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Lime Trees CAMHS, 31 Shipton Road, York Y03 6RE
Consultation with Tier 1 professionals is an integral part of comprehensive child and adolescent mental health services (CAMHS) (NHS Health Advisory Service, 1995; Audit Commission, 1999). Despite enthusiasm for consultative approaches and clearly described advantages (Steinberg, 1993), the evidence base for consultation work is thin. In schools, the consultation intervention has been found to be the least effective of four interventions (Kolvin et al, 1981). Consultation enables the development of an integrated tiered system, improves communication, provides a greater understanding of the roles of CAMHS by Tier 1 professionals and fosters more relevant referral patterns.
Focusing consultation work on the concerns of the consultees and measuring their change in relation to those concerns is proposed as a realistic method of evaluating consultation. School nurses often find themselves presented with pupils' emotional and psychological difficulties. Schools look to their nurses for support and information when a pupil has had contact with mental health services or has behaved in a worrying manner. School nurses can lack confidence in these areas of work as they and their professional supervisors have little or no mental health training. Consultation to school nurses offers a forum for addressing this lack of confidence.
Aims of the consultation
The aims of the consultation, agreed with the consultees, were to:
The authors also investigated how the school nurses felt about differing aspects of their work in order to get a sense of their working and personal approach to their professional task.
Organising the consultation
From the information elicited in the first session, an analogue rating scale, which highlighted the issues raised by the nurses in the first session, was developed as an evaluation questionnaire. At the beginning of each meeting an agenda was set to include items brought by school nurses as well as items on which the school nurses had requested more information from CAMHS. These items were recorded so it was possible to look back at what topics had been covered during the study period.
The consultation process
The consultation process began in June 1996 and has operated on a monthly basis in term time subsequently. The sessions offer opportunities for specific case discussion, discussion of professional issues (for example, the role of CAMHS, boundary setting, role definition) as well as a forum for more formal teaching on clinical areas of interest and relevance to the school nurse task (e.g. deliberate self-harm, attentiondeficit disorder, eating disorders) as well as issues of clinical management (e.g. working with difficult parents, managing school teachers' anxieties). The school nurses can also phone to discuss issues and seek advice and support between the sessions.
Comments
From the questionnaires used after 6 months' consultation, it was clear that knowledge had been acquired about the functioning of CAMHS and some confidence had been gained by nurses in managing young people who take overdoses and suffer from mental health problems. In general, these were felt to be more within the nurses' capability. Nurses felt less threatened by parents. There was a decreasing feeling of being valued by the employing trust and of being paid appropriately for the job. The questionnaires revealed that, after 42 months, these changes had been consolidated.
Clearly, not all changes in school nursing practice and beliefs can be put down to monthly consultation sessions. However, understanding the school nurses' preoccupations helped focus the consultation. There appears to have been an improvement in school nurses' understanding of the functioning of CAMHS and with certain nurses of how CAMHS work with schools. Confidence in managing young people after they have taken overdoses and those suffering from other mental health problems has been consolidated.
The conclusions of any evaluation with small numbers must be regarded as impressionistic. However, this work has demonstrated that consultation can be evaluated using analogue questionnaires based on information given by consultees on their work. Such a method has the advantage of working with an agenda that is developed by the consultees who feel involved in the process. Consultation time can be devoted to areas where change would be most desirable. An incidental by-product is that we now accept referrals from school nurses who are very good at discussion regarding appropriateness prior to referral.
Acknowledgments
We would like to thank all the school nurses who have contributed so fully to this consultative exercise.
References
AUDIT COMMISSION (1999) Children in Mind. London: Audit Commission Publications.
KOLVIN, I., GARSIDE, R. F., NICOL, A. R., et al (1981) Help Starts Here The Maladjusted Child in the Ordinary School. London: Tavistock Publications.
NHS HEALTH ADVISORY SERVICE (1995) Together We Stand: The Commissioning, Role and Functioning of Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services. London: HMSO.
STEINBERG, D. (1993) Consultative work in child and adolescent psychiatry. In Managing Children with Psychiatric Problems (ed. M. E. Garralda), pp. 115-125. London: British Medical Journal Publishing Group.
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