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Published byAndre Popwell Modified over 9 years ago
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Increased demand and uncertainty Changes to job/employment security Service impacts Personal impacts Trust boards urged to act on staff wellbeing (HSJ, 28 – 11 -12) Trust boards urged to act on staff wellbeing Professional role shift to broader roles: Supervision, leadership, consultancy
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Clinical task is to support/restore well- being in others (individual, groups, families, teams) Restorative role in supervision (Inskipp & Proctor, 1993) Focus on well-being of supervisee in order to support and care for others Supervisor’s well-being and support is also important
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Complexity of workload Size of caseloads Understaffing Job insecurity Lack of supportive manager Poor role clarity Lack of social support (Burrows & McGrath 2000, Gardner & O’Driscoll, 2007)
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Social support Autonomy Feedback Good supervisory relationship (SR) (Bakker, et al 2005) Self-awareness/monitoring Preserving a balance between personal/professional life (Coster et al 97)
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Supportive functions of supervision Managing workload, balance Space to reflect, self-monitor Regular, balanced feedback integral Shown to buffer stress (Bakker, et al 2005) High-quality SR (poor SRs have detrimental effect)
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The SR is crucial to effective supervision Not all SRs are effective Poor SRs can be damaging (Ladany, 2011) Limited research into what contributes to effective SRs
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6 pieces of major research on the quality of the SR Beinart (2002) – mixed methodology - supervisees Palomo (2004) – quantitative study - Supervisory Relationship Questionnaire (SRQ)- supervisees Frost (2004) – Longitudinal IPA study – supervisors and supervisees Clohessy (2008) – Grounded Theory study – supervisors Pearce (2010) – quantitative study – Supervisory Relationship Measure (SRM) – supervisors Borsay (2012) – qualitative study –supervisees attempts to manage problems in the SR 8
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Core qualities of effective SRs: › boundaried & safe › supportive › respectful › invested/committed › open & trusting › collaborative › sensitive to supervisee needs › educative/evaluative › Influenced by context 9
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Importance of establishing a safe base Influence of context › Individual characteristics of supervisee/supervisor (personal stressors, cultural characteristics) › Team/service (contributions to/demands/constraints) 10
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Supervisor investment in supervision & in the supervisee Supervisee openness to learning & development Flow of supervision (virtuous cycle) 11
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To build resilience (capacity to withstand stresses and demands) in self and others Linked to job satisfaction, performance, motivation, social competence A good SR supports development of skills to meet challenges of changing environments (Rothman 2004) Essential to protect clinical supervision and promote its value in enhancing staff well-being
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