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Section of Forensic Mental Health, University of Nottingham and Nottinghamshire Healthcare NHS Trust, Duncan Macmillan House, Porchester Road, Nottingham NG3 6AA, email: nick.huband{at}nottshc.nhs.uk
Section of Forensic Mental Health, University of Nottingham, Nottingham
None. Funding detailed in Acknowledgements.
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Abstract |
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To explore the impact of adults with personality disorder on the professional groups that support them. Staff (n=72) from five agencies participated in interviews focusing on reactions to short case vignettes representing the three personality disorder clusters.
RESULTS
Each presentation was relatively consistent in its impact on staff irrespective of the agency or setting. Several agency-specific themes were also identified, some illustrating areas of potential difficulty in inter-agency working. Many non-mental health workers reported considerable contact with this client group, although most felt dissatisfied with the training available and suggested solutions.
CLINICAL IMPLICATIONS
Findings from this study may help to match the content of training courses to need. Similar vignette-based surveys could be used to investigate the impact of staff training over time.
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Introduction |
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Method |
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Three short hypothetical vignettes were prepared to represent individuals likely to meet the DSM-IV criteria for personality disorder within Clusters A, B and C respectively (American Psychiatric Association, 1994), although none contained reference to any diagnosis. Male and female versions of each vignette were constructed. The Cluster A vignette was strongly suggestive of paranoid personality disorder, the Cluster B vignette of antisocial personality disorder with borderline traits and the Cluster C vignette of dependent personality disorder with avoidant traits (vignettes available from N.H. on request). Each vignette was less than 170 words and the amount of information included was deliberately restricted to encourage respondents to draw inferences based on their pre-existing attitudes (Lewis & Appleby, 1988).
Interviewees considered each vignette in turn as part of a semi-structured interview lasting typically 1 h. Each interviewee was asked the same series of closed and open-ended questions about each presentation to explore how they anticipated the experience of working with the client, with colleagues and with workers in other agencies.
Anonymised transcripts of interviews were obtained either from audiotapes recorded with the interviewees consent, or from hand-written notes made by the interviewer. The content of each transcript was analysed with the help of a computer program (QSR NUD*IST v4.0) following the main steps in grounded theory. Use of the constant comparative method (Strauss & Corbin, 1990) allowed substantive codes to be assigned to key themes.
| Box 1. The six themes most frequently identified in interview
transcripts for each presentation Cluster A presentation (paranoid) Anticipated as likely to:
Cluster B presentation (antisocial with borderline traits) Anticipated as likely to:
Cluster C presentation (dependent with avoidant traits) Anticipated as likely to:
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Results |
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Agency-specific themes
For the Cluster A vignette, two additional themes emerged consistently in
the codings from interviews with housing workers. Housing staff felt
particularly familiar with this (paranoid) type of presentation, and felt that
many such clients neither sought nor welcomed treatment. For the Cluster B
vignette, a theme frequently coded in interviews with A&E staff was that
such (antisocial/borderline) individuals often became impatient and tended to
cause the most problems when they were forced to wait for assessment or
treatment. Probation staff appeared to experience less anxiety over antisocial
presentations in comparison with other interviewees. Mental health staff
frequently reported that workers in other agencies tended to expect some
immediate and effective action from a psychiatrist or the community mental
health team whenever this type of client hit a crisis. For the Cluster C
vignette, an additional theme coded frequently in interviews with social
workers and housing staff was that this type of client often needed (and would
benefit from) home visits, which some agencies would be unable to offer.
Several agency-specific themes were coded frequently and irrespective of the vignette presented. Housing staff commented that they were often the only workers left in contact with a client after all other agencies had withdrawn, and so had needed to find their own ways of supporting such tenants. Mental health staff involved in delivering psychological interventions tended to favour a single therapist model. They valued having a psychiatrist as a central coordinator but not also in the role of therapist, and clients having their care arrangements stated unambiguously and in writing. Staff from A&E departments felt that their service tended to experience suspicious or dependent presentations as relatively straightforward.
Potential for disagreement among staff
Views about the potential for each client to cause disagreement among
colleagues are summarised in Table
2. The Cluster B client was considered most likely to give rise to
disagreement among those involved. The two lines of cleavage most commonly
reported centred on whether the clients condition was treatable (or
not) and whether they should engage with the service (or vice versa).
The most commonly expressed reason for disagreement about the Cluster A client
was whether they had a mental illness or a personality disorder and hence what
treatment was most appropriate, and for the Cluster C client whether input
would increase social skills or create more dependency.
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Training and support
Interviewees ratings of the overall level of support and training
available to workers in their own agency are presented in
Table 2. Responses to
open-ended questions revealed that the majority (but not all) of those
interviewed felt supported by their colleagues. Staff in A&E departments
in particular reported a strong sense of working together as a team and
supporting each other when difficult patients presented. Descriptions of poor
support and inadequate supervision most commonly occurred in the context of
the Cluster B presentation.
In contrast, most interviewees were dissatisfied with the training available to them, particularly in relation to the Cluster A and B presentations. The most common complaint was that an organisation had provided training in basic skills to deal with specific behaviour problems (such as anger and aggression) but this had not afforded any deeper understanding of the nature of personality disorder or how best to relate to such a client. The solutions most commonly suggested can be summarised as a desire for pragmatic, scenario-based training to complement more conventional approaches. Staff working outside mental health settings tended to value being taught by someone who managed this client group on a day-to-day basis and who could bring specific examples to illustrate real-life situations. Some mental health professionals were not always considered suitable for this role, however. The reason most often given was that they rarely met their clients outside a clinical setting and thus were seen as too far removed from handling real-life situations face to face.
| Box 2. The 13 themes most frequently coded from transcripts in relation
to inter-agency working1 Communication
Agency role
Individual staff characteristics
Service provision/accessibility
1.The terms enhanced and impaired were applied in the context of impact on inter-agency working.
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Inter-agency working
The 13 most frequently coded themes relating to inter-agency working fell
within four categories (communication, agency role, individual staff
characteristics and service provision/accessibility) (Box 2). An additional
and frequently coded theme (not easily classified into one of the four
categories) was that the perception that inter-agency working had improved
significantly since the advent of joined up primary care teams.
Views about the value of having a clearly defined agency role were notably
inconsistent. This was exemplified when the probation service was praised for
having clear boundaries but then criticised for not making its treatment
groups available to non-probation clients.
A number of agency-specific themes also emerged. Housing workers generally regarded the probation service and the police as helpful, but were critical of mental health staff when patients were discharged from wards before accommodation was available, and when community nursing support was withdrawn once a client was considered to have settled. Housing workers found themselves invited to care programme approach meetings only rarely, but felt this would be invaluable in some cases. Mental health staff reported difficulties working with housing and crisis services if their workers did not respect or understand their treatment model or gave advice to patients that clashed with that model. Staff in A&E departments tended to welcome the input they received from police and from local self-harm/liaison teams where these existed, but some remained critical of delays in obtaining psychiatric assessments. Probation staff reported good links with housing workers, but were critical of mental health staff for inconsistency in their clinical assessments and for their occasional unwillingness to share information on the grounds of confidentiality.
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Discussion |
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The Cluster B presentation was most likely to lead to disagreement among colleagues. It was also the presentation that workers felt least adequately trained to manage and the one that raised the greatest number of potential difficulties. This is in keeping with a report by Rigby & Longford (2004) on the experience of running a multi-agency training course on personality disorder. They noted that each time their trainees were asked to construct a vignette of a client with personality disorder they did so using borderline presentations based on the clients who caused the greatest problems.
Interestingly, the majority of commonly identified themes in the interviews reported here emerged as vignette-specific but not agency-specific. It has been suggested that one reason why clients with personality disorder create so many problems in treatment is that they evoke inconsistency (Bateman & Tyrer, 2004). Although this is to some extent supported by the apparent ability of the Cluster B presentation in particular to cause disagreement within a team, our findings suggest that certain personality disorder presentations were relatively consistent in their impact on staff irrespective of the agency in which they worked.
A minority of themes emerged as exclusive to a particular agency. The perception among many housing workers that they were often left to support a client with personality disorder after all other agencies had withdrawn seems particularly significant and, in our experience, not often considered by mental health professionals. Similar views are reported in a recent survey of housing staff in South Yorkshire and North Lincolnshire (National Institute for Mental Health in England, 2006) which concluded that the majority of mainstream or general needs housing staff saw themselves as providing a significant and valuable but often unsung role in community mental healthcare.
We concluded that the interviewees from agencies other than mental health had considerable experience of working with clients likely to have personality disorder. Furthermore, most appeared to have accepted that regular contact with such clients was necessary in their work. Their comments suggested many had drawn on (and refined) their existing skills to a point where they generally considered themselves to be reasonably competent in dealing with this client group. However, the vast majority felt they lacked greater understanding and were dissatisfied with the paucity of relevant training. The document Breaking the Cycle of Rejection (National Institute for Mental Health in England, 2003b) acknowledged the very limited availability of such training for staff working in generic, community-based services, and offered a framework within this could be addressed. Our findings support this but also suggest the need to match any new training to deficits, so that new courses can include specific content relevant to the staff group being taught. The vignette-based approach described here might be particularly valuable when attempting to identify such deficits, and when trying to quantify the impact of staff training over time.
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Acknowledgments |
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References |
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BATEMAN, A. W. & TYRER, P. (2004) Services for
personality disorder: organisation for inclusion. Advances in
Psychiatric Treatment, 10, 425
-433.
LEWIS, G. & APPLEBY, L. (1988) Personality
disorder: the patients psychiatrists dislike. British Journal of
Psychiatry, 153, 44
-49.
NATIONAL INSTITUTE FOR MENTAL HEALTH IN ENGLAND (2003a) Personality Disorder: No Longer a Diagnosis of Exclusion. Department of Health.
NATIONAL INSTITUTE FOR MENTAL HEALTH IN ENGLAND (2003b) Breaking the Cycle of Rejection: The Personality Disorder Capabilities Framework. Department of Health.
NATIONAL INSTITUTE FOR MENTAL HEALTH IN ENGLAND (2006) At Home? A Study of Mental Health Issues Arising in Social Housing. http://www.socialinclusion.org.uk/publications/GNHFullReport.doc
RIGBY, M. & LONGFORD, J. (2004) Development of a
multi-agency experiential training course on personality disorder.
Psychiatric Bulletin,
28, 337
-341.
STRAUSS, A. & CORBIN, J. (1990) Basics of Qualitative Research: Grounded Theory Procedures and Techniques. Sage.
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