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Halton General Hospital (NHS) Trust
Halton Community Trust
Psychotherapy Family Unit, Thorn Road Clinic, Thorn Road, Runcorn, Cheshire WA7 5HQ
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Abstract |
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This paper describes a 10-year alliance between an adult psychotherapy service and a child and adolescent mental health service to bring psychotherapeutically-informed help to families in difficulties early in the lives of their children.
RESULTS
It outlines staff training, the development of the unit into a significant training resource, the unit's underlying philosophy, its therapies and the key inter-relationships between teams and with health visitors to enable mutual teaming and the rapid access of families to assessment and treatment of the parentchild relationship.
CLINICAL IMPLICATIONS
Funding, future plans and the preventive and economic implications of such work are mentioned.
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Introduction |
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Since 1989, with the aim of secondary prevention, the psychotherapy team and children's mental health workers in Runcorn, Widnes and adjacent parts of rural Cheshire have allied to bring psychotherapeutically-informed help to families.
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Conception |
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A community-based team would draw on expertise from psychotherapy and child and family psychiatry to target two groups: (a) families having difficulties early in their children's lives, including those where the mother was depressed postnatally; and (b) more chaotic families whose entrenched difficulties were inadequately addressed by existing services. Rapid access, outreach and joint working with other professionals would let the team benefit from others' expertise and spread psychotherapeutically-informed help most widely.
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Birth |
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Training and development - continuous processes |
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Core principles |
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The help that families need and can use varies and timing that help is important. Several courses of care may be needed for a family's various components family, sexual couple, parent(s), parentchild relationship, adult individual(s), child(ren). Each course of care is provided by the most appropriate team. The process of deciding among the teams and with the family which elements of the family need and wish help, in which order and from which team is valuable. It clarifies each team's responsibilities, helps address how family members' needs are negotiated and emphasises the need for appropriate boundaries around the family's various components and certain subject matter. Where these discussions become heated and agreement difficult this can reflect and illuminate processes in the family. Understanding this helps us tolerate our disagreements.
Where we consider a child may be at risk (not necessarily one within the immediate family), we address this and our responsibilities under the Children Act 1989 with the relevant adult(s). If uncertain about such matters, we seek the advice of CAMHS' Social Worker, preserving case anonymity until our responsibilities become clear. When the Act was introduced, we felt anxious and resentful at its intrusion into our therapeutic relationships. We have learned that when concerns for children's safety are aroused in us, similar concerns exist in the parent(s). Discussion thereof, although never easy, mostly affords relief. Rapport usually survives, or can be recovered.
Even if only mother and child attend, we ensure father and any partner are remembered in the work. (It happens that all the PFU staff are female. The male colleagues who join us for work experience show us the value of a male perspective and presence and, fortunately, that our current gender skew does not fundamentally affect the PFU's work.)
The PFU encourages consultation early in the life of a family's children. Using home visits when appropriate, we ensure rapid access to assessment and brief focal work. By remaining quietly enthusiastic and readily available in whatever way is useful, we maintain strong links with colleagues in primary, secondary, tertiary care and social services (Daws, 1999).
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The PFU's therapies |
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For early relationship difficulties, we also offer two brief focal therapies, one psychoanalytical, the other cognitivebehavioural. Our Brief ParentInfant Clinic (BPI) is the core of our rapid-access focal work. Parents and children are offered up to six sessions for psychoanalytically-informed thinking about their situation. Our foci are meanings, feelings and connections between the problems and family members' internal worlds. Often we find unmourned losses, painful struggles with parental ambivalence and un-metabolised difficulties in the ordinary transitions to becoming a family (Hopkins, 1992). The six-session cognitivebehavioural Parent/Child game helps parents acquire greater skill and sensitivity in playing with their children and in managing a child's difficult behaviour. We may use the focal treatments consecutively, their order determined by the parents' readiness. Thereafter, some mothers proceed to an analytical mothers' group.
Families with more entrenched difficulties and sufficient motivation may join a family day therapeutic community programme, which centres on a family meal and includes relationship play (Binney et al, 1994), an analytical mothers' group and video-aided work on live parentchild interaction. The PFU also provides a marital and family therapy clinic for the adult population.
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Linking the three teams |
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Important always, but especially during times of change, are the understanding of each other's work and respect for each other's professional expertise gained from joint working throughout our shared development. Clear boundaries are needed around each team with clear guidelines defining appropriate work for each, cross referrals and inter-team consultation. The PFU's adult mental health origins make one guideline central if you wonder whether CAMHS could or should help, ask them now.
The composition of the various weekly intake meetings is crucial. A PFU therapist attends the intake meetings of CAMHS and adult psychotherapy. The child psychiatrist has a key role in PFU's intake meeting, where family referrals and assessments are discussed. She also attends the BPI supervision meeting, which the consultant psychotherapist leads. These arrangements have many advantages.
On receipt of an adult psychotherapy referral, we may suspect that the individual's difficulties have originated in the transition to parenthood, that a child may be at risk or that family therapy might be more appropriate. Then a prompt home visit by a PFU therapist, possibly with a CAMHS worker, may clarify matters quickly. Having this option is a great boon.
The presence of our several perspectives in each meeting enriches our understanding of referred cases and our plans for work with them. Much background information becomes available, even concerning referrals in a parent's own childhood and can help anticipate difficulties in engaging patients. Multiple referrals are short-circuited. The most appropriate first assessment can be planned, sometimes a joint one. We have more flexibility to help parents who have presented through their children engage in work on their own difficulties.
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Funding, research and future hopes |
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Teaching resource |
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Working with disturbed young people and their families, we often find their early histories suggest BPI work might have helped. Balbernie (1999a,b) has outlined the huge financial costs to society of failing to intervene early to improve family life, infant mental health and development. He describes the well-researched early-intervention services which are an established part of American provision. We hope this brief account helps promote interest in such work in Britain.
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Acknowledgments |
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References |
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BALBERNIE, R. (1999b) InfantParent Psychotherapy and Infant Mental Health Services A Strategy for Early Interventions and Prevention. Report of Travelling Scholarship supported by Winston Churchill Memorial Trust. Gloucester: Child and Adolescent Service.
BINNEY, V. A., McKNIGHT, I. & BROUGHTON, S. (1994) Relationship play therapy for attachment disturbances in 4- to 7-year-old children. In Clinical Applications of Ethology and Attachment Theory (ed J. Richer). London: Association for Child Psychology and Psychiatry.
DAWS, D. (1999) Child psychotherapy in the baby clinic
of a general practice. Clinical Child Psychology and
Psychiatry, 4,
23-37.
FOREHAND, R. L. & McMAHON, R. J. (1981) Helping the Non-Compliant Child. A Clinician's Guide to Parent Training. New York: The Guilford Press.
HOLMES, J. (1998) The psychotherapy department and the community mental health team: bridges and boundaries. Psychiatric Bulletin, 22, 729-732.
HOME OFFICE (1998) Supporting Families: A Consultation Document. London: The Stationery Office.
HOPKINS, J. (1992) Infantparent psychotherapy. Journal of Child Psychotherapy, 18, 5-17.
NATIONAL HEALTH SERVICE EXECUTIVE (1996) Psychotherapy Services in England. London: The Stationery Office.
This article has been cited by other articles:
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P. Stallard, P. Norman, S. Huline-Dickens, E. Salter, and J. Cribb The Effects of Parental Mental Illness upon Children: A Descriptive Study of the Views of Parents and Children Clinical Child Psychology and Psychiatry, January 1, 2004; 9(1): 39 - 52. [Abstract] [PDF] |
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