1 / 17

Staff Attitudes Towards Young People Living in Looked After Accommodation

Staff Attitudes Towards Young People Living in Looked After Accommodation. Jennifer Copley EUSARF September 2014. Objectives Outline the aims of research project Discuss the research findings Consider practical application of the research considerations

asher-lyons
Download Presentation

Staff Attitudes Towards Young People Living in Looked After Accommodation

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Staff Attitudes Towards Young People Living in Looked After Accommodation Jennifer Copley EUSARF September 2014

  2. Objectives • Outline the aims of research project • Discuss the research findings • Consider practical application of the research considerations Copley, J., Johnson, D., and Bain, S. (in press). Staff attitudes towards young people in looked after accommodation. Journal of Forensic Practice

  3. Introduction • Education and residential, secure and foster placements for young people, male and female • May experience a range of difficulties, including mental health difficulties, self-harming behaviours, or involvement in offending and substances misuse • These characteristics can attractive negative attitudes from public and staff members (Colton and Roberts, 2006)

  4. Why consider staff attitudes? • Important aspect of client facing roles • May affect their working practice (Craig 2005; Lea et al,1999) • Young people feel staff attitudes impact on their well-being (Stevens and Boyle, nd)

  5. Factors impacting on attitudes • Burnout • a framework for considering the development of negative attitudes towards clients • notes the demands of client facing roles can leave staff feeling emotionally exhausted, which can lead to the development of cynicism and negative attitudes (Maslach and Jackson, 1981) • some difficulties regarding measurement of burnout, but the model suggests a link between staff well-being and the development of negative attitudes • Studies have considered the factors impacting on staff well-being; this has included age, gender, exposure to violence, and organisational factors

  6. This study focused on further individual characteristics that may impact on psychological well-being, and therefore attitudes, specifically empathy and coping style

  7. Empathy • has been found to leave staff vulnerable to burn out (Regehr, et al, 2002) • considered a necessary characteristic for working in client facing roles (Marshall, et al, 2005) • emotional empathy: concerned with the feelings experienced towards another person and linked to increasing risk of damage to psychological well-being (Walker, 2011) • cognitive empathy: ability to perspective take and consider views of others while remaining detached, which can protect against damage to psychological well-being (Gerdes and Segal, 2009)

  8. Coping Style • how an individual copes with perceived threat (Roger at al, 1993) • emotional coping: describes tendency to ruminate on emotionally upsetting events, which may increase risk of psychological distress or burnout (Roger and Jamieson, 1988) • rational coping: defined by feeling independent of the problem and found to be positively correlated with psychological well-being (Ireland et al, 2005)

  9. Research hypothesis • Psychological well-being, empathy (emotional and detached) and coping style (affective and cognitive) would predict attitudes towards young people • Low psychological well-being, emotional empathy and emotional coping would correlate negatively with attitudes • Cognitive empathy and rational coping would correlate positively with attitudes

  10. Current study • 83 Education and care staff • Completed four questionnaires • Attitude to prisoner scale (adapted from Melvin et al, 1985) • The General Health Questionnaire(Goldberg and Williams, 2006) • Interpersonal Reactivity Index (Davis, 1980) • Coping Styles Questionnaire (Roger, et al, 1993) • Used multiple regression to consider the power of each variable in predicting attitudes

  11. Research Findings • Only factor predictive of staff attitudes was emotionalempathy • And in opposite direction to predicted As emotional empathy went up, positive attitudes went up

  12. What does this mean • Original model proposed is unsupported (possibly not relevant to this population) • Emotional empathy may protect against development of negative attitudes • Importance of fostering staff empathy

  13. Practical applications • Consider empathy training • empathy training has been demonstrated to increase patient care with junior doctors (Riess et al., 2012) and a similar recommendation has been made for prison staff (Ireland and Quinn, 2007) • Consider empathy within supervision • open discussion about feelings towards young people • understand the impact this work can have on attitudes • Consider empathy during recruitment • use of psychometric measures?

  14. Limitations • Only 34% of population responded, why they may have responded • Cross-sectional study, using self-report at one establishment, limits in determining causal direction • Socially desirable responding (may reflect self awareness of empathic feelings and desire not to present negative attitudes) • Use of psychometrics to measure empathy: there is a range of tools, possibly consider other methods

  15. Thank you for your attention Jen.Copley@kibble.org

  16. References Brewer, E.W. and Shapard, L. (2004). Employee Burnout: A Meta Analysis of the Relationship Between Age or Years of Experience. Human Resource Development Review 3, 102-123. Clarke, J. (2004). The Psycho-social Impact of working therapeutically with Sex Offenders: an Experimental study. (Unpublished PhD Thesis). University of York Colton, M., and Roberts, S. (2006). Factors that contribute to high turnover among residential child care staff. Child and Family Social Work,12(2), 133–142 Craig, L. A. (2005). The impact of training on attitudes towards sex offenders. Journal of Sexual Aggression, 11(2), 197- 207. doi.org/10.1080/13552600500172103 Gerdes, K.E.and Segal, E.A. (2009) A Social Work Model of Empathy. Advances in Social Work, 10 (2), 114-127 Hatcher, R. and Noakes, S. (2010). Working with sex offenders: the impact on Australian treatment providers. Psychology, Crime and Law, 16(1-2), 145-167 Ireland, J.L., Boustead, R., and Ireland, C.A. (2005). Coping Style and Psychological Health among adolescent prisoners: a study of young and juvenile offenders. Journal of Adolescence, 28, 411-423 Ireland, J. L., and Quinn, K. (2007) Officer Attitudes Towards Adult Male Prisoners Who Self Harm: Development of an Attitudinal measure and Investigation of Sex Differences. Aggressive Behaviour, 33, 63-72 Lea, S., Auburn, T., and Kibblewhite, K. (1999). Working with Sex Offenders: The Perceptions and Experiences of Professionals and Paraprofessionals. International Journal of Offender Therapy and Comparative Criminology, 43, 103-119

  17. Marshall, W.L., Ward, T., Mann, R.E., Moulden, H., Fernandez, Y.M., Serran. G., and Marshall, L.E. (2005). Working Positively with Sexual offenders: Maximising the Effectiveness of Treatment. Journal of Interpersonal Violence, 20, 1096-1114 Maslach, C., and Jackson, S. E. (1981). The measurement of experienced burnout. Journal of Occupation Behaviour, 2, 99-113 Regehr, C., Goldberg, G., and Hughes, J. (2002). Exposure to Human Tragedy, Empathy and Trauma in Ambulance Paramedics. American Journal of Orthopsychiatry, 72(4), 505-513. DO1 10.1037//ooO2-9432.72.4.50 Riess, H., Kelley, J.M., Bailey, R.W., Dunn, E.J. and Phillips, M. (2012). Empathy Training for Resident Physicians: A Randomized Controlled Trial of a Neuroscience-Informed Curriculum. Journal of General Internal Medicine, 27(10), 1280-1286 Roger, D. and Jamieson, J. (1988). Individual differences in delayed heart-rate recovery following stress: The role of extraversion, neuroticism and emotional control. Personality and Individual Differences, 9, 721-726 Roger, D., Jarvis, G., and Najarian, B. (1993). Detachment and coping: The construction and validation of a new scale for measuring coping strategies. Personality and IndividualDifferences, 15(6), 619–626 Stevens, L and Boyle, P. (nd) The National Care Standards: hearing the voices of young people in residential care. Available at http://www.celcis.org/media/resources/publications/National-Care-Standards-irene-stevens.pdf.(March, 2013) Walker, A.L., (2011). Working with sex offenders and those individuals with a learning disability: The importance of psychological factors in the delivery of care. (Unpublished doctoral dissertation). University of Birmingham. Available at http://etheses.bham.ac.uk/3156/1/Walker11ClinPsyD1.pdf (November, 2012)

More Related