1. Reflections on the coproduction of a crisis-focused intervention for inpatient settings underpinned by a Cognitive Behavioural Therapy for psychosis (CBTp) model.
- Author
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Wood, Lisa, Rowe, Arthur, Persaud, Karen, Nyikavaranda, Patrick, Malde-Shah, Nira, Guerin, Ella, Dare, Ceri, Constant, Callam, and Birken, Mary
- Subjects
INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,CONCEPTUAL models ,PATIENT safety ,SELF-efficacy ,HOSPITAL care ,MEDICAL care ,CULTURAL competence ,PRIVACY ,AFFINITY groups ,CRISIS intervention (Mental health services) ,REFLECTION (Philosophy) ,PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation ,FAMILIES ,DISCHARGE planning ,PATIENT advocacy ,CONTINUUM of care ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,PSYCHOLOGY ,CAREGIVERS ,TRUST ,PSYCHOSES ,COGNITIVE therapy ,INTERPERSONAL relations ,SOCIAL support ,HEALTH care teams ,HOPE ,MEDICAL ethics - Abstract
Background: Psychological interventions delivered in inpatient settings have rarely been coproduced with those who receive them. The aim of this study is to outline the coproduction process which led to the development of an adapted inpatient intervention underpinned by a Cognitive Behaviour Therapy for psychosis model. Method: Our coproduction group was comprised of experts by experience, family and carers, multi-disciplinary clinicians, and researchers. The group met monthly to develop the intervention and focused on eight key areas of the intervention, including therapist values, assessment, formulation, coping strategies, crisis/safety plans, and discharge plans. Results: The coproduction panel highlighted the importance of flexible delivery of the intervention, developing a trusting relationship with the therapist, advocacy, prioritising patient safety on the ward, managing the impacts of inpatient care, preparing for discharge, and having family, carer and community involvement. Challenges of the coproduction process included having a pre-existing intervention model that was being adapted rather than coproducing a new one, discussing emotionally charged issues, and having limited time to coproduce the intervention. Discussion: Coproduction brought immense value to the development of this intervention, ensuring it was culturally competent and suitable for the inpatient setting. Further research should be undertaken exploring the coproduction process applied to clinical research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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