Title: The Place of Systemic Interventions in Psychiatry
1 The Place of Systemic Interventions
in Psychiatry
-
- Eia Asen, M.D., FRCPsych
- Consultant Child Adolescent
Psychiatrist - Consultant Psychiatrist in
Psychotherapy - Marlborough Family Service
- London NW8 OPJ
- Swansea 10th June 2005
2 Types of Interventions in
Psychological Medicine
- Intra-personal
- Biological
- Psychodynamic
- Cognitive-Behavioural
- Inter-personal
- Systemic
3The Individual in ContextLevels of Intervention
4 From Family Therapy to Systemic
Intervention
- The family as site of intervention?
- Who is the patient?
- What is the family?
- Therapy for the family?
- Systemic Interventions are aimed at
- - blocking dysfunctional interactions /
communications - - activating and encouraging new interactions /
communications
5Systemic approaches
- Structural
- Strategic
- Milan systemic
- Social constructionist
- Narrative
- Brief solution-focused
- Psycho-educational
- Behavioural
6Evidence Base for Systemic Interventions in
Psychiatry
- Type I evidence (at least one good systematic
review, including at least one RCT) - schizophrenia, depression, alcohol
dependency, - children conduct disorder, anorexia nervosa
- Type II evidence (at least one good randomised
controlled trial) - adult anorexia nervosa, marital and family
distress, - children asthma, enuresis and encopresis
- Type III evidence (at least one well designed
intervention study without randomisation) - bi-polar disorders, anxiety disorders
- Type IV evidence (at least one well designed
intervention study) - various disorders
- Type V evidence (expert opinion, including the
opinion of service users and carers) various
disorders
7Examples of Systemic Interventions
- Couple
- Family
- Multi-Family
- Social Context
- Professional System
8Systemic Couple Interventions evidence base
- London Depression Intervention Study
- (Leff et al 2000)
- RCT CBT vs PAT vs Antidepressants
- Partner Assisted Therapy
- Significant reduction in depression both at end
of treatment and on 2 year F.U. (BDI) - more acceptable than CBT and medication (low
drop-out rates) - No more expensive than medication
9Systemic Couple Therapy for Depression
- - Depression conceptualized as an interactional
event contextual processes maintain or
reinforce symptoms - - Depression of patient affects the partner
and partners responses affect patient and
depression - - Depression is 3rd person in relationship
- - Partner graduates from informant to being
part of it - - Reducing EE
- - Enacting and re-solving familiar couple issues
- - Experimenting with new interactions (homework)
10Phases of Systemic Couple Therapy in Depression
- First Phase Problem and Solution-focused
- Second Phase Examining long-term relationship
patterns - Third Phase Relapse Prevention
11 Family Work with Persons with schizophrenia
and other psychosis
- Ingredients
- Educational Sessions for Family
- Relatives / Carers Groups
- Single Family Sessions
12FAMILY PSYCHO-EDUCATION
- Single Families Format
- 1) Formal Problem Solving
- 2) Communications Skills Training
- 3) Relatives groups
- Reduce stigma
- Relieve the carer burden
- Reduce EE in key relatives
- Develop empathy
- Expand social network
- Anderson Leff Falloon Goldstein
Miklowitz
13 MULTIPLE FAMILY THERAPY
- Laqueur et al.1960s
- Group Therapy Family Therapy
- sheltered workshops of communication
- meeting other families
- learning by analogy
- improved communication
- less constraint on therapist
14Marlborough Multi-Family Model
- Family Day Unit for Multi-Problem Families
- whole days for weeks to months, since 1977
psychotic parents - Family School for excluded and marginalised
pupils and their families half days for months,
since 1981 psychotic parents teenagers - In vivo real life situations
- Clinicians as convener, catalyst and stage
manager, connecting families with families - Provides context in which resources and strengths
are emphasised
15Families as consultants to other families
- Experienced families engage new and sceptical
families, offering hope - Families support each other and reflect on their
own process - Families observe and comment on unhelpful
patterns they see in each other - Families provide a network of support for
isolated families outside of the programme - Families provide a resource for each other to
help prevent relapse
16Multi-Family Group Psychodeducation (McFarlane)
- Joining
- Minimum of 3 single family sessions
- Educational Workshop
- whole day
- Ongoing MFG
- - Fortnightly 90 min
- 5 8 patients and families
- 2 clinicians
17Mental Health Matters Workshops (Cooklin)
- Survival skills workshop (educational not
therapeutic) - one off events, repeated 6 weekly, open
group - Each workshop theme-oriented diagnosis,
treatment, voices groups, young carers - formal presentation
- small groups discussions
- reflections plenary
- mid-workshop evaluation
- joint lunch
- small group discussions / events
- closing plenary
- Various groups constellations, incl. single role
groups - patients only, carers only, professionals only
- Aim cross-family, cross-generational
18Marlborough Psychotic Adults Multi-Family
Workshops / Discussion Groups
- 7 families containing psychotic member
- Single Family Preparation
- Initial Whole Day Workshop
- Fortnightly Meetings (2 hours)
- 1 year
- 4 staff (psychiatrist, CPN, family therapist)
- all systemically trained - to guarantee
- presence of at least 2 at each MFG
- meeting
19MFG activities
- Whole group discussions
- Sub-group discussions (carers only, patients
only) - Specific problem solving
- Playful exercises (sculpts, collages, genograms)
- Reflecting teams
- Lunch and tea
20Themes
- Illness and its course, specific crises
- Early relapse signs and prevention
- Medication adherence, alcohol and substance
misuse - Illness and management and coping strategies
- Partner issues
- Parental concerns vs intrusiveness and
over-protection - Emotional reactions
- Social networks
- Space giving and limit setting
- Work Issues
- Young carers
- Living and leaving home issues
21Work with Social Context / Professional Network
- Working with neighbourhood and friendship
network aim to identify and foster a close
confiding relationship - work within culture-specific / religious
framework - coordinate professionals inputs via network
meetings which include all significant adults
22Framing Multiple Family Group Work
- Ingredients of introductory speech
- Welcome
- if you look around you can see that you are not
alone - there are plenty of other sufferers and their
families, many of whom have experienced social
isolation, stigmatization, increased financial
and psychological burden - today we are meeting to compare notes, what
works and what doesnt work when living with the
illness
23Framing Multiple Family Group Work (2)
- we will also want to talk about whats known and
whats not known about the illness - the illness has many causes, its multi-factorial
- what we do know is that without the intensive
involvement of families, there is a much greater
chance of relapse - we need you families to help the ill person
- we have found that the more information people
have, the better equipped they are to deal with
problems as they occur - we hope that families and sufferers can talk to
each other, get advice. Feel free not to talk
about anything that you dont wish to
24Framing Multiple Family Group Work (3)
- if there is someone here who has participated in
a workshop programme, well ask you to talk about
it - we will want to know about familiar dilemmas,
issues and problems and find ways of discussing
these and re-solve some - we would like people to introduce themselves. And
to say one or two things about who they are and
what makes them tick. Many people probably want
to talk about the illness and the problems it
presents. We will get to that later, but for now
we want you to say something about the rest of
your life and the kind of things you and your
family are proud of. I could start by telling you
a bit about myself (then turns to the next
person) - later we shall talk about how mental illness has
changed our lives
25 The Problem Solving Process
- Aim to define, address and solve illness related
issues - Step 1 Defining the problem
- (the problem is the problem the person is
never the problem) - How has the illness affected each family member
since we last met? - Typical issues conflicts and disagreements
compliance with medication substance abuse life
events safety issues outside agency events
daily living skills finding and keeping
employment. - Circular and reflexive questioning of the
problem, to narrow it down, make it more
concrete and place in an interactional frame.
26- Step 2 Generate and list all possible solutions
- All group members are encouraged to contribute,
without evaluating or discussing these in this
round - Step 3 Discuss advantages and disadvantages
(pros and cons) of each in turn - Eliminate specific suggestions
27- Step 4 Choose the solution that best fits the
problem - Family is asked which of the solutions they would
like to test over next 2 weeks - Step 5 Plan how to carry out this solution
- A very detailed plan is developed, involving real
and hypothetical scenarios - Step 6 Review implementation
- This is done at a follow-up meeting
28The Individual in ContextLevels of Intervention
29Work with Social Context / Professional Network
- Working with neighbourhood and friendship
network aim to identify and foster a close
confiding relationship - work within culture-specific / religious
framework - coordinate professionals inputs via network
meetings which include all significant adults
30Systemic Interventions in Psychiatry
- Multi-level
- Multi-contextual
- Multi-family
- Multi-perspective
- Multi-modal
- --------------------------------------------------
- - Systemic skills
- Context Reading
- Context Making
- Context Managing