| Literature DB >> 30326878 |
Yvonne F Awenat1,2,3, Sarah Peters4,5,6, Patricia A Gooding4,5,6, Daniel Pratt4,5,7, Emma Shaw-Núñez4,7, Kamelia Harris4, Gillian Haddock4,5,7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Suicide is a global problem and suicidal behavior is common in acute psychiatric wards. Inpatient suicides regularly occur with 10.4/100,000 such deaths recorded in the UK in 2016. Inpatient suicides are potentially the most avoidable of all suicides as inpatients have 24-h staff contact. Current inpatient treatment prioritizes maintenance of physical safety by observation, medication and general supportive measures, however efficacious and effective specific treatments are lacking. Psychological treatments have a growing evidence base for suicide prevention yet provision of inpatient therapy is uncommon. The present qualitative study aimed to understand the patient acceptability issues by investigating suicidal inpatients views and expectations of a novel suicide-focussed cognitive behavioural psychological therapy which was nested alongside a pilot clinical trial of the intervention.Entities:
Keywords: Implementation; Psychiatric inpatients; Psychological therapy; Qualitative; Suicide prevention; User-views
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30326878 PMCID: PMC6192165 DOI: 10.1186/s12888-018-1921-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Psychiatry ISSN: 1471-244X Impact factor: 3.630
Participant Socio-demographic Information
| Ppt. | Reason for admission | Length of stay on ward in days | Admissions in last 12 months | Diagnosis | Previous psychological therapy |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | Hearing voices | 21 | 1 | SCZ4 | No |
| 2. | Overdose | 21 | 1 | U | Yes |
| 3. | U | 112 | u | MDD2 | No |
| 4. | Sectioned | 336 | u | Alcoholism | No |
| 5. | Breakdown; overdose | 10 | 2 | U | Yes |
| 6. | Repeated overdoses | 49 | 1 | Emotionally unstable PD1 | No |
| 7. | Overdose (Sectioned) | u | u | Anxiety | Yes |
| 8. | U | u | u | U | No |
| 9. | Manic / high; overdose | 38 | u | Bipolar / PD1 | Yes |
| 10. | Hearing voices | 21 | 1 | Voices / SCZ4 | No |
| 11. | Suicidal | 17 | 1 | U | No |
| 12. | U | 14 | 1 | Bipolar / PD1 | No |
| 13. | U | 84 | 2 | SCZ4 | No |
| 14. | Suicidal | 21 | 0 | Depression | No |
| 15. | Stopped clozapine | 7 | 0 | SCZ4 | No |
| 16. | Suicidal | 10 | 0 | U | No |
| 17. | Self-harm | 672 | u | PTSD2 / Emotionally unstable PD1 | No |
| 18. | Feeling down | 2 | 0 | Depression | No |
| 19. | Mental breakdown | 7 | 0 | U | No |
| 20. | Hearing voices | 12 | 3 | U | No |
Abbreviations: Gender M Male, F Female, PD Personality Disorder; PTSD Post Traumatic Stress Disorder, MDD Major Depression Disorder3, SCZ Schizophrenia 4, U data unavailable
Themes and Sub-themes
| Theme 1: A Therapy that ‘works’ | Theme 2: Concerns about inpatient suicide -focused therapy |
|---|---|
| Past experiences shaped expectations | A secure therapeutic relationship |
| Suicidality-specific goals | Potential for harm |
| Mechanisms: how suicide-focussed therapy works | Ending therapy |
User-informed conceptual model of in-patient suicide-focused psychological therapy [52]
| Stage of therapy | Client’s Need | Supporting data | Therapeutic approach |
|---|---|---|---|
| Immediate | Feel safe. |
| Explore potential barriers to therapy and if necessary defuse fears of talking about suicide. |
| Development of strong therapeutic relationship. | Create a safe environment conducive to building secure, ‘containing’ therapeutic relationship. | ||
| Catharsis / Relief from distress. |
| Facilitate client to share experiences of suicidal ideation and behaviour by demonstrating non-judgement and empathy. | |
| Tolerating intense negative emotions / suicidal thoughts and prevention of suicidal behaviour. |
| Guide development and practice of distress tolerance skills / techniques to overcome emotional avoidance and emotional dysregulation. | |
| Intermediate | Make sense of suicidal thoughts and behaviour. |
| Collaborative development of individualised formulation. |
| Self-understanding and self-management of emotions and cognitions. |
| Provide exit points from suicidal thoughts and cognitions by: | |
| Regain personal independence, and social confidence / functioning. |
| Behavioural activation and activity scheduling. | |
| Longer term | Reclaim personhood and positive self-identity. |
| Develop stronger recognition of own values and hopes for the future. |
| Re-establishment / improvement of close relationships. | Discuss possibility of information sharing with and/or involvement of family in therapy and longer-term suicide prevention plans. |
Recommendations for research and practice of suicide-focused psychological therapy
| In-patients’ views | Implications for suicide-focused therapy | Recommendations for therapist |
|---|---|---|
| Past negative experiences of therapy | Unsatisfactory previous experience of therapy may prevent uptake of suicide-focused therapy. | Enquire about and consider the impact of any past experiences of therapy. |
| Confusion / lack of understanding of aims and functions of psychological therapy | Potential for disappointment if client’s expectations of therapy cannot be met. | Discuss and mutually agree expectations including client’s expectations of own and therapist’s role, and therapist’s expectations of client’s role. |
| Concerns about trust and confidentiality of information disclosed in therapy | Lack of trust and confidence in confidentiality may impact on continued uptake and engagement. | Allow time for trust to develop recognising the particular challenges for inpatients who may be involuntarily detained. |
| Fear or unwillingness to talk about suicide | Willingness to discuss suicide is essential for suicide-focused therapy. | Important to give full information about the need to talk about suicide to enable informed consent. |
| Concerns about the ending of therapy | Anxiety about possibility of abrupt ending of sessions may affect ability to engage in therapy. | Involve client in discussions about preferences for ending of therapy. |