Hodges' Model: Welcome to the QUAD: ImROC: Briefing Paper 24 - Recovering Adult Acute Psychiatric Inpatient Wards

Hodges' model is a conceptual framework to support reflection and critical thinking. Situated, the model can help integrate all disciplines (academic and professional). Amid news items, are posts that illustrate the scope and application of the model. A bibliography and A4 template are provided in the sidebar. Welcome to the QUAD ...

Sunday, February 04, 2024

ImROC: Briefing Paper 24 - Recovering Adult Acute Psychiatric Inpatient Wards

"Explanation, compassion and a holistic understanding of the person’s situation are critical (Royal College of Psychiatrists, 2017)." p.39.
(my emphasis)

"It requires practitioners to critically reflect on their values, beliefs, and biases and actively work to reduce as far as is possible the oppressive systems and practices within inpatient wards." p.15.

What models / frameworks for/of care do practitioners use? 

What models invite - are primed for:

  • critical reflection (individually, or as a group, p.56)?
  • recognition of oppressive situations, phenomena, ethical dilemmas?
  • citizenship - citizenry (p.18)?
  • deciding whether it is a journey, or not?
  • a possible role in burnout (p.54) mitigation?
  • reflection, development, and restoration (p.56)?
  • are all models situated?


Individual

   |
      INTERPERSONAL    :     SCIENCES               
HUMANISTIC  --------------------------------------  MECHANISTIC      
 SOCIOLOGY  :   POLITICAL 
|
Group

neurotypical
neurodivergent/autistic


[Yes.] Can what has been stressed for decades - compassion, listening, validating, empathy, rapport, the therapeutic alliance, seeing the person ... in mental health nurse education, theory and practice, be strengthened through review of skill-mix, and workforce? Whilst, in-turn, being sensitive to the pressures on mental health RNs, as cohorts of students, seek to assure their learning experiences; and as qualified nurses old and new seek to protect their professional identity, values, standards, and ethics - responsive to the demands of the 21st century.


close to home

transport

physical environment:
noise, smells, space, decor, light..

While (originally?) aimed at elective in-patient care, the mantra of discharge planning begins upon admission (even before) has reached mental health services and community mental health teams. Even as the reduced number of beds (perversely) provides ideal conditions, this should (must) not mean the 'game' becomes 'pass the parcel', 'musical chairs' - the person lost in the many processes.


Hell is other people -
as the saying goes ...


When the therapeutic value and potential of relationships are recognised, the need for a tool to identify and critique what is relational is even more critical. Not just to realise what has long-been psycho-social, but the 'alt-def' of person-centred. This demands simultaneity in assurance. We contrast the humanistic with the mechanistic - service-centred.

Let's not forget the
need for integrated** care.

See community/society
as the safety net it can be.


So DO NOT:
raise a patient's / family's expectations (p.49) only to let them down.

least restrictive

Let's not re-learn the lessons of
history, but if you insist...?^

One mention of (social)
'determinants' (p.37)!
Please take a look out of the [safety] window; and beyond the APPG Committee room...

 Wither ambition, courage in policy - to discover what is evidence-based (the lesson since 5th July 1948)?

In-patient care is too late.*

For sustainable health services and systems we need to act sooner, educate, to try to address all the determinants.

Please remember what 'you' (through policy..) have done to the patient as a concept: patiency.

<- Recovery carries political heft. 



Please remember what 'you' (through policy..) have done to the patient as a concept: patiency. Recovery carries political heft. No one wants to create, foster, instill dependency, but (emotional labour) care delivery demands space and time: being with, or at least available.

*If this was the guiding principle for all disciplines, stakeholders, policymakers, researchers could this:
  • place emphasis (again) on prevention; staying well - relapse prevention;
  • help generate alternate modalities for therapy / care;
  • help concentrate services to deliver person-centred, recovery and trauma informed in-patient experiences - where therapeutic outcomes are  at least feasible/possible;
  • begin from literacy-first stance: take up educational focus in schools - PSHE, work-place;
  • health career - life chances?

**physical-mental, care context, philosophy of care - trauma - recovery - strengths, funding, disciplines, pastoral, health - social care - housing ...

^Dept. of Health. Caring for people: the CPA for people with a mental illness referred to specialist mental health services. London: 1990
Joint Health/Social Services Circular  C(90)23/LASSL(90)11

Rachel Perkins, Sharon Gibbard, Yasmin Blackwood, Simon Barnitt, Lowri Smith, Anna Cheetham, Poppy Repper, Anne Rackham, Ben Dorey, Jo Luck, Julie Repper. Recovering Adult Acute Psychiatric Inpatient Wards: Creating Recovery-Focused, Trauma-Informed and Neuro-Inclusive Culture, Relationships and Practice. ImROC. Briefing Paper 24. 2024.


See also:

ImROC (2023) Thinking about Recovery Together

ImROC (2023a) Team Recovery Implementation Plan for Acute Inpatient Wards

Wand, T. (2024), We have to cancel psychiatric nursing and forge a new way forward. Int J Mental Health Nurs. https://doi.org/10.1111/inm.13301

Warrender, D., Connell, C., Jones, E., Monteux, S., Colwell, L., Laker, C. et al. (2024) Mental health deserves better: Resisting the dilution of specialist pre-registration mental health nurse education in the United Kingdom. International Journal of Mental Health Nursing, 33, 202–212. Available from: https://doi.org/10.1111/inm.13236

Plus:
Jones P. (2014) Using a conceptual framework to explore the dimensions of recovery and their relationship to service user choice and self-determination. International Journal of Person Centered Medicine. Vol 3, No 4, (2013) pp.305-311.