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The Tavistock and Portman NHS Trust, Belsize Lane, London NW3 5BA, email: Kimberley.barlow{at}gmail.com
Department of Psychotherapy, Springfield University Hospital, London
John Connolly Wing, St Bernards Hospital, West London Mental Health NHS Trust
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Abstract |
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To ascertain the views of people with personality disorder on their clinical interactions with professionals, to identify potential solutions to problematic interactions and to compile guidelines on how professionals could improve their interactions with these service users. Qualitative methodology was employed, comprising a modified nominal group technique with two iterative groups and ranking by importance the issues and themes raised.
RESULTS
There were 13 service users from three separate personality disorder services who actively participated in a group discussion and iterative process. Collectively they indicated considerable areas of deficiency in the quality of their interaction and communication with professionals. These deficits were defined clearly enough to allow the construction of guidelines aimed at preventing or remedying such deficiencies.
CONCLUSIONS
The contribution of those people with personality disorder who took part in this study was sufficiently thoughtful to allow the development of guidelines that might help staff improve their interactions with such service users. From these guidelines, further training tools are being developed, which will be evaluated in the future. However, because not all those approached chose to participate, the views expressed might not be representative of this group as a whole.
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Introduction |
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Method |
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The professional leads were requested to seek volunteers with personality disorder to meet as a group with the investigators (K.B./S.M.) for approximately an hour to talk about issues concerning professional training.
Group meetings were held at the premises of each personality disorder service and a full explanation of their purpose was given, at the start of each meeting. The rooms used for the meetings were familiar to the participants. On one occasion refreshments were provided. Such aspects were designed to put participants at their ease to facilitate their authentic participation.
A modified nominal group technique was employed (Jones & Hunter, 1995). This consisted of structured iterative discussions that explored the negative and positive experiences of the interactions with professionals and how things could be improved. Investigators made contemporaneous field notes that were checked with participants for accuracy at several points during the meeting, at the end and again at the follow-up meeting. These notes were read to the participants by the facilitator and corrections made if necessary until agreement was reached. The meetings lasted between 60 and 90 min.
Thematic analysis was carried out on the field notes by the investigators. At a second meeting of the group the themes identified were checked with the group and altered to improve the extent to which service users perspectives were captured. Finally the group members ranked these themes in terms of priority during the second meeting. This process was repeated with each of the groups of service users from the relevant local specialist personality disorder services.
The ranked themes were then used by the trusts personality disorder working party. The latter comprised a multidisciplinary team, with further service user membership, that had been set up in the wake of locally acknowledged difficulties with treating this group successfully. The identified themes thus formed the basis for generating trust guidelines on how to interact with people with personality disorder. This process involved incorporating unaltered, as much as possible, the service users themes, adding guidelines to meet other trust requirements and altering the language or wording where unavoidable.
We were advised by the local health authority ethics committee that ethical approval was not required, but we took measures to conduct the study in an ethical manner.
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Results |
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The raw data that were collected highlighted relevant issues, from which clear themes were identified. The latter were developed into the service user guidelines. These were further refined by the trust personality disorder working party into 11 trust guidelines on how staff should interact with those with personality disorder (see data supplement to online version of this paper). Examples of this process are given in Table 1.
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Discussion |
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An acknowledgement that the clinicians contribution to the interaction is not necessarily all positive may be a step towards improving the encounters between people with personality disorder and staff (Norton & McGauley, 1999). We found that involving service users in the process of feeding back their experiences of service provision helped to shed a light on aspects that clinicians might consider changing.
Furthermore, in our opinion, participants comments correspond with complaints clinicians raise when treating people with personality disorder, that members of teams may disagree about diagnosis and treatment and that resources are inadequate.
However, the process of involving service users raised several issues. Gaining their participation was problematic. Despite targeting services with approximately 150 identified people with personality disorder, only 13 service users took up the invitation to participate. Those taking part were not therefore necessarily representative of all service users with personality disorder. It is possible that those with grievances to air might have been more willing to take part; hence their views might be unusually negative. If so, this could support an argument that specific guidelines are only required by this minority of patients.
It might be argued that a larger sample of service users, including those who are not currently receiving treatment or are receiving it from a non-specialist personality disorder service, might improve the representativeness of the views. The fact that professional leads of the services were in a position to choose or otherwise influence those service users invited to participate could also have introduced bias. The changing membership of the groups possibly impaired the groups ability to foster a trusting attitude towards the investigator and a firm belief that service users views could influence professionals training. A more consistent membership would almost certainly have led to a more thorough evaluation of the draft guidelines produced and might have led to a more collaborative, superior but different product.
The above limitations could be overcome by widening the source of recruitment (e.g. to voluntary agencies), service users being involved in facilitating the groups and using advocacy for those who might struggle to communicate in the groups (Simpson & House, 2003). However, the recruitment and maintenance of the small groups of service users with personality disorder took a considerable amount of effort by the investigators and professional leads. The nature of personality disorder means that people may struggle to commit to and develop working relationships themselves. Larger numbers in each group might have made the task for the group and the investigator unwieldy.
Given the foregoing, and considering that our data are congruent with those reported elsewhere (National Institute for Mental Health in England, 2003a,b; National Institute for Clinical Excellence, 2004), this argues in favour of their validity, and guidelines for personality disorder have been produced for use in south-west London. It will therefore be possible to determine further the validity of our data by evaluating their clinical usefulness. This is our next step. If, after appropriate training, the guidelines prove to be ineffective in improving the user satisfaction with specialist services, we shall need to return to address the methodological limitations. If the guidelines prove effective, however, we shall consider how to introduce such training to a larger group of staff.
We conclude that our study shows that, with a degree of effort and persistence on the part of professionals, people with personality disorder can be involved to provide a distinctive perspective in pursuing the goal of improving the quality of their services.
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References |
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NATIONAL INSTITUTE FOR CLINICAL EXCELLENCE (2004) Self-Harm:The Short-Term Physical and Psychological Management and Secondary Prevention of Self-Harm in Primary and Secondary Care. NICE. http://www.nice.org.uk/guidance/CG16/guidance/cfm/English.
NATIONAL INSTITUTE FOR MENTAL HEALTH IN ENGLAND (2003a) Personality Disorder: No Longer a Diagnosis of Exclusion. NIMHE. http://www.nelmh.org/downloads/other_info/personality_disorder_diagnosis_of_exclusion.pdf
NATIONAL INSTITUTE FOR MENTAL HEALTH IN ENGLAND (2003b) Breaking the Cycle of Rejection:The Personality Disorder Capabilities Framework. NIMHE. http://www.spn.org.uk/fileadmin/SPN_uploads/Documents/Papers/personalitydisorders.pdf
NORTON, K. & McGAULEY, G. (1999) Counselling Difficult Clients. Sage Publications.
SIMPSON, E. L. & HOUSE, A. O. (2003) User and carer involvement in mental health services: from rhetoric to science. British Journal of Psychiatry, 183, 89 91.[CrossRef][Medline]
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