1 Using psycho-dynamic small group work in nurse education: Closing the theory-practice gap?’ Helen Allan Division of Health Social Care Faculty of Health.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Ms Liz Anderson & Dr Hayley Richards Changing our approach to assessing professional behaviour.
Advertisements

Dr Fiona Frame Foundation Doctor Oxford Deanery CAIPE, November 2012
Emotional labour within the personal tutor role Angela Williams Lecturer Department of Nursing School of Health Science.
TRAINING GENERAL PRACTITIONERS IN MENTALIZATION BASED THINKING Annette Sofie Davidsen.
1 The socio-cultural context of care delivery and the management of emotions in the fertility clinic Helen Allan Division of Health Social Care Faculty.
© Quality Solutions for Healthcare Team Leadership Programme Betsi Cadwaladr University Health Board Workshop evaluation from 25 th January 2012 Debbie.
Linda Gask University of Manchester. Problem-Based interviewing a model Development by Art Lesser in Canada in 1980s. One of several models!
Leeds Metropolitan University Centre for Psychological Therapies WELCOME.
 The aim of continuous dental care is for dentists to be able to make contact with patients in an easy and acceptable manner.  For patients who may.
Psychological Therapies Psychotherapy is: “…essentially a conversation which involves listening to and talking with those in trouble with the aim of.
Reflective Supervision: How to Be and What to Do Learning & Development in the Practice of Reflective Supervision Andrea Foote, PsyD, IMH-E (IV)® Jordana.
F AMILY T HERAPY Presented by: Sana Hamzeh Clinical psychologist Psychotherapist.
FIELD AND BRANCHES OF PSYCHOLOGY
© West Educational Publishing Treatment and Therapy C HAPTER 18 A professional therapist actively works on the problems of others. This chapter discusses.
Supported by GPTQ and Greater Metro South Brisbane Medicare Local Funding from James Cook University Australia Clinical Supervision Support Program Interprofessional.
Ann Corbett & Jodie Morris Clinical Nurse Facilitators End of Life Care SUPPORTING THE SUPPORT WORKERS.
Follow up visits to an ICU: Critical care nurses' experience Åsa Engström, CCN, PhD, Senior Lecturer Siv Söderberg, RNT, PhD, Professor Division of Nursing,
1 Impact of a Social Home Visit on High-Utilizing Patients in a Residency Continuity Clinic January 31, 2015 Stephanie Nothelle, MD; Colleen Christmas,
Describe and Evaluate the Cognitive Treatment for Schizophrenia
RBB March 2009 Psychoanalysis A therapeutic technique developed by Sigmund Freud.
1 1 Relationships with Professional Schools: The University of Minnesota Experience.
Developing training to support staff working with people with Personality Disorders Kate Sloan Nurse Practitioner in Psychotherapy Ian Gidley Nurse Specialist.
Open Educational Resources (OER): their role in faculty development Lynn Johnson, PhD The University of Michigan USA.
The Benchmark Project. The Broken Links Illustrated Clinical Instructor: “How is your day going?” Student: “It’s been great! I got to start an IV and.
MEDICAL STUDENTS – POTENTIAL CONTRIBUTORS TO SMOKING CESSATION PROVISION: THE ADDED BENEFITS OF THE ONLINE NCSCT TRAINING King’s Undergraduate Medical.
 Treatment of psychological disorders involving psychological techniques  Involve interactions between a trained therapist and someone seeking to overcome.
Is there a Doctor in the house? Then take me to your leader. Engaging medical and clinical staff in Post Graduate accredited workbased leadership development.
Peplau’s Interpersonal Relations Theory
The Therapeutic Nurse-Patient Relationship
Practice Leaders Programme Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Cohort Findings Practice Leaders Programme Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Cohort Findings Aim.
AP PSYCHOLOGY 6 th Six Weeks April 21, Today’s Lesson 4/21/2014 Journal prompt: Psychotherapy Go into Therapy (Chapter 15) The King’s Speech.
Training and Supervision of Behavioral Health Interns and Staff: Best Practices in Integrated Care Jackie Williams-Reade, PhD, LMFT Loma Linda University.
Copyright © 2012 Wolters Kluwer Health | Lippincott Williams & Wilkins Chapter 1Self-Awareness.
“Before, I did not have any idea what psychotherapy looks like in practice. Now I have a greater understanding of what to expect, and how actual psychotherapy.
AP PSYCHOLOGY 6 th Six Weeks April 21, Today’s Lesson 4/21/2014 Journal prompt: Psychotherapy Go into Therapy (Chapter 15) The King’s Speech.
Student Nurses Learn Spiritual care in hospice and palliative care settings Lesline Lewinson
Treatment: Day 1. Thomas SZASZ Wrote the “Myth of Mental Illness”(1960). Attacked Psychiatry and Psychology as a science. People who are said to "have"
Tangible Outcomes of Mentoring Hospital Medicine Nancy Redfern.
Impact of a Mentoring Program in a Brazilian Medical School: changes acknowledged by the students Bellodi, Patricia L and Martins, Milton A Center for.
Faculty Graduate School Induction for new PGR students Dr Martina Daly Faculty PGR Lead Faculty of Medicine Dentistry & Health.
Engaging Colleagues: Developing a Faculty Seminar on Multicultural Practice Kimberlyn Leary, Ph.D., ABPP.
Psychological Therapies. Introduction Psychotherapy Emotionally charged, confiding interaction between a trained therapist and someone who suffers from.
Do Now  Write on your notes page: When you think of a psychologist, what mental images immediately appear?
Developing a Therapeutic Relationship in Practice
LO: To be able to describe and evaluate the Cognitive Treatment for Schizophrenia.
What is your section about ?  Clinical psychology is an integration of science, theory and clinical knowledge for the purpose of understanding, preventing,
Y1 SBT Workshop EYFS Input Please ensure you have registered your name before you take a seat.
Foundation Trainee Simulation Faculty Pedley H, Rawding O, McGuinness C, Abid N, Collins K, Holdsworth B, Midha D, Osborn A, Patel D Education Centre,
Psychology Chapter 1 Review. Which psychologist introduced reinforcement?
Graduate School of Medicine University of Wollongong Educators learning together and modeling interprofessional collaboration Sue Vella, Sal Sanzone, Helen.
Culturally Competent in Medical Education (C2ME) ( ) Jeanine Suurmond Academic Medical Centre/University of Amsterdam
In October 2015, MAITS funded Therapeutic Art trainers, Lesley Hill and Joanna Pearce, to deliver training to 65 Neuropyschology and Psychiatry students,
Psychological Therapies. Psychotherapy An emotionally charged, confiding interaction between a trained therapist and someone who suffers from psychological.
Creating Awareness of Psychiatric Nursing. Purpose Increase knowledge of mental/behavioral health triumphs and challenges, increase nursing engagement.
Ch. 19 S. 1 : What is Therapy? Obj: Define psychotherapy, and list the advantages of each method of psychotherapy.
Interpersonal and Communication Skills
Psychological Development
Welcome to the Open Evening
FIELD AND BRANCHES OF PSYCHOLOGY
Immersive Simulation in the Foundation Programme
Patient-Centered Clinical Method
aLjXtOPRKzVLY0jJY-uHOH9KVU6
Balancing Administrative & Clinical Supervision
Thinking About Psychology: The Science of Mind and Behavior 2e
Introduction Unit Training Educators: A practical guide to facilitate learning in the workplace Slide 1.
Organisational factors
What is psychology? The scientific study of behavior and mental processes.
Making Tomorrow’s Doctors Today’s Teachers
Roles of the Mental Health Team:
Presentation transcript:

1 Using psycho-dynamic small group work in nurse education: Closing the theory-practice gap?’ Helen Allan Division of Health Social Care Faculty of Health & Medical Sciences

Aim Illustrate the role of psychodynamic small group work in integrating theory and practice for nursing students

Background Menzies-Lyth –The nurse-patient relationship changes ‘ordinary’ social relationships and there is a need to manage the intimate and emotional nature of these clinical, ‘non-social’ relationships. Fabricius –As well the clinical dimension of care, there are the social and emotional processes at work in interactions with patients.

4 The psychodynamic approach Psychodynamic model –emotions shape our being in the world and reactions to the world Small group work can help nurses and doctors work therapeutically through reflection and learning from reflection –Balint; Menzies; Tavistock Clinic –Peplau; –Gilmartin 2008; Ashburner et al 2004; Clifford 2004

5 Psychodynamic approach to emotions The study of the psychological forces that underlie human behavior, which emphasises the interplay between unconscious and conscious motivation (Brown & Pedder 1991)

Personal experience as a tutor Participated in small group work as a tutor run by Julia Fabricius –Fabricius J (1991a) Learning to work with feelings — a psychodynamic understanding and small group work with junior student nurses. Nurse Education Today 11,134–42. –Fabricius J (1991b) Running on the spot or can nursing really change? Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy 5, 97-/108. –Fabricius J (1995) Psychoanalytic understanding and nursing: A supervisory workshop with nurse tutors. Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy 9, 17–29

My experience with personal tutees Small group supervision –Meeting regularly, bringing clinical material –Staying with the emotions –Managing emotions to help them learn –Support to help them learn –Containing to help them learn 7

8 Presentation of some supervision material Clinical material is brought to supervision sessions by students Reflected on in the supervision Reflected on by the supervisor afterwards Journaling to help reflection

Using small group work to integrate the T/P Gap The theory practice gap can sometimes feel like a fact of nursing life; it exists but of course each of us reproduces it in our teaching (as I have show) and in our practice (as the material described here shows).

Using small group work to integrate the T/P Gap (cont’d.) It is possible to integrate theory and practice for our students and ourselves if we reflect and recognise the split and projection by working psychodynamically. By integrating theory and practice internally, it may be possible to integrate at the structural level also.

Conclusions Of course, such work needs training and an acceptance that working with feelings is firstly, possible and secondly, desirable; I say this as resistance to participating in small groups has been well described in the literature (Ashburner et al 2004;Fabricius 1995;Gilmartin 2008).

12 Conclusions (cont’d.) Arranging meetings once in placement –Large cohorts means groups divided and personal tutor groups not part of same curriculum group –Geography –Financial –Resistance Less with students than trained staff