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Supervision  Consultants in their first year  The transfer to consultancy  Management Skill  I want them to be able to supervise others  I want them.

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Presentation on theme: "Supervision  Consultants in their first year  The transfer to consultancy  Management Skill  I want them to be able to supervise others  I want them."— Presentation transcript:

1 Supervision  Consultants in their first year  The transfer to consultancy  Management Skill  I want them to be able to supervise others  I want them to stay in the service  Identification of gaps  Not paid; no time allocation  Mentoring

2 Supervision  Professional Hierarchical  Cross professional for special purposes or on special request  Peer group (cross team)  Personal Appraisal (Service based)

3 On Prevention

4 Primary Prevention Evidence  Durlak & Wells in 1997 reviewed 1200 primary prevention programs of which 77 met a stringent 54 standards for meta-analysis.  Average effect size was between 0.2 and 0.9  Better than most of the work on heart disease  Better than results from antidepressant studies  At least as good as composite results for MST

5 Universal Work

6 EVIDENCE INFANCY Improved maternal diet and reduced smoking during pregnancy led to fewer pre-term deliveries, higher birth weight babies and less child abuse Olds et al 1988

7 1958 British Cohort health at age 33 Significant Latent Factors (Early life 0-7 yrs)  Birth weight and height age 7 (as ratio of adult height)  Whether read to.  Social & emotional status age 7 (assessed by school teachers, how well they adjusted to school) Source: Clyde Hertzman

8 ‘Sensitive periods’ in early brain development Binocular vision 01237654 High Low Years Habitual ways of responding Language Emotional control Symbol Peer social skills Relative quantity Central auditory system

9

10 Breakfast and Annual Changes in Test Scores -0.2 0.6 1.4 2.2 0.7 1.1 1.5 1.9 2.4 0.5 1.0 1.5 2.0 2.5 ReadingLanguageMathematics Percent who ate breakfast -10 -5 0 5 10 Change in SAT-9 (NPR) 485562697648556269764855626976 Source: California Healthy Kids Survey & STAR data files.

11 EVIDENCE SCHOOL AGE CHILDREN Increased resilience and connectedness to the school led to 50 point reduction in suicidal thinking Resnick, Blum et al, 1997 Because of the trajectory from thinking through planning to attempts, we can assume this reduction will have long term benefit

12 Selective Work

13 COPMI Qualitative Studies  “Family-centered, strengths-based approaches were identified across program directors as critical to intervention success.” Hinden, Nicholson et al, Uni Massachusetts, 2006

14 Hinden et al., 2002 (Child Outcomes)  Child outcomes included achieving developmental milestones, enhanced school readiness, improved child behavior and emotional adjustment, and improved school attendance.  For those programs engaged in political advocacy and social marketing, increased public awareness, decreased stigma, and increased funding opportunities reflected positive outcomes.

15 PATS Evaluation, 2005  Structured questionnaire follow-up study over 3 years  PATS participants reported significant reductions in depressive symptoms (60% pre- intervention, 38% 12 months later), risk of homelessness (44% pre-intervention, 17% 12 months later) and stigma (30% pre- intervention, 15% 12 months later) after their involvement in the program. http://www.rch.org.au/emplibrary/pats/PATS_FinalEvaluationReport_Dec 2005.pdf

16 Indicated Work

17 MST: Meta-Analysis of Programs  8 programs met criteria  At follow up:  fewer arrests  less time in institutions  lower self reported delinquency  No differences for behaviour, parental mental health, family functioning and relationships, risk of incarceration, and peer relationships. Bruce, J., 2002. Evidence Based Mental Health. 5:4.

18 MST  Costs may be up to $30,000 per family  RESULTS  A number of randomised controlled trials with chronic juvenile offenders  Reduces re-arrest by 25 - 70%  Reduces out-of-home placement by 47 - 64% in long-term follow-up Juvenile Forensic Evaluation Resource Centre, 2000

19 Can Trajectories be Averted? Longitudinal study of 909 students up to 17 years of age:  More types of trajectories than expected  < 6% followed trajectory of chronic antisocial behaviour  Disruptive preschool children are at higher risk of following trajectories of frequent antisocial behaviour  Intensive intervention between 7- 9 yrs of (parent training, social skills training), changed long term developmental trajectories of physical aggression, vandalism, and theft for disruptive kindergarten boys in low socio-economic areas. Lacourse et al., 2002

20 Thinking through to the Future

21 So what should we be thinking about?  It is likely that Australia will have to confront the economic realities, and this may make social exclusion worse  Despite the percentage reduction overall in young people over the next 20 years, more of them may react to stress with mental health problems  We need to consider every scrap of evidence that allows us to put in place preventive strategies along the trajectory of young life  We need to ‘proof’ our children against stress

22  We do need to grab as much as we can of the available new monies for mental health services.  However, the increased demands are at this time likely to drown services capacity  We must collaborate to present to Bureaucracies what is most likely to work in prevention  A major part of this may be to revisit the first 3 years of a child’s life and promote the primary relationships - perhaps through such simple things as reading. So what should we be thinking about?

23 A Couple of Elegant Tiered Partnerships

24 Bayside Ei Program Universal Program 20 weeks (2 terms) of in school, class teacher managed, AUSSIE OPTIMISM Program based on an Australianisation of the work of Seligman (Optimistic Child), and his team - Jaycox, Gillham et al. Selective Program IF a young person scores over 30 on the CES-D (>2SD greater than mean) and the SDQ also scores over 20, THEN We discuss with school personnel and further assessment occurs with the MINI Kid and either set up a program in the school or refer direct to CYMHS

25 CadetLiFe Australian Defence Force Cadets (n=22,000)  UNIVERSAL CD based program using elements adapted from LiFe, the national MHPPEi documents, Aussie Optimism, Mind Matters, and available research  A ‘Pathways to Care’ program acknowledging national resources (eg Kid’s Helpline, Reach Out) and possible local service access.  Access to Reach Out On Line (ROC!)

26 USAF Suicides by year

27 A Changed World

28 Youth Suicides 1968-2005

29 Mobile Phone Ownership (Australian Bureau of Statistics, 2006)

30 Mobile Phone Ownership in Young People (Roy Morgan Research 2006)

31 Battling the forces of Darkness Consumerism creates Public health challenges for us

32 The Centre for MHPPEi

33 Possibilities for the Centre  Placement at a Major Health Centre (eg RBH) (adv. Infrastructure)  Placement in the Community (eg Nundah) (adv. Links with NGOs and Community)  Placement across Institutions (ie Uni plus Health Service) (adv. ?Kudos plus academic input)


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