diagnosis and their feelings - (helping someone explore who they are)
- I feel now that I go to someones house, I
havent got an action plan in my head. It makes a
difference, the counsellingits them deciding
what you are doing for them, not you that is
going into their home deciding what you will do - (helping someone explore what they want you to
do)
36Person Centred (1)
-
- I found the personal development bit really
good you know it really makes you think about
things, about whats important, it makes you
prioritize things and you know even with
relationships ..and thats gone on into my work
you know, I find that when I go out to see
someone now I am not just looking at the form
filling, the medicine and you know. I used to go
in and think right Ive got to get this form
filled in, Ive got an hour, get this form filled
out and make sure Ive got the right medication,
you know, and out the door as quickly as possible
to get to the next one. I am not doing that
anymore. I am going in without any paper or pen
or anything you know and I just sit and listen
and its amazing what you get from people by just
not saying an awful lot, just nodding, just using
the counselling skills basically.
37Person Centred (2)
-
- There was one lady I went to see the other day.
She wasnt dementing. She was a lady who had
been sexually abused as a child and I walked into
the house and she wasnt going to talk to me
about anything and I thought right Ill try this
counseling skills here. within 15 to 20 minutes
she really got into telling me you know problems
and things that had happened and, eh, I think I
sat with her for nearly two and a half hours just
sitting talking to her and her talking to me and
I said very little I think she probably got
more benefit from that than me sitting filling in
a form and making sure she was on the right
antidepressant medication, you know basically. I
think thats what a lot of the nurses do just go
in and check that they are you know, people need
to be listened to.
38Person Centred (3)
- I check out more, Ill check out is that okay
with you? What do you want to speak about today,
what issues are important and when the session is
coming to an end I say what do you want to look
at from here. I wouldnt normally have done that
because people tend to often I dont think they
know what you are there for and what you are
trying to achieve. I cant just take it for
granted without checking that out. and again we
make our own assumptions about what we think
might help, and that has changed because it is
not always about what we think will help.. it is
what the person thinks will help. I have to say
I still make mistakes I shouldnt have done that
I should have let them speak a bit more about
that. but thats in my awareness now, thats in
my awareness so when I go back again I can try
and maybe rectify that. I hope you understand
what I mean because its hard to explain
39Seeing the person with dementia differently
- Actually talking more to people with dementia and
therapeutically tackling their issues - using
less of other services - Intense engagement - focused on the person and
the relationship
40Enhancing Skills and increasing knowledge
- This is not about training nurses to be
counsellors - Its about professional development - building
on and enhancing the skills of professionals - Enabling them to identify therapeutic
opportunities and respond in a meaningful way
41Whats the difference?
- Person Centred 11 interactions
- Listening actively
- Recognising emotional pain
- Respecting and recognising uniqueness
- Relationship focus
- More equal partnership
42Changing Lives (including their own!)
43Sustainability
- What next?
- Another cohort of 6 CMHNs has been recruited
- Learning set evolving into a Community of
Practice
44The Last Word
- These nurses are giving back power to the
person and helping them to see that the diagnosis
is not the end it is only the beginning of
something different - Agnes
45More information about the approach
- dotweaks_at_nhs.net
- rjohansen_at_nhs.net
- Nursing Standard (2008) Oct 22nd
- Vol. 23, No.7, p.22-23
- Piramhids Website Case Study
- Connect in Care Website