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Review of Good Practice Statement

Review of Good Practice Statement Engaging People, Observation of People with Acute Mental Health Problems. Jamie Malcolm & Anna Wimberley. CHANGES AND DEVELOPMENTS. Legislation and policy changes that reflect changing philosophies of care – principle based

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Review of Good Practice Statement

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  1. Review of Good Practice Statement Engaging People, Observation of People with Acute Mental Health Problems Jamie Malcolm & Anna Wimberley

  2. CHANGES AND DEVELOPMENTS • Legislation and policy changes that reflect changing philosophies of care – principle based • Greater emphasis on risk management in care planning, and observation as a tool in overall care and risk management • Greater emphasis on involvement of families/carers • Environmental awareness – new purpose built facilities

  3. Developments in observation practice - upskilling Lessons learnt from reviews of the suicides of inpatients since 2008 Mental Welfare Commission review of enhanced observation – clear recommendations for improvement for NHS boards Use in other clinical settings

  4. Process-centred Current practice: an approach that is based on standardised levels of observation ‘general, constant, special’ Person-centred Future practice: an approach that is based on an individual care plan/safety plan, prepared with the patient that sets out when, where, how and by whom continuous one to one engagement with a member of staff is required Key change areas

  5. Enhanced therapeutic engagement (?) Allows staff to intervene as specified in the patient’s care plan and to: • provide support towards recovery • be a ‘participant observer’ • prevent, contain and reduce any risks arising from the person’s behaviour • maintain a safe environment • provide care and treatment in accordance with the person’s overall care plan, and • record and report on the person’s physical and mental state, progress and behaviour.

  6. Based on existing good practice the intervention will be: • supportive of the patient’s recovery and do no unnecessary harm to them • a clearly understood part of the care, operation and culture of the clinical area • fully integrated in the patient’s overall care plan • as far as possible, carried out with the patient • used when the patient is not consenting or unable to consent to any restrictions placed on them, then the provisions of the relevant legislation are used to protect their rights

  7. The intervention will be: • carried out only when necessary and there is no effective less restrictive alternative • not highly visible in a way that carries a risk of stigmatising the patient concerned • undertaken by staff with the necessary knowledge, skills and information who are confident and supported by management in positive risk taking, and • based on the principles of the Mental Health (Care and Treatment) (Scotland) Act 2003 and complies with the requirements of human rights legislation.

  8. Where have we got to? • 3 national working groups • Draft guidance – 50% of the way there • Lots more to do! • Original timescales revised to allow for wider engagement and consultation and development of implementation support

  9. Service user/Patients/Families and Carers • Reference group • Focus groups • Patient, family and carer verbal/written information (Mental Welfare Commission) • Access to independent advocacy is easily available (Mental Welfare Commission)

  10. Service user/Patients/Families and Carers: key words • Respect • Trust • Relationships • Engaging • Therapeutic opportunities • Perspectives

  11. PROPOSED Next steps • Multidisciplinary focus groups within each NHS board involving all relevant specialties/services • Discussion and engagement with key stakeholder groups • Testing • Develop implementation support package (patient and family written information and prompts for verbal information/practitioner education and training/legal framework/local policy development) • Final guidance revision

  12. Discussion questions • What is your experience, what are the key things that matter to you? • What’s the best approach to consultation and collaboration? 3. What are the key things that will make a difference and improve patient/service user/family experience?

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