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EDITORIAL
Adrian Ward
ABSTRACT: No abstract.
RESEARCH
Setting up new services: How service users were involved in planning therapeutic community day programmes
Barbara Rawlings
ABSTRACT: This paper describes how service users with personality disorders helped to plan therapeutic community day programmes in Leeds, Liverpool and Manchester The planning for the three programmes was initiated and led by Webb House, a residential therapeutic community, and carried out in partnership with local statutory and voluntary groups. The paper describes how, in each location, service users had diferent degrees of participation in planning, and describes how this participation worked. It goes on to look at three problems which arose in the course of this planning method: finding appropriate service users to recruit, assessing and managing the emotional risk for service users who became involved in the planning enterprise, and creating a ‘quasi-staff’ role for ex-therapeutic community members who joined the planning groups and the programmes. The paper concludes that even though the problems described were largely anticipated, it was only when they occurred that their distinct character and significance became apparent.
A pilot evaluation of a therapeutic community for adolescent male sexual abusers
Gwyneth Boswell and Peter Wedge
ABSTRACT: McGregor Hall (a pseudonym) is a Voluntary Children’s Home registered with the Department of Health. It was founded nearly forty years ago and has operated as a therapeutic community for over thirty of those years. Having always catered for particularly damaged and challenging young men, the majority of whom had failed in previous care or custodial settings, the staff and trustees took the decision, in the early 1990s, to specialise exclusively in known male perpetrators of sexual abuse in late adolescence – the group that no-one else wanted. They believed that their work was effective but, in 1998, decided to seek hard evidence of this belief by commissioning a pilot research investigation.
This paper outlines the content and outcome of the research into McGregor Hal Vs programme of work and focuses, in particular; on the views of ex-residents whose growth and relapse prevention it promotes. Set against a comparison group of those who were referred, but did not become resident, re-conviction rates of both sexual and non-sexual offending had been considerably reduced. The ex-residents were almost unanimously positive about their time at McGregor Hall and the coping techniques with which it had furnished them.
WINDSOR 2002
Decision making in therapeutic communities
Enrico Pedriali and Edoardo Razzini
ABSTRACT: Decision-making is a very critical aspect of the community app roach under most circumstances. Factors influencing decision-making can be quite different; sometimes they can be easily detected, sometimes they are more difficult to recognise due to their connection with unconscious conflicting aspects, individually or within the group or the organisation.
Decision-making means selecting, establishing, leading to, defining or solving problems. Each of these actions includes one acting part and another part that receives, shares, undergoes, or opposes decisions, or is merely present.
The different ways of decision-making in institutions are, however, a direct and visible expression of the working style, which creates important dynamics among the structure members.
There is a variety of possibilities ranging from lack of decision-making ability to the anarchy where nobody (or everybody) takes a decision, to assembly-oriented decision-making, to authoritative behaviour and many other intermediate variants. Whatever the theoretical reference model may be, decision-making can be considered, both for operators and for patients, as a gradual passage leading from a dependence status to an autonomy position. Under this aspect, the structure aiming at being called a ‘therapeutic community” represents a reality where both operators and patients are stimulated to develop and improve their individual decision-making abilities.
Enjoying myths in psychotherapy
Natassa Karapostoli, Eleftheria Assimina, Diamando Dogramatzi, Christina Terlidou and Eleni Morarou
ABSTRACT: Several kinds of art have been used as therapeutic means in different settings and especially within therapeutic communities. The Mythology Group is, as far as we know, an original group which started in January 1985, in the context of the Daily Psychotherapeutic Community of the OPC. In this specific group we approach mythology not through reason nor interpretations, but through pure enjoyment, following the belief that every myth has a basic element of poetry and creative fantasy Myth is by nature something pleasant, fascinating and hilarious, even when it is tragic. It has converted into speech the unexpressed emotions of the individual, the group and the people. Myths can serve as a basis or connecting link to group procedure and offer an additional means of communication, especially for patients who have difficulty in expressing directly their deepest emotions, fears and thoughts to others. Narrating myths is by nature a communicative procedure which offers a link between reason and fantasy and reconciles the contradictions of human nature.
MEMOIR
Summing up: A day with Maxwell Jones
Dennie Briggs
ABSTRACT: Maxwell Jones was instrumental in amplifying his practice of democratic therapeutic communities to community mental health on a broad scale, beginning in the US in the early 1960s and then applying it to a rural setting in Scotland. Following his retirement he was offered an opportunity to widen his ideas as an ecological approach to a relatively cloistered environment. When he met the local opposition he wasn’t able to implement his ideas since they could not be construed as within the confines of the governmental funding agency. In this conversation he looks back at his work in community mental health with its broader social and political implications.
Book reviews
Journal of School violence. Vol.1, Edited by Edwin R Gerier, Jr
Reviewed by Lorraine O’Sullivan
The anthropology of Child and Youth Care work, by Rivika A Eisikovits
Reviewed by Barbara Rawlings
Handbook of counseling (2nd Ed.), by Stephen Palmer and Gladena McMahon
Reviewed by Sarah Birch
EDITORIAL
John Gale
ABSTRACT: No abstract.
SOCIAL ECOLOGY
Private spaces, open spaces and asylum
Bill McGowan
ABSTRACT: This paper addresses the theme of Social Ecology and Mental Health by attempting to bring together a range of concepts and ideas from health, social and urban geography, social ecology urban sociology, architecture, psychoanalysis, and public health.
The concept of ‘social space’ is used as an organising framework to illuminate the ways in which the built environment, and the wider social, economic and political structures may support or inhibit the ‘expressive’ function of asylum and the implications of this for our health and social wellbeing in our everyday lives in western urban cities. Concepts drawn from psychoanalytic literature are used to highlight the relationship between the internal world of the individual and the external environment through a discussion of the spatial anti psychological significance of a range of public amenities i.e. housing, open green spaces, transport systems etc.
The work of Anthony Giddens is used to set this discussion within a wider sociological context and a number of his ideas are used to locate and identify the therapeutic community as an important health promoting ‘locale ‘within the context of the wider neighbourhood locality. A plea is made for the recognition and advancement of the therapeutic community as an important health promoting intervention within the field of public health.
HORTICULTURE AND PSYCHOTHERAPY
The healing fields
Jenny Grut
ABSTRACT: This paper was presented at CHT’s annual conference, at the Royal College of Psychiatrists in 2001. The author is a psychotherapist who coordinates the work of the National Growth Project set up by the Medical Foundation for the Care of Victims of Torture. It is a unique project which works with refugees and asylum seekers in a long term rehabilitation programme using a combination of horticulture and psychotherapy on two allotment sites and in a remembrance garden. Here the author describes her work with 30 torture survivors and their families in what one client has called ‘hospital with a blue sky.’
ARCHITECTURE AND PSYCHOTHERAPY
Finding a place for our soul: working in participatory design
Teresa Howard
ABSTRACT: This paper describes a theoretical perspective and example of practice, developed by the author as a result of working in two professions concurrently; one dealing with the outer physical world: architecture and the other with the inner emotional world: psychotherapy Two short case studies are used as examples to demonstrate how working with unconscious modes of communication enables a more complete response to the problem of designing a more soulful environment; one that begins to meet some of our most difficult to express, inner needs.
Unconscious messages coming from the deepest recesses of our soul are always present but they usually get ignored, leading to impoverished communication and impoverished design solutions. Taking account of this delicate relationship leads to a form of participatory design that makes it possible for the end user to feel heard and involved. Consequently, an upward spiral from apathy to creative involvement is generated which significantly changes what is built, and how it is used and viewed.
PHILOSOPHICAL PERSPECTIVES ON NATURE
The natural environment as an element in a therapeutic community treatment programme
John Gale
ABSTRACT: This paper the author outlines the ambiguous relationship which man has with the natural world, as well as some of the particular ways in which psychotic clients experience nature. He explains the philosophical basis for the way CHT works with nature, ddrawing on Heidegger an dLacon. Direct experience of the natural environment is built into the therapeutic programme, as is time for talking and thinking about the connection and alienation which we experience in relation to the earth. Together with an attentive reflection, provoked by the silence found in the countryside, these elements in the therapeutic treatment programme are aimed at helping clients gain greater self understanding, a sense of belonging and an ability to enjoy the world around them.
CASE STUDY: SUMMER CAMP
A report on a therapeutic summer camp for residents of mixed diagnosis from four therapeutic households run by Community Housing and Therapy
Terry White, Kate Brown and Nicholas Wolff
ABSTRACT: This paper is an account of a camp run for clients with a mixture of psychiatric diagnosis, which was held last summer. Initially inspired by research by a team of Polish psychiatrists, on a community programme for in-patients diagnosis with schizophrenia, a group of staff and clients set a theoretical basis for the project and planned a clinical framework on which the camp was run. There were excursions into the countryside and communal activities focused on cooking around a campfire. It is CHT’s aim to develop these five-day camps as an extension of its existing therapeutic programmes. Clients and therapists will be able to connect with the natural environment as part of a team, working on basic tasks together. It is hoped that will give them an experience of being part of community-forming and highlight the ambiguous character of their relation to the natural world.
ARCHIVE ARTICLES: Richard Crocket (1972, 1973)
Introduction
Craig Fees
Notes on the architectural requirements of the therapeutic community approach to psychiatry in district general hospitals
Richard Crocket
Therapeutic community adaptation of standard plans for district general hospital psychiatric units
Richard Crocket
EDITORIAL
Adrian Ward
ABSTRACT: No abstract.
INTERVIEW: Maxwell Jones, Harold Bridger, Dennie Briggs and the ‘two’ therapeutic communities: an interview with Juan Parés y Plans (Corelli) about the development of the Centro Italiano di Solidarietà (CeIS) di Roma
Stijn Vandevelde and Eric Broekaert
ABSTRACT: There has always been a certain distinction between European democratic milieu-oriented psychoanalytical therapeutic communities (TCs) and American hierarchical drug-free concept TCs. However, several authors, such as Maxwell Jones, have tried to build bridges between the two types of TC. During the last years of his life (1986- 1990), Maxwell Jones worked as a consultant for the Centro Italiano di Solidariedtj (CeIS) in Rome, which was developed as a concept TC for substance abusers. Also Harold Bridger who took part in the Second Northfield Experiment at Hollymoor Hospital (1944) and Dennie Briggs, who developed some pioneering therapeutic communities in prison settings (initiated in the 1950s), have had an influence on the development of the Centro Italiano di Solidarietià. This article presents the most striking excerpts of an interview with Juan Paris y Plans (Corelli), the vice-president of CeIS, focusing on how a democratic TC ‘met’ with a hierarchical one. The authors refer to the importance of the meeting between the two communities for the further evolution of the European concept-based TC (see Broekaert et al, 1999).
SERVICE DEVELOPMENT: Beyond tokenism in service user involvement: lessons from a democratic therapeutic community replication project
Susan Ormrod and Kingsley Norton
ABSTRACT: Service user involvement (UI) is now a key feature of health care planning and delivery of services. What this now means in practice varies widely. Even in democratic therapeutic communities (DTCs), involvement at service development level seldom moves beyond tokenism. We discuss an approach to the service development of Henderson Hospital DTC that is rooted in a commitment to service user involvement (UI), showing how the approach to service development emerged, and shifted, from protected to more participatory forms of UI, as the project proceeded. We consider these aspects in the light of Winnicott’s ideas of transitional phenomena and paradox.
Who’s in charge here? Projective Processes, of course!
Joseph Berke
ABSTRACT: No abstract.
RESEARCH: Users views of therapeutic community treatment: A satisfaction survey at the Cassel Hospital
Marco Chiesa, Pamela Pringle and Carla Drahorad
ABSTRACT: In recent years the notion of greater users’ involvement in health service planning and provision has been at the root of several governmental initiatives. Surprisingly very little has been published concerning therapeutic community users’ views about, and satisfaction with treatment. In this paper we explore the experience of 85 patients through the systematic survey of their views following their inpatient stay at the Cassel Hospital. Data was examined through a separate quantitative and qualitative approach. The main results show that although on the whole patients are satisfied with the treatment received, their negative experiences and criticisms highlighted important deficiencies in specific aspects of the treatment programme in the areas of the transitional phases of treatment (admission and discharge), nursing organisation and adequate provision of aftercare. These issues may be usefully addressed as part of the ongoing process of improving the services provided to future generations of patients.
Six month follow-up of anxiety and depression in polysubstance misusers undergoing treatment in a therapeutic community
Marian Small and Sara Lewis
ABSTRACT: One hundred residents undergoing treatment for severe drug and/or alcohol addiction were asked to complete the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale at the time of admission. Follow-up was obtained from sixty-eight residents six months later. The group average anxiety scores on admission and at follow-up were 11.5 and 7.3 respectively and, for depression, were 7.1 on admission and 3.4 at follow-up. The percentage with moderate or severe anxiety on admission was 53%, decreasing after six months to 12%. For depression, 19% were classified as moderately or severely depressed at admission but at six months this figure had fallen to zero. The results indicate significant improvement in both variables over time but also reveal that anxiety continued to remain high for a small number of subjects.
EDITORIAL
Adrian Ward
ABSTRACT: No abstract.
LEADERSHIP
Who’s in charge here? – Managing the mess
John Diamond
ABSTRACT: This paper was written for the annual conference of the Association of Therapeutic Communities (ATC) held at Windsor in September 2002. The title of the conference was ‘Who’s in charge here’. This paper is the author’s interpretation of that conference title and as such, uses examples of situations that the author found himself managing in his first year as Director of the Mulberry Bush School, a therapeutic school and member of the Charterhouse Group of Therapeutic Communities, an organization which promotes and supports therapeutic work with children and adolescents.
Leadership in a therapeutic environment: ‘What a long, strange trip it is’
Richard Rollinson
ABSTRACT: No abstract.
RESEARCH
Clinical effectiveness of an accurate psychiatric day hospital run on therapeutic community lines
Helena A. Crockford, Joan Brunton and Tammy E. Surgenor
ABSTRACT: Day hospitals have been a widespread constituent of adult mental health services. However they have often run without clearly defined service models, and rarely been systematically studied. This naturalistic study explored the clinical effectiveness of a day hospital for acute psychiatric patients run on therapeutic community lines.
Outcome data was collected as part of routine service delivery so measurement was restricted by pragmatic considerations. Patients completed the BSI and IIP-32 questionnaires. Staff rated health and social functioning on the Health of the Nation Outcome Scales (HoNOS). The measures were completed at admission, mid-treatment, discharge and follow-up.
Results are presented for patients who were admitted and had a planned discharge within a two year period (N=56). Statistically significant improvement between admission and discharge was found on all measures. Clinical significance was established, using a modification of the Jacobson and Truax (1991) method and by comparison with other studies. Methodological constraints and key features of the service model are discussed.
Is frequency of absences from a daytime therapeutic community related to the seniority of the current members? An investigation of containment and stability in therapeutic communities.
Steve Pearce
ABSTRACT: Objective: The culture of therapeutic communities is carried to a great extent by the more senior patient-members. This study was designed to determine whether the seniority of current patient-members of a therapeutic community affected the functioning of the community, as measured by frequency of absences.
Method.’ Admission and discharge data for 1999 at a daytime therapeutic community were analysed and compared with member absences. The correlation between average duration of treatment for all members at any time point (average seniority) and the number of non-planned absences was calculated.
Results.’ There was no significant correlation (at the 0.01 level, 2-tailed) between member absences and the average seniority of current members. Absences peaked in December and August.
Conclusions: The seniority of current members did not have a detectable effect on member absences in this sample.
TRAINING
Staff training in Greek Therapeutic Communities for drug addicts: an experiential approach
Anna Tsiboukli and Kim Wolff
ABSTRACT: Training staff to combat drug use is not an easy task given the range of different treatment models and professionals in this field. Treatment models range from pharmacotherapies through outpatient approaches to drug-free self-help groups and therapeutic communities. Staff working in Greek therapeutic communities for drug addicts constitute a mixed group, ranging from some who have already acquired a professional identity through university studies to others being ex-addicts who base their work mainly on a personal treatment experience. This present paper is focused around the experiential approach to training programmes in the drug addiction field. Consideration is given to the origins in a generic TC with special reference made to the therapeutic communities movement in the Greek context. The development and history of training within hierarchical TCs will be explored and the tensions between the professional staff group and the ex-addict staff group will be discussed. The paper suggests that the improvement of existing services and the development of better facilities for drug addicts and their families require greater emphasis and resource allocation for staff training.
Book reviews
Dave Mearns and Brian Thorne. Person-Centered Therapy Today: New Frontiers in Theory and Practice
Reviewed by Grigoris Mouladoudis
Nick Luxmoore. Listening to young people in school, youth work and counseling
Reviewed by Grigoris Mouladoudis
Dave Mearns and Brian Thorne. Person centered counseling in action, (2nd Ed.)
Reviewed by Grigoris Mouladoudis
MAXWELL JONES MEMORIAL LECTURES
The System Bites Back: Politics, Parallel Process, and the Notion of Change
Sandra L Bloom (2002)
ABSTRACT: In this paper the author weaves together her personal experiences of creating a trauma-sensitive therapeutic milieu based on therapeutic community principles with the currents of social, political and economic tides that have exerted influence over and interacted with the mental health service delivery system of the US over the past four decades. She uses chaos theory and the insights of Maxwell Jones as a background for illuminating and explaining some of these influences as they affected the life and work of her colleagues and herself.
Therapeutic Communities Behind Bars: Treatment and Consent
Mark Morris (2003)
ABSTRACT: This paper summarises the arguments proposed during the 2003 Maxwell Jones Memorial Lecture. It introduces Grendon Prison as a secure therapeutic community based treatment facility, then explores a series of ethical themes that emerge in the therapeutic work that are brought into sharper focus in a forensic setting. These include the trauma of insight; the paradox relating to offence disclosure and resultant risk assessment; the notion that a therapeutic community can be conceived of as a total institution; the effect of deconstructing psychopathic defences; and the question of how meaningful consent is for such psychodynamic treatment. The paper proposes a partial solution to these identified ethical dilemmas, arguing that the therapeutic work is virtuous on the dimensions of symptom relief, risk reduction and in its striving for truth. Secondly, it argues that, while there may be total institutional aspects to therapeutic community practice, it is one with virtuous values that inculcates these in its residents, and can be justified on these grounds.
Charismatic Ideas – Coming or Going?
Rex Haigh (2004)
ABSTRACT: Therapeutic communities are very complex systems of group dynamics. Only some of their operation is understandable rationally. This paper argues that the power of the treatment philosophy behind therapeutic communities (the ‘charismatic ideas’) is far more important than anyone, or several, powerful pioneers (the ‘charismatic leaders’). By giving examples from the author’s own career in therapeutic communities, it looks at what these ideas are and goes on to suggest that many ways in which the TC movement currently conducts itself are likely to do more harm than good to itself, and suggests that this would be particularly unfortunate as much of the TC treatment philosophy is currently at the leading edge of progressive mental health practice. It ends with suggestions for three actions which might help to prevent the marginalisation of the therapeutic community approach.
Does the Therapeutic Community Work? The Politics of Knowledge
Nick Manning (2005)
ABSTRACT: The therapeutic community idea has been attractive, and in equal measure unattractive, to colleagues and clients working in the fields of education, mental health and the addictions for different reasons. In recent years these reasons have been closely connected to the question of whether the therapeutic community works, and how evidence about its effectiveness has been received by the clinical and research community. However the nature and quality of this evidence has been disputed. In this paper the nature of evidence and the difficulties of establishing its acceptance are discussed with the help of a sociological view of scientific practice. A series of eight reflections are developed within the paper, which lead to a final series of difficult questions.
Response to Maxwell Jones Memorial Lecture 2005
Delivered by Professor Nick Manning
Nigel Eastman
ABSTRACT: No abstract.
OTHER PAPERS
The Addiction Therapeutic Communities for Psychiatric Disorders
George De Leon
ABSTRACT: This paper outlines what is known about the Addiction Therapeutic Community model modified for treating the dually diagnosed, i.e. those with both non-drug Axis 1 psychiatric disorders and an Axis 1 substance abuse disorder. The initial sections provide a brief overview of the background of the TC in psychiatry and substance abuse and of the main clinical and research findings relevant to the efficacy of the TC for substance abuse and psychological disorder. The subsequent sections present the perspective and approach of both the traditional Addiction TC and the modified Addiction TC model for the serious mentally ill chemical abusers (MICAs). The last two sections summarise research conducted on modified Addiction TCs for co-occurring disorders and some implications for the Psychiatric TC models and mental health in general.
Commissioning and the Future of Residential TCs – Lessons Learned from the Case of the Henderson Replication Project
Kingsley Norton
ABSTRACT: As with the hunting of some bird species, there are seasons during which residential therapeutic communities are considered ‘fair game’ by commissioners – at least that’s how it feels. The potential victims of such a cruel sport do not appreciate the perspective of their hunters. The latter view the matter as a legitimate ‘sport’, while the former cry ‘foul’ and fight, fly or limp off more or less seriously wounded.
The Henderson has been in the role of the ‘hunted’ on a number of occasions. While each occasion demands particular attention to the precise context – the current rationale or justification for this cruel sport – some similarities of response are common to all such threats and may generalise to other residential TCs that do not escape the predatory clutches of commissioners. Some examples relating to the Henderson and the National Health Service (NHS) in the UK are therefore described in order to identify strategies that others might find useful.
In the fear and excitement of the chase, it is easy to forget, that other parties are or can become significant players in the game. These others can help to engender a more optimistic state of mind in the ‘hunted’ and allow for rational approaches to be entertained and enacted. This is because the hunter/hunted metaphor, although reflecting an emotional reality, does not represent an entirely helpful state of mind with which to carry on business.
It may be wise to view the future survival of residential TCs as an ongoing ‘game’, requiring continual attention to the quality of relationships with commissioners of the TC service and not just at times of crisis. Service users may turn out to be our best allies in sustaining the good quality of this vital relationship, through supporting us to maintain professional attitudes and rational behaviour towards our non-clinical colleagues.
Reflections on the Treatment of Psychosis in Therapeutic Communities
John Gale and Beatriz Sanchez
ABSTRACT: After a brief historical synopsis of the use of therapeutic community programmes in the treatment of psychosis the authors sketch some key changes in the context of health care for the mentally ill. This includes the omplications of the availability of atypical antipsychotics for the psychotherapy of the psychoses. They then outline some of the principal foci in their current work with psychotic patients. They identify four hermeneutic strands, all of which interlock to form the character of the contemporary therapeutic communities they run for the severely mentally ill, in the context of community care in the UK. These threads are the permanence and temporality of meaning, the imperative to continually interpret the world, the way belonging develops and insight accrues through dialogue.
Overview of an Ethnographic Study of the UK DSPD Pilot Units
Mark Freestone
ABSTRACT: The Government’s initiative to reform the Mental Health Act and to create 300 additional high-secure places in prisons and special hospitals for those classified as having a ‘dangerous and severe personality disorder’ (DSPD) has caused controversy and outrage in all sectors of the field of mental healthcare.
This paper is based on the embryonic results of an ongoing ethnographic study of three pilot DSPD Units and presents an overview of the practice of studying such institutions from a cultural perspective. It features an outline of the evolution of ethnography as a research method, as well as a description of how this method should be situated within a wider sociological schema. Additionally, some clinical examples are given linking these schema to everyday ward activities on one such Unit.
Researching Therapeutic Communities in Secure Settings
Barbara Rawlings
ABSTRACT: This paper describes the experience of carrying out qualitative research projects in two secure settings, a prison and a high security hospital. The author describes how the therapeutic communities are located inside the physical space and the culture of their secure host settings, how this impacts on the everyday life of the therapeutic community and what it felt like to carry out research in these settings.
Experiencing the Community of Communities Review Process: Views of Therapeutic Community Members
Joanne Moffat
ABSTRACT: Service user involvement has been recognised as a central feature of current health care planning. Therapeutic Communities (TCs) incorporate this principle within their structure to create services that address the changing needs of clients and involve them in related decisions. The Community of Communities review network} represents an extension of this and provides member TCs with a framework for service review and improvement in which they are actively involved. This paper presents member experiences of the review process and reflects the reality of the peer-review day. Furthermore, it symbolises member involvement in developing the review process itself by highlighting members’ contribution of ideas. Responding to this positively is crucial for ensuring a relevant review process and for establishing a member-owned network that accommodates a diverse and expanding membership.
What’s Cooking for Therapeutic Communities in the Future?
Penelope Campling
ABSTRACT: This is a talk I gave at the annual Therapeutic Conference in Windsor in September 2004. The title of the conference was ‘What’s Cooking? Recipes from Home and Abroad’. Many of the papers focused on culture and locality and how important it is to adapt the therapeutic model to diverse situations. I thought it important to speculate about the future in a similar way. The paper is personal and introspective and starts by looking back at the many changes over the last 20 years in the therapeutic community in which I work. These changes are not just about practice and structure of the institution, but include the expectations and values of different generations of staff and residents. This raises a question about whether cultural change involves a shift in our inner worlds and leads me to speculate on the links between socio-political changes and child care and how this might affect the personalities ofthe future.
Some Strands of a Longer Story – Reflections on the Development of Therapeutic Child Care in Britain
John Diamond
ABSTRACT: This paper explores some historical pathways and experiences which have helped shape residential therapeutic provision for children and young people. The source of much of the information in Part 1 is Maurice Bridgeland’s (1971) book ‘Pioneer work with maladjusted children’. I have used this to develop a ‘snapshot’ of the 19th century foundations and precursors to the work. The other main reference for this work is Kajetan Kasinski’s (2003) chapter ‘the roots of the work-definitions, origins, influences’, which traces the evolution of the different ‘branches’ of this tradition. In Part 2, I describe my experience of researching other strands of this story through experiences relating to Bodenham Manor School and New Barns, which I hope will provoke research into more as yet ‘invisible’ links and connections.
I Am Arresting You, Therapeutic Community, On Suspicion Of Ineffectiveness; You Are Not Obliged To Say Anything, But Anything You Do Say May Be Used As Evidence Against You
David Cameron
ABSTRACT: This paper explores the concept of evidence-based practice (EBP) within a hierarchical framework where evidence from the gold standard randomised control trial overrides clinical knowledge and experience. This leaves the therapeutic community for the treatment of psychosis, the subject of inquiry of this investigation, without a scientific alibi. In preparing the case for the defence of what is a rare and endangered species, the author challenges an exclusive reliance on RCT evidence as a misappropriation of EBP to permit the testimonies of expert witnesses, which suggests that a psychodynamically/analytically-informed approach, as with the TC, can provide a meaningful framework to understand the psychotic state of mind. Set against the global and age-old debate between scientist and practitioner it is argued, however, that if psychodynamic-analytic interventions are to compete and survive as viable options in the public health domain they must adequately unpack and operationalise their key principles of treatment. The paper concludes by outlining an effectiveness-based framework for evaluating services.
Beneficence In Ethical Practice In Diagnosis And Treatment Of Personality Disorder
Nora McClelland
ABSTRACT: In Mental Health the ethical principle of beneficence compels practitioners to address the needs of service users who have received diagnoses of personality disorder through a professional judgement of best interests. Acting in accord with beneficence is not incompatible with respecting autonomy. Yet autonomy is often the basis for ethical justifications for service exclusion of people who have personality disorder diagnoses. Underpinning concepts of mental disorders is a belief that usually people do not choose to be ill; as such, they are not responsible for and cannot be held accountable for behaviour that may arise as a consequence of the illness. Responsibility presupposes rationality, autonomy and freedom to act. Conceptualising mental experience in terms of rationality alone neglects the influence of the social and emotional world in which we live. Addressing beneficence will support the development of ethically-based practice and improve the experiences of service users.
Antisocial Personality Disorder And Retention: A Systematic Review
Morten Hesse and Mads Uffe Pedersen
ABSTRACT: The purpose of this review is to examine treatment retention for drug dependent users with co-occurring antisocial personality disorder (ASPD). Peer-reviewed papers were identified searching Medline, PsycInfo and bibliographies of seminal papers. Seventeen studies were identified, and a meta-analysis on retention was conducted. The overall impact of ASPD was non-significant with an effect size of -0.05. However, differences were found between programmes. Studies conducted in Therapeutic Communities indicated that subjects with ASPD were more likely to complete treatment than drug abusers without ASPD, whereas in drug-free outpatient treatment the reverse was true. Implications for future research and substance abuse treatment are discussed.
A Three-Year Study Of The Treatment Of Psychologically Disturbed Homeless Ex-Military Personnel In A Therapeutic Community
John Gale, Inmaculada Vidaña Marquez, Nadia Al-Khudhairy, Terry Saftis, Kevin Knottley and Veronica Azua
ABSTRACT: The idea of a dispersed TC for the homeless was first thought of by a former soldier and director of The Homeless Fund, Edward Thorneycroft MBE TD DL,* back in 1997. After the National Lottery Charities Board had funded research into the problem of homeless ex-military personnel, Community Housing and Therapy (CHT) was approached to set up a pilot scheme. Further funding was received from the National Lottery and a pilot set up later that year with six beds, in a partnership with Central and Cecil Housing Trust (CCHT). Over the course of the following six years the project has developed further partnerships and a complex network of inter-agency links. The project now has 15 flats and a shared house for six. A further eight flats owned by Haig Homes form vital move-on accommodation and a proposal to build a further 20 flats in Southwark in partnership with Metropolitan Housing Association is about to go to public consultation.
This project has a number of original features which will be of interest to a therapeutic community (TC) readership. It has kept the armed forces establishment on side while maintaining the distance from the military necessary for effective therapeutic interventions. It does not, at its core, depend on total group living. It is an inter agency initiative which integrates a psychoanalytic perspective in the treatment of homelessness and its habitual symptoms of alcohol and drug abuse. And it also bridges the gap between psychotherapy and practical skills training for work. This paper is a case study in the development of an innovative TC project from first conception to mid-term fruition and is significantly relevant to our contemporary situation, as it confronts the psychological effects of combat, military training and the culture of the armed forces on servicemen and women.
* An appreciation of Edward Kendall Thorneycroft (1927-2000) was published in his old school magazine, The Oratory School Magazine, No. 160 (2000), pp.5-13.
Being Is Belonging
Harry Wilmer’s Challenge To 21st Century Therapeutic Community
Dennie Briggs
ABSTRACT: Over his lifetime, Harry Wilmer established the first democratic therapeutic community in North America, and encompassed five others, all unique in terms of the populations he was concerned with: tuberculosis, war veterans, adolescent drug abusers, convicted felons, and schizophrenia. His career began as a physician; originally a pathologist, he moved into traditional psychiatry, had a Freudian analysis, then later in life was trained in Jungian psychology and analysed by Jung’s successor. This movement is evident in his work and in his writings. As a practitioner he combined action with reflection and was able to flesh out theoretical aspects of the therapeutic community. The influence and indebtedness of Maxwell Jones, Tom Main, and T.P. Rees abound in his writings.
Therapeutic Outfitting: Enhancing Conventional Adolescent Mental Health Interventions Through Innovative Collaborations With A Wilderness Experience Programme
Nevin Harper and Daniel G. Scott
ABSTRACT: This paper presents an innovative approach designed to meet the needs of conventional mental health service providers in serving adolescents with a range of mental health needs. The collaborative effort between an experiential wilderness education programme and multiple adolescent community and mental health agencies is here described as therapeutic outfitting. This service delivery model addresses the need for innovative programme designs at a time when many adolescents experiencing mental health distress in Canada may not be receiving the services they need. Implications for practice and the need for research in this multi-agency, multidimensional setting will be discussed.
The Therapeutic Qualities Of Unstructured Time
Ilia Maltezou, Matthew Nicoll and Michael Göpfert
ABSTRACT: A significant proportion of time in a residential community is unstructured. However, there is limited understanding of the meaning or effect of unstructured time or how it contributes to the therapeutic process within the Democratic Therapeutic Community (DTC) approach. This paper utilises the experiences and observations of the authors, alongside those of a group of residents of the Webb House DTC in exploring the therapeutic qualities of unstructured time. Three themes were identified and, linking theory to experience, this paper hypothesises how unstructured time promotes learning in forming and sustaining relationships, facilitates secure attachments and its effect on the therapeutic alliance between staff and residents. The discussion follows how these themes contributed to the overall therapeutic programme and also rendered unstructured time as a therapeutic structure in its own right. Ultimately, we feel that this paper produces a rich array of possibilities for future areas of study.
Coping With Traumatic Experiences In A Communal Setting
Anna Tziotziou, Dimitris Livas, Natassa Karapostoli and Ioannis K. Tsegos
ABSTRACT: Traumatic experiences are generally recognised by their overwhelming nature and their sudden force beyond the usual limits, and constitute severe threats to the psychological functioning of an individual or a group. Communal therapy has been used in a great variety of settings and even applied to such extreme situations as warfare, forced migration, asylum and refugee situations, as well as post-trauma of children, young persons and adults.
The Therapeutic Communities of the Open Psychotherapy Centre are not addressed exclusively to people exposed to traumatic experiences, but to all those suffering from any type of psychiatric disorders (mainly psychoses, severe personality disorders etc). Yet, it is a common phenomenon that many of our clients have experienced traumas in the past. We believe that group activity is the most suitable setting to deal with such experiences, since trauma (as with every other incident) is considered as an opportunity for personal growth and change.
The clinical approach of such conditions is illustrated through the case study of a young adult having had traumatic experiences not only in the past but also during his therapy in the Daily Psychotherapeutic Community. We suppose that the safety network and the reinforcement of trust relationships, which are main characteristics of the communal environment, constitute crucial factors in coping with trauma. The significance of the multifactorial approach as well as the harmonious collaboration between different settings is also discussed.
PERSONAL CONTRIBUTION
A Home Is Broken: The Closure Of A Philadelphia Association Household
Marie-Laure Davenport
ABSTRACT: No abstract.
Cultural Reviews
Joseph H. Berke, Margeret Fagan, George Mak-Pearce and Stella Pierides-Müller (2002) Beyond Madness: Psychosocial Interventions in Psychosis. Published by Jessica Kingsley Publishers, pp.288, price p/b £19.95, ISBN: 1-85302-889-4. Reviewed by Elizabeth Boyd.
Philip Zaleski (Ed.) (2004) The Best American Spiritual Writing, 2004. Published by Houghton Mifflin, pp.304, price p/b $14.00 Paperback; $27.50 Cloth, ISBN: 0-618-44303-7 PA/0-618-44302-9CL. Reviewed by Dennie Briggs.
Dick Blackwell (2005) Counselling and Psychotherapy with Refugees. Published by Jessica Kingsley Publishers (London), pp.124, price p/b Paperback £14.99, ISBN: 1-8 4310-316-8. Reviewed by Penny Campling.
Language Use in a Therapeutic Community: An Exploration of Traditions and Changes in Terminology
Anita Bracey
ABSTRACT: This paper proposes a concept and structure comprising three categories of Therapeutic Community (TC) language, which are explored in relation to the author’s experience at Main House. The author then argues that one such category is fundamental, the TC basic language of the service user. The practical value of this model is considered.
No More Ghosts: The Exorcism of Traumatic Memory in Children and Adolescents
Chris Nicholson
ABSTRACT: This paper argues that trauma can be caused by events, perceived as negative, that impinge sharply upon continuity, upon the natural rhythm of life, and that the treatment of trauma can be partially achieved by restoring continuity. The poet, Robert Graves (1895-1985) is used as an apt illustration of the effects upon someone who experiences an accumulative series of traumatic incidents throughout his early years, culminating for Graves in the First World War. Despite his efforts to repress these experiences, the trauma Graves felt emerged in the manner by which he lived, the relationships he made, the illnesses and accidents which beset him and, finally, the intrusive memories from the war during his last years. The persistence of Graves’ traumatic symptoms and influences is similar to that experienced by some young people who enter residential care. The care system can, as young people move through it, in itself become a trigger for memories of early trauma. However, there are ways in which these triggers, inherent in the care system, can be modified, by using elements of therapeutic community practice, to become corrective experiences that enable maturation.
Working with Trauma in a Prison TC: An Essentially Social and Integrative Approach
Sarah Tucker and Bill Wylie
ABSTRACT: No abstract.
Madness: A Place for Narcissism?
Barry Jones
ABSTRACT: This paper examines the impact of narcissism upon the treatment of psychiatric illness. Elements common to both major and minor psychoses have an effect upon staff and hence upon the delivery of effective care. Conversely, unconscious retreats from the pain of such caring can result in deleterious effects upon the patient. Examining processes at the differing levels of treatment highlight these effects, instruct in the important aspects of practice and guide future developments. The Cassel Hospital Therapeutic Community comprises 50 inpatient beds within an open setting. The community is a microcosm of clinical care, wherein different tiers of professionals relate to one another and to patients. This model affords an examination of the nature and consequences of both caring and being cared for. In gaining an understanding of this interplay, useful applications can be made to the wider healthcare system.
Moving on: Exit Interviews in a Therapeutic Community Prison
Elizabeth L. Sullivan
ABSTRACT: Exit interviews were conducted with 48 men leaving a prison-based Therapeutic Community. Men who were returned to their originating prison shortly after arrival felt a strong sense of rejection and described disadvantage resulting from interruption to their sentence plans. Some men were shocked and disappointed, having formed erroneous impressions of the therapeutic regime and facilities based on hearsay. While some participants self-selected out for a variety of dissatisfactions relating to facilities and infrastructure, all were impressed with the quality of staff-prisoner relationships, trust, humanity and opportunities for self-development and improvement at the prison. The exit interviews were particularly informative in relation to the development of recommendations for recruitment and retention. However, the interviews are time consuming to conduct and analyse, not lending themselves to continual use unless in a modified format or shortened form, likely to be less informative.
Confrontation About Potential Harm Related to Substance Use: Changes in and Correlates of Confrontation in Sober Living Houses
Douglas L. Polcin and Thomas K. Greenfield
ABSTRACT: Therapeutic communities for addiction treatment have a history of using confrontation as an integral part of rehabilitation. However, confrontation has not been well defined and confrontational interventions have ranged from personal attacks to feedback about destructive behaviours associated with addiction. Sober living houses (SLHs) are a less restrictive therapeutic environment that offers an alcohol- and drug-free living environment to individuals who want to remain abstinent. They offer no formal treatment, but use a social model recovery philosophy that emphasises mutual help groups, such as Alcoholics Anonymous. Confrontation in sober living houses was studied using the Alcohol and Drug Confrontation Scale (ADCS), which measures confrontation about potential harm associated with substance use. At entry into SLHs, confrontation from various sources was associated with level of drug and other problem severity. After six months, confrontation declined and was received mainly from others who were strongly supportive of sobriety. Overall, confrontation was experienced as supportive and helpful. Thus, therapeutic community professionals may want to consider increasing their use of helpful confrontation and teaching residents’ family members and friends how to use confrontation in a positive manner.
Histories of Trauma in Client Members of Therapeutic Communities
Mark Freestone, Jan Lees, Chris Evans and Nick Manning
ABSTRACT: This paper presents further data from the ATC/NLCB Therapeutic Communities Research Project, based on findings from the 306 social histories collected as part of this project. The project focused on people with personality disorders in therapeutic communities, and this paper explores some of the traumatic experiences of this sample of client members prior to their admission to a therapeutic community. We look particularly at early separations from main carers and family of origin; at losses and disability; and at experiences of physical and sexual abuse in childhood and adulthood, and see what, if any, relationship these have with personality disorders for this study sample. We also explore whether the different clients in the different types of therapeutic communities have different traumatic experiences, as evidenced by these social histories. The paper discusses the implications of these findings.
Who Comes into Therapeutic Communities? A Description of the Characteristics of a Sequential Sample of Client Members Admitted to 17 Therapeutic Communities
Jan Lees, Chris Evans, Mark Freestone and Nick Manning
ABSTRACT: This paper describes characteristics of 313 client members of 17 therapeutic communities (TCs) in England and Scotland. These data were collected in a research project evaluating the effectiveness of therapeutic communities in treating people with personality disorders. Everyone admitted to these communities between 2 April 2001 and 30 September 2002 was invited to complete a set of questionnaires. We report their scores on a measure of personality difficulties (PDQ4+) and on two measures of state distress (CORE-OM and Brief Symptom Inventory) to provide a description of members willing to participate in the study. This dataset complements information from the same measures reported previously for everyone who was in these therapeutic communities on 1 April 2001 (Lees, Evans & Manning, 2005) giving a snapshot of the composition of the communities on that day; this sample gives a picture of the new arrivals as they arrived subsequently. One of the significant findings of this study is that the women in addiction therapeutic communities have much the highest scores on all the PDQ scales used but do not have particularly higher BrSI or CORE scores than the other therapeutic community groups. The next significant finding, replicating the snapshot data, is that the men in the prison therapeutic communities appear to score rather lower than might have been expected on the PDQ. Finally, the scores are generally higher in this sample than in the snapshot sample.
The biggest limitations of the dataset are the missing data. The outstanding question is whether the snapshot sample scores lower than sequential admissions because of improvement in treatment, attrition of those with higher scores, or some combination of both.
OBITUARY
Rebel with a Cause: John Farrow (1946-2005)
Edited by Keith Tudor
ABSTRACT: No abstract.
Cultural Reviews
Mark Morris (2004) Dangerous and Severe – Process, Programme and Person. Published by Jessica Kingsley Publishers (London), pp. 224, price p/b £18.95, ISBN: 1-84310-226-9. Reviewed by Dennie Briggs.
Russel Meares (2005) The Metaphor of Play – The Origin and Breakdown of Personal Being.3rd Edition. Published by Routledge, pp. 254, price p/b £18.99, ISBN: 1-58391-967-8. Reviewed by Chris Nicholson.
Jan Lees, Nick Manning, Diana Menzies and Nicola Morant (Eds.) (2003) A Culture of Enquiry: Research Evidence and the Therapeutic Community. Published by Jessica Kingsley Publishers (London), pp. 336 price p/b £19.95, ISBN: 1-85302-857-6. Reviewed by Stijn Vandevelde and Eric Broekaert.
WINDSOR PAPERS
The Humanising of Trauma: Social Context and Witnessing
Martin Weegmann
ABSTRACT: The impact of so-called shell-shock on psychiatry led to the downfall of a more neurological, constitutionalist paradigm. The impact of sexual and other misuse of children on psychology led to the downfall of a more cynical, patient-blaming tradition. This paper considers the contribution of W.H.R. Rivers and Sandor Ferenczi in challenging the dogma of their times and forging new concepts of psychic disruption and trauma. I describe their ideas in terms of a humanising of trauma. Has the word ‘trauma’ subsequently become over-used and divorced from the horrific contexts about which clinicians like Rivers and Ferenczi were responding? On the other hand does emphasis on the traumatic enable a desirable, more sensitive approach to self-care?
Traumatic Memory: Is it All in The Mindfulness?
Mark McFetridge, Carol Morton and Julia Berg
ABSTRACT: No abstract.
Traumas of Forming: The Introduction of Community Meetings in the Dangerous and Severe Personality Disorder (DSPD) Environment
Claire Moore and Mark Freestone
ABSTRACT: This paper presents a perspective on the staff and patient experiences of the introduction of Community Meetings into the Rampton Hospital DSPD Peaks Unit, a high-secure setting designed to accommodate “some of the most dangerous people in society” (Home Office, 2004); nevertheless a client group who have often lived through deeply traumatic experiences in childhood and young adulthood.
The bi-weekly Ward Community Meetings, which are intended to integrate aspects of Therapeutic Community living into the highly restricted, institutionalised life of the DSPD Unit, were introduced in late 2004 by Claire Moore, Principal Forensic Psychologist in the Peaks. Since then, they have become an accepted feature of life on the Unit but one which nevertheless seems to induce strong feelings in patients and staff at all levels, making the maintenance of a therapeutic environment an ongoing process of negotiation and the epicentre of institutional conflict. In this paper, Claire reflects on her personal experience of introducing, implementing and defending the Meetings – as well as the strong therapeutic ethos behind them – and, based on his ethnographic fieldwork in the Peaks, Mark Freestone presents a sociological contextualisation of this therapeutic ideal within a ‘totally’ institutionalised environment, with particular attention to the maintenance of a particular power/knowledge apparatus within the Unit.
‘Sharing the Struggle’: An Exploration of Mutual Support Processes in a Therapeutic Community
Maddy Loat
ABSTRACT: This descriptive, qualitative study explored individuals’ experiences of mutual support whilst they were resident in the Cassel Hospital, a therapeutic community for people experiencing severe emotional and social difficulties. Twelve participants were interviewed and the interview data were analysed qualitatively, using interpretative phenomenological analysis. Eight themes, each comprising a number of sub-themes, were identified from the analysis. These were organised into three higher-order domains relating to participants’ experiences of being in the therapeutic community, the process of giving and receiving mutual support, and the impact of mutual support on their sense of self and perception of their difficulties. Overall, participants’ experiences of mutual support were positive and the study identified a number of ways in which mutual support processes operated within the TC and the impact these had on individual members. The findings were highly consistent with the mutual support literature, providing further evidence for the benefits of this type of support. The outcome of the study has implications with regard to the provision and delivery of mental health services and highlights the importance of providing people experiencing mental health difficulties with opportunities to support one another, alongside the usual provision of professional support.
OTHER PAPERS
Community as Method: A Study of the Predictors of Affirmations that Residents of a Corrections-Based Therapeutic Community Receive from Others
Keith Warren and Carole Harvey
ABSTRACT: The idea of community as method of treatment is fundamental to therapeutic communities. However, there has been little research seeking a deeper understanding of the mechanisms that underpin its functioning. Drawing on contemporary results in evolutionary game theory, we argue that residents will receive help in the form of affirmations in proportion to their reputations for giving help in the form of affirmations and corrections. We test this hypothesis using localised regression modelling of data on affirmations received and affirmations and corrections given during residence in a 90-bed corrections-based therapeutic community. Consistent with our hypothesis, we find that both affirmations and corrections given predict affirmations received. These relationships are positive over most of the range of data; however, the relationship between affirmations given and received flattens at high numbers of affirmations given, while that between corrections given and affirmations received grows negative at high levels of corrections given. Thus, while these results support the hypothesis that those who give more help also receive more, there seems to be limits to this effect.
Coercion in the Therapeutic Community
Doug McConnell and Grant Gillett
ABSTRACT: Recently the therapeutic community (TC) has become the focus of a new optimism especially in treating holistic social problems such as personality disorder. We readdress the concept of coercion, emphasising its necessary and pervasive role within wider society and conscious life. Foucault’s ‘discipline’ is employed to show that all social structures channel individuals into particular ways of living. Coercion, thus defined, is at the crux of all ethical and functional questions facing the TC and wider society. The TC’s role is to heal those who have been damaged by life in wider society and who will continue to struggle without the TC’s discipline. This extra discipline should be offset by educating patients about the TC’s transformative aims and professional mediation of resulting conflicts. Wider society lacks explicit education about coercive influence and mediation is not always sympathetic. However, it is this deceptive environment that patients should aim to return to.
Premature Termination of Short-Term Inpatient Psychotherapy: Client’s Perspectives on Causes and Effects
Moniek Thunnissen, Yole Remans and Wim Trijsburg
ABSTRACT: From a management point of view it is important to apply psychotherapeutic treatment in an efficient manner. Research on why patients drop out of treatment is necessary.
The purpose of this study was to find out what motivated patients to end their treatment prematurely, and to give recommendations for changes in the policy of the institute. Between May 1999 and December 2001, 24 patients were dropouts from a three-month inpatient psychotherapy programme; we held interviews by telephone with 16 of them. The aim was to find out what they experienced during the treatment, which factors (from the patient’s point of view) led to their leaving and how they functioned after they left the institution. Nearly 50% of the dropouts reported that they ended treatment in the first two weeks because of very high levels of anxiety. The remaining dropout patients reported more diffuse motives. Most patients recommended more supportive elements in the treatment to prevent dropout.
As a result of this study, the staff changed its attitude and endorsed a more supportive approach, especially in the first weeks of the treatment. In the next period from January 2002 till May 2003 the dropout rate was reduced from 16% to 8%.
Theoretical Development and Various Applications of Group-Analytic Psychodrama
Olga Vassiliou, Dimitris Livas, Natassa Karapostoli and Thalis Papadakis
ABSTRACT: Group-Analytic Psychodrama is an original approach which is derived from the dynamic interaction of the classical psychodramatic procedure and the group-analytic principles. It was applied in 1980, in the context of the Psychotherapeutic Community of the Open Psychotherapy Centre (OPC). According to this approach we suppose that two distinct processes occur within the group: the group process and the stage action. The emphasis is laid on the link between them, which results from the continuous transition between the group as a whole (matrix) and the action on stage (acting out the group matrix). The matrix of the group contains the undesired and destructive impulses of the self, which can be acted out through playing. The group’s potentiality to ‘play’ with personal and transpersonal conflicts and to incorporate them in the therapeutic process seems to allow the possibility of resolving transpersonal as well as inner conflicts. The above procedure is essential as it offers the opportunity for corrective emotional experience in a short period of time, especially for severely disturbed patients, who have difficulty in expressing themselves in groups, where verbal communication is prominent.
Initially, Group-Analytic Psychodrama groups functioned in the Psychotherapeutic Communities of the OPC with the so-called ‘difficult adult patients’ (borderlines, psychotics etc). Later, their function expanded to the therapy of children, adolescents, and young adults as well as in several training activities of the organisation in a non-clinical population. During a 25-year period, Group-Analytic Psychodrama attained a sound theoretical basis and was established as an integral therapeutic approach.
EFTC PAPERS
Brief Encounters: The Development of European Drug Free Therapeutic Communities and The Origins of the European Federation of Therapeutic Communities
Rowdy Yates, Barbara Rawlings, Eric Broekaert and George De Leon
ABSTRACT: No abstract.
Some Reflections of a Decade of Experiences in British and American Concept House Therapeutic Communities, 1967 to 1977: A Personal Experience
David Warren-Holland
ABSTRACT: This brief paper recalls the author’s experiences of working in the early drug-free therapeutic community movement in the decade from 1967 to 1977. It describes the setting up of the first ‘concept-based’ community, the author’s experiences of learning placements in therapeutic communities in the USA and maps out the structure and methodology of the early UK therapeutic communities. The article also covers the author’s departure from the movement and the difficulties experienced in re-adjusting to a less intense working routine.
Therapeutic Communities for Addicts in the Czech Republic – Roots, Recent Development and Current Profiles
Kamil Kalina
ABSTRACT: Therapeutic communities in general have a long history in the Czech Republic (western part of former Czechoslovakia). In 1948, Prof Jaroslav Skala established, in Prague University Hospital, the first residential unit for alcohol treatment, close to TC principles. In the 1950s-1960s, the works of Jones and Main directly influenced both Skala´s unit and several newly established TCs for neurotic patients. During the 1970s, there emerged a unique system of training in group psychotherapy (called the SUR), based on TC principles. This stimulated another wave of TCs in the field of psychiatry and psychotherapy. After 1990, under new political conditions, autonomous TCs for drug addicts have been established as a next generation. These newer TCs are mostly ‘professionally staffed’ (although ex-users are valued members of therapeutic teams) and they can be seen as a mixture of the ‘hierarchic’ and ‘democratic’ models.
There are 15 TCs for addicts working on an independent basis and another 12 hospital-based residential units for alcohol and drug treatment, working on TC principles. An assessment of TC methodology in the Czech Republic has been undertaken by the author. The study utilised a checklist combining criteria of ‘hierarchic’ and ‘democratic’ models. Preliminary conclusions of this pilot study are presented at the end of the article suggesting an appropriate understanding to TC principles, and confirming mixed profiles of TCs for addicts in the Czech Republic.
Social Network Involvement During Therapeutic Community Treatment: Is There An Impact On Success?
Veerle Soyez, Eric Broekaert and Yves Rosseel
ABSTRACT: Success after substance abuse treatment is multi-factorially determined. Most of these factors have not been adequately studied yet. Specifically in therapeutic communities for substance abusers the impact on success of social network elements during and after treatment remains unclear. The goals of the current study were threefold: (1) to determine whether different factors predicted success after treatment; (2) to determine whether there was an improvement in the clients’ situation at follow-up compared to admission; (3) to determine whether a social network intervention added to standard family counselling in the beginning of treatment affected improvement.
A prospective, semi-controlled field study was set up. Consecutive admissions (N=124) to four long-term residential therapeutic communities were assessed at two measuring moments: immediately after admission (t=0) and between 12 and 18 months after leaving primary treatment (t=1). Network members of different cohorts of the baseline client sample were assigned to a social network intervention during the first three months of treatment.
Hierarchical regression analyses showed that women, clients that had remained longer in treatment, and clients that experienced more social support at the moment of the follow-up interview were more likely to be successful. Although the interaction effect between ‘full participation of social network members in the intervention’, treatment and ‘total number of days in treatment’ significantly contributed to success when measured as a separate domain, this interaction did not reach significance in the final model.
Therapeutic Community Meets Empowerment Evaluation: Combining Treatment and Internal Evaluation in a Therapeutic Community
Yrmy Ikonen
ABSTRACT: A model of combining treatment and internal treatment evaluation in a therapeutic community for drugaddicts is presented in this article. Basic concepts and elements of a participatory evaluation approach called empowerment evaluation are employed in making visible and modelling the treatment/evaluation process, which is carried out internally without an external moderator. Then, using ten empowerment evaluation principles as a reference point, the work done in the community is discussed. Finally, in order to articulate some changes involved in the process of adopting participatory evaluation elements, a few concrete examples are given. The author wishes to argue that using internal evaluation as a part of the treatment makes therapeutic sense.
BLANKENBERGE PAPERS
Writings from the Edge
Rowdy Yates, Barbara Rawlings, Eric Broekaert and George De Leon
ABSTRACT: No abstract.
Managing the Transition from Treatment in a Therapeutic Community to Successful Integration Back into Society
Karen Diver and Neil Dickson
ABSTRACT: This paper outlines the crucial process by which positive change achieved through participation in an intensive residential drug and alcohol therapeutic community programme is sustained after residents complete and move on. The ongoing relationships between residents developed whilst in treatment, the experience of full time employment prior to leaving treatment, and the role of resettlement staff are all explored. A number of case studies are provided as illustration: none refers to any specific individual, but are rather a composite of issues that residents have presented in the past.
The Therapeutic Village of Care: An Alaska Native Alcohol Treatment Model
Valerie Naquin, Jodi Trojan, Gloria O’Neil and Spero M Manson
ABSTRACT: Little has been published regarding the treatment of substance abuse among Alaska Natives, particularly in residential settings. Notable exceptions, dating to nearly a decade ago, include reports on Akeela House and Dena A Coy, multi-faceted in-patient programmes that explicitly address cultural aspects of their Native clientele. This article describes the setting, establishment, structure, and process of the Therapeutic Village of Care within the Ernie Turner Center, a residential treatment programme operated by the Cook Inlet Council, Inc, an indigenously managed, non-profit human services organisation located in Anchorage, Alaska. The Therapeutic Village of Care borrows heavily from the core principles of the therapeutic community, but adapts them to the unique structural and functional aspects of Alaska Native culture. Qualitative and quantitative data assess resident engagement with treatment process, advancement through treatment levels, and subsequent social reintegration, as well as continued sobriety.
Women in European Therapeutic Communities: Conclusions of the BIOMED Project
Joke De Wilde and Karin Trulsson
ABSTRACT: The BIOMED II project aims to identify and address the needs of ‘emerging dependency groups’ in Europe. These new high-risk groups are a major challenge for the therapeutic community. Although a large database of their characteristics was set up in order to improve their treatment, the BIOMED II project failed to focus on genderspecific characteristics. A further development of the BIOMED II project succeeded in bringing the special needs of substance-abusing women to the forefront. The BIOMED for WOMEN reveals that women have different and more substance-related problems than men and that the connection between their substance abuse and other areas of functioning is much stronger. However, we must carefully consider how we look for differences between men and women. Women seem to manifest their problems in a different way, but they also are different in the way they develop and cope with their addiction. Therefore, women need a different treatment approach. Suggestions for a more women-sensitive treatment system will be discussed.
Music Therapy in the Tehran Therapeutic Community
Mohammad Reza Abdollahnejad
ABSTRACT: This article reports on research into music therapy activities in the Tehran TC for drug users. The research was in two parts. The first part looked at the effects of lyric analysis and song sharing. Clients were initially given a questionnaire about their previous use and choice of music. A total of 25 sessions were held and clients were asked focused questions at the end of each one to discover how they had reacted. The second part looked at the effects of relaxing music on sleep. A total of 30 sessions of relaxing music were held, before bedtime, and a questionnaire was used to learn how long it took residents to fall asleep, the frequency of nightmares experienced, and their mood on the following day. Conclusions showed the use of lyric analysis and song sharing was particularly useful for enabling residents to express their feelings and thoughts and that relaxing music shortened the time taken to fall asleep and improved mood on the following day. Finally it was found that the music which substance abusers had listened to during their addiction had positively affected their relapse and aggressive consuming.
EDITORIAL
Barbara Rawlings and Rex Haigh
ABSTRACT: No abstract.
The Experience of a Hospital’s Psychiatric Ward Organised According to a Therapeutic Community Model
Vincenzo Cesario
ABSTRACT: Is it possible to organise a hospital ward for the treatment of psychiatric patients in an acute stage according to a therapeutic community model?
With this work we are describing the experience of a psychiatric ward in a hospital located in Northern Italy, which began in 2003 and is still functioning today. As an alternative to a traditional hospital ward, care here has been organised according to several fundamental work principles in the therapeutic community. The author notes that in the past similar transformations of care for psychotic patients have been achieved, and describes the context in which this current work was born and its consequent peculiarities.
The therapeutic community model applied in a hospital ward may offer the advantage of a treatment more complete, democratic and better accepted by both the patients and the staff; it may also avoid some negative effects of the traditional hospital model such as institutionalisation, early leaving and coercive admission.
Data presented conclude it is possible to find positive indicators related to the therapeutic community model as a care instrument for treating psychiatric patients in an acute stage who may have diagnoses of psychosis and/or personality disorders.
In this experience, it is important to underline that the model has been applied flexibly, and not according to a rigid ideological model.
Soteria, Psychoanalysis and the Treatment of Acute Psychotic Disorders
Elmar Kraus
ABSTRACT: The Soteria (House in the park) Munich is a special ward for young adults who are suffering mainly from acute psychotic episodes. After a short discussion of the psychoanalytic theory and practice of psychotic disorders there follows a short characterization of the Soteria Munich. Then the author focuses on the significance and interaction between the individual psychotherapeutic and the milieutherapeutic relationship. The complementing nature of these two relationships is discussed in a clinical illustration on the basis of a psychoanalytic view of psychotic disorders.
Facilitating Close Personal Space in a Therapeutic Community
Vijendra Kumar S.K. and Vijayashri Ravi
ABSTRACT: This study explores the role of close personal space at Athma Shakti Vidyalaya, a therapeutic community for persons suffering from chronic schizophrenia, based on the philosophy of transactional analysis and reparenting model of psychotherapy. Personal space has communicative and protective functions and plays a role in enhancing positive interpersonal relationships and attachment, which are two significant factors in the treatment process of mentally ill persons.
To illustrate the facilitating factor, the study used the therapist’s observation to obtain data on the dimensions of personal space. Rating was done based on the subjective scores on negative feelings, during, before and after non-sexual physical contact (NSPC). The study used the BPRS (Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale) and IDEAS (Indian Disability Evaluation and Assessment Scale) to measure changes in symptomatic patterns, due to the facilitating factor.
The findings support Harlow’s emphasis on contact comfort in the attachment process and Schiff’s reparenting model, and highlight the role of the therapeutic community setting in the process of facilitating close personal space with persons suffering from chronic schizophrenia.
Application of Therapeutic Community Principles to a High Secure Deaf Service
Amy Izycky, Simon Gibbon, Kevin Baker and Manjit Gahir
ABSTRACT: Connaught Ward at Rampton Hospital provides the National High Secure Deaf Service for Men. Therapeutic Community (TC) principles have been used to inform the development and ongoing work of the service. This paper describes the work of the service and its particular difficulties. A discussion is then presented of the potential benefits and challenges that the use of TC principles has brought.
The Value of Community Member Involvement in the Admission Day Process
Graham Prior and Claire Hulme
ABSTRACT:The process by which residents are admitted to a therapeutic community is significant in enabling a sense of connection in the community; the involvement of peers (current community residents) is one strategy by which to achieve this with the potential for benefits to new arrivals, current residents and the community as a whole (Norton 1999). This paper reports on a study that explored the value added by including residents in the admissions day process of Webb House Democratic Therapeutic Community. Focus groups elicited the perceptions of the key groups involved, the management, residents and rota staff.
The study found engagement of new residents was hampered by a task-orientated structure. Conversely, lack of structure and clear delineation of staff, residents and their roles meant both new and current residents felt uncomfortable. Whilst those managing the service believed involvement of residents to be worthwhile and constructive, staff held mixed views. Conflict between residents and new arrivals arose as a result of the perceived special treat-ment received by the new arrivals which could lead to alienation from their peers. Residents had an empathy with new arrivals but felt involvement in the process to be a chore.
Towards Integration: Encountering Differences Among Therapists Involved With Severe Borderline Patients
Irini Ioannovits, Hara Karamanolaki and Gregorios Vaslamatzis
ABSTRACT: This paper looks at an inpatient program for patients with severe borderline personality disorder. Such patients regularly use means to escape from their internal distress, such as ‘splitting’ and ‘projective identification’, which can have a damaging effect on the cohesiveness of the staff team. The paper looks at how such processes manifest as transference and counter-transference, particularly with regard to the institution, which, being placed inside a hospital, is not entirely under the control of program staff. The authors argue for the need for staff particularly to understand the psychological processes involved, rather than getting lost inside them, and the importance of a reflective space for staff to recognize, acknowledge and work on such processes in the staff team.
Youths in Coercive Residential Care: Perception of Parents and Social Network Involvement in Treatment Programs
Jürgen Degner, Anna Henriksen and Lars Oscarsson
ABSTRACT: Involvement by parents and other significant social network members (PSMs) in the treatment program is important for positive treatment effects when youths are placed in residential treatment centres (RTCs). The staff of the RTCs play a key role by either supporting or not supporting such involvement. By interviewing 23 boys and 23 girls in ten different RTCs using a milieu-therapeutic method, the present study explores obstacles to, and opportunities for the involvement of PSMs in the treatment program. The majority of the youths report non-involvement strategies from staff, a negative emotional attitude from parents, and desolate, non-supportive social networks. A small group of youths report encouraging staff and PSMs. Explanations such as staff turnover, facility rules, staff attitudes, and deficiencies in significant individuals’ involvement are discussed.
Does Psychodynamic Environmental Therapy Work?
Poul Nissen and Kim Gabriel Hansen
ABSTRACT: This paper presents the first Danish prospective outcome study of psychodynamic environmental therapy of children in residential treatment with early, serious traumatisation and extensive relational disturbances. The study delves beneath the surface and explores the extent to which the children’s development during their placement outside their own home is rooted in the personality structure and function or is merely an expression of pseudo adaptation.
Process and Change: The Treatment Careers of Residents in Therapeutic Communities
Barbara Rawlings
ABSTRACT: The research used 83 records of clients who had left therapeutic communities run by Community Housing and Therapy (CHT). To begin with, numerical data were collected for all 83 records, and two groups, ‘therapy completers’ and ‘early leavers’, were identified. Twelve clients were randomly selected from each group, and their records were investigated in much greater detail. The paper presents a qualitative report on the major themes from clients’ records, including joining, making progress, problematic behaviours, and leaving. Two fictional case studies, based on general information from the records are presented. The paper concludes with a summary of behaviours frequently cited in the records as ‘signs of progress’, ‘signs of lack of progress’ and ‘either way behaviours’.
Heroin Use in Shetland From the Perspective of Different Local Professionals
Anke Stallwitz
ABSTRACT: With the aim of obtaining a comprehensive in-depth understanding of the nature of the Shetland heroin subculture, 11 local professionals confronted with drug use in different ways through their respective work were interviewed qualitatively in 2004. Interviews were analysed according to grounded theory. For about 20 years the Shetland heroin scene existed in the form of a stringently-organised, secretive underground subculture involving only a restricted number of older users. Due to recent changes within the mainstream and the drugs culture, the heroin scene has begun to transform its originally relatively unproblematic, contained nature. A growing number of diverse, including young, users has emerged alongside a significant increase in heroin supply. Accordingly, the subculture appears to develop commercial, partly urban-appearing tendencies. Such tendencies embrace a significant increase in patterns of risky (e.g. less controlled) intravenous heroin use. Participants’ perspectives regarding the assessment of the changed and further changing heroin subculture, as well as their suggested approaches to effectively counteract the situation, are presented.
WINDSOR PAPERS
Moving a Preparation for Residence Group From Outreach to In-reach: From Bridger to Main
Anita Bracey, Jan Birtle, Gerrard McCullagh and Chris Newrith
ABSTRACT: This paper begins by outlining the process and rationale for setting up a group to help prepare potential residents for Main House Therapeutic Community. The authors explore how: the culture of the group developed while it was held in the Outreach part of the service at Bridger House; and the rationale of moving the Preparation Group to Main House in January 2006. The paper also explores how the culture of the Preparation Group and that of Main House impacted upon one another. A comparison study is also made between the six-months of January to July 2005 and of January to July 2006 to determine any impact the change in location may have had.
From Outsider to Insider: The Residents’ Experiences of Joining the Acorn Programme Therapeutic Community
Julia Coakes, Matthew Miles and Katherine Lawson
ABSTRACT: This paper explores clients’ experiences of joining a therapeutic community. Six current residents in the Acorn Programme were interviewed using a semi-structured format, and the data were then analysed using Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis (IPA). The main themes were divided into two categories: those referring to the assessment process itself and those referring to the start of being a member of the community. The main themes in the assessment period were: fear and anxiety about being judged; things being different; challenges; and making a positive choice. The initial period after joining the community elicited experiences of: choosing to stay and wanting to leave; being alone in a group; hope, and learning new skills; the experience being worth the distress; and then being hit by reality and feeling left. These themes were supported in the literature, which describes joining as a time of crisis and return to old coping styles and attachment behaviours. This study was limited by the unique setting in which it was conducted; however, as a therapeutic community, further research in other similar communities may support the current findings.
New Kids on the Block! The Government-Funded English Personality Disorder Services
Rex Haigh
ABSTRACT: In 2004 the English Department of Health funded 11 pilot projects to manage people in the community who were diagnosable with personality disorder. Several of the projects chosen were therapeutic communities, were based on therapeutic community principles or were modified forms of therapeutic communities. This paper describes the different projects, and argues that therapeutic communities can have a very important place in modern 21st century mental healthcare, but only if they are prepared to ensure their recognition and survival by adapting to their organisational environment, and doing so before others ‘steal their clothes’.
Psychotherapy Training in a Therapeutic Community
Ann Speirs
ABSTRACT: This paper outlines the formal aspects, academic and clinical, of a three-year training in psychotherapy offered in a psychiatric hospital functioning as a therapeutic community. The trainee’s adjustment to the community is described, with reference to the overlap and intersection with the patient’s experience in the community. Consideration is given to individual and group processes within the entire community.
Erikson’s concept of developmental stages is used, as well as a paper by Baird Brightman, to examine how crises in the training experience are managed by the trainee.
Exploring the Work of Service Users Within the Development of Therapeutic Community-Based Personality Disorder Services
Vanessa Jones and Clare Stafford
ABSTRACT: This paper arose from a presentation given at the 2006 ATC Windsor conference on the subject of service user involvement in the development of personality disorder services in the Thames Valley. It describes the way service user involvement has developed both locally in the Thames Valley and Nationally in England. It outlines a research project carried out in 2006, which aimed to find out how people had experienced their role in service user involvement, what had been good and what problems existed. It offers ideas and challenges to those providing personality disorder services and concludes that there are huge benefits to having an open and flexible approach to involving service users both for those providing services, those currently in treatment, and those who take the service user role.
How Accessible are Personality Disorder Services for Black and Minority Ethnic People?
Vanessa Jones and Clare Stafford
ABSTRACT: Staff from the Thames Valley Initiative, one of 11 national pilot projects delivering community-based personality disorder services, conducted a literature review regarding personality disorder services and people from Black and Minority ethnic backgrounds in order to identify trends in diagnosis, prevalence, accessibility and use of services. In a presentation at the Windsor conference of 2006 the views of BME service users and staff were also included in order to bring the literature review to life at a local level. Although there is a paucity of research in this area, we have concluded that the available literature, coupled with anecdotal evidence from service users and staff, offers a powerful mandate to service providers to take action to make their services more accessible.
The New Day TCs: Five Radical Features
Rex Haigh
ABSTRACT: A new model of therapeutic community practice is emerging in the UK, with its growth based on day units for the treatment of personality disorder. Several new units are being set up by the Government (Department of Health, 2003), and this paper examines five ways of working they have in common. These relate to the five ‘quintessential’ features previously described (Haigh, 1998). In the context of the day units, ‘attachment’ refers to the complex way in which joining the community confers a strong sense of belonging; ‘containment’ is the experience of safety members gain from their own support system; ‘communication’ and ‘inclusion’ are made to happen by using carefully scheduled and tightly structured community meetings, ensuring that members put their experience into words where they become common concerns; ‘agency’ refers to both the way in which members of these communities are responsible for themselves and each other, and to the self-determination that is required to withdraw from psychotropic medication.
Preparing to Go to Main House – This Week, Maybe Next Week!
Jan Birtle, Bill Calthorpe, Fiona McGruer, Liz Adie, Gerrard McCullagh and Sue Kearney
ABSTRACT: Main House Therapeutic Community was set up in the NHS in September 2000, one of two new residential units opened to provide a service for people with severe personality disorder residing in England, building on the work of the Henderson Hospital. While the community began to function relatively well as a democratic Therapeutic Community (TC) in the initial phase there was also a notable number of people dropping out of treatment.
We were aiming to investigate the hypothesis that engaging potential residents in a weekly preparation group prior to selection into a residential therapeutic community reduces the early dropout rate, increases the proportion of residents completing one year of treatment and results in an increase in the average length of stay.
A retrospective analysis was carried out comparing data from the group of residents in the year after the preparation group had been established with a historical control group from the preceding year. The effects on: numbers of admissions to the residential therapeutic community; individual and mean lengths of stay; the proportion of residents completing treatment; and early dropout rates were investigated. A further analysis was undertaken comparing those residents more recently invited to the preparation group with those who had not attended the group.
Early dropout rates were reduced from 19.6% of residents leaving in the first week to 5.3%; whilst the percentage leaving before completing one month fell from 47.5% to 18.4%. The mean length of stay increased (from 106.5 days to 145.1 days), as did the proportion of residents completing treatment (16.4% v 21.1%) but these changes did not reach statistically significant levels.
Our conclusion was that involving potential residents in a preparation group was associated with a significant reduction in early dropout rates from a residential therapeutic community. There were however no statistically significant increases in average length of stay in the community nor the percentage of residents who completed treatment.
At the time of the study the authors were all working in the Personality Disorder Service.
A Systems Approach to Understanding the Primary Task of the Henderson Hospital
Matthew Bowen
ABSTRACT: Since their inception, therapeutic communities have drawn on systems thinking to understand practice. However, this model of thought has tended to be underdeveloped compared to the use of psychodynamic models. This article will try to re-position the centrality of systems thinking to an understanding of therapeutic community practice, not as a competitor to a psychodynamic model but as a ‘meta-discipline’ that supports an understanding of how the psychotherapeutic model can come alive in a complex living system. I will draw particularly on Peter Checkland’s soft system methodology (1999a, 1999b, 2006) to generate a root definition and schematic model of the primary task of the Henderson Hospital, a therapeutic community founded by Maxwell Jones. Clinical vignettes will illustrate the application of the schematic model and its strength in drawing out the different functions that staff and residents perform, at different times, as they endeavour to work collaboratively.
A Bridge Too Far: The Living Learning Experience of Life and Death in a Residential Community for Personality Disorder in Northern Ireland
David Cameron, Heather Maxwell and Raman Kapur
ABSTRACT: This paper provides an experiential overview of the life and death of Bridge House, a residential TC for the treatment of personality disorder in Northern Ireland. The house opened in August 2002 but closed prematurely one-year later because of a lack of core funding. The paper outlines the theoretical approach of the TC model, provides a clinical snap-shot of the Bridge House residents and draws on the painful lived learned experience of one resident, to illustrate the trauma based antecedents and unrelenting pain and suffering of a largely misunderstood and neglected client group.
The Leader and the Institution
Antonello Correale and Enrico Pedriali
ABSTRACT: This paper does not conceive of the leader of an institution as leading only as the result of the emotional power that is active within the institution itself: the leader is him/herself a powerful factor that moulds the institution’s culture and outlook.
The influence that the leader has on an institutional group takes place in largely unconscious ways which are mainly related to what the Leader is, rather than what he/she does. Freud’s reflections on leadership are proposed to support this theory, particularly with reference to the analysis of idealisation processes within groups.
Circulation phenomena in institutional groups are also analysed, since effective circulation of emotions and ideas in groups essentially results from good leadership.
An Exploration and Explanation of the Treatment Model at Floen Kollektivet
David Walker
ABSTRACT: Kollektivet is a Norwegian term meaning ‘the collective’. There are many similarities between Floen kollektivet and British-based therapeutic communities. The author, who is a British-trained clinical psychologist and group analyst, is now clinical leader at Floen and draws on these links in his work.
There is much political debate in Norway as to the relevance of long-term medication-free treatment for drug-dependent patients. As in many European countries, this debate is often influenced by bureaucratic and economic pressures. At the same time misunderstandings about the nature of the work of therapeutic communities/kollektivs, and lack of knowledge about the validity and reliability of these methods can undermine the case for such treatments. This paper was presented at a conference designed to celebrate the work of Floen over the last 20 years, to inform and explain the treatment approach, and to explore future developments.
This keynote paper, using a combination of clinical, descriptive and theoretical material, explores and explains the treatment method used and the theoretical underpinnings to the approach. The paper gives clinical illustrations and explains the theory of drug abuse which informs Floen’s treatment approach. This approach is then explained and the basis for this approach explored further. A case is made for the need for continued long-term medication-free kollektiv/therapeutic community treatment for young drug-dependent adults.
Fractured Families: Building a Resource for Recovery – Preliminary Findings from the ADFACT ‘Stronger Families’ Initiative
Lynne Magor-Blatch
ABSTRACT: A number of gender differences exist between drug using women and men. Addicted women are more likely to suffer from depression and low self-esteem, to combine drugs and alcohol, and to begin and sustain an addiction through association with an addicted male associate. Women also face distinct issues related to their social roles as women, mothers and carers. These women have to overcome considerable obstacles in order to care for their children. However, the increasing number of children affected by parental substance use in today’s society is fast becoming a social problem requiring action on a number of levels.
It is well acknowledged in the literature that fewer women than men seek treatment for their substance use problems. One of the key reasons for the low numbers of women accessing treatment is believed to be a lack of complementary services for children. In 1989 the Alcohol and Drug Foundation of the Australian Capital Territory (ADFACT) opened the Karralika Family Program as part of the Karralika Therapeutic Community. In 2004, the program was enhanced through funding by the Australian Government under the ‘Stronger Families and Communities Strategy’. Results of preliminary studies show the range of programs provided under this initiative is proving successful in working with vulnerable families to increase parenting capacity and to heal the lives of children of substance-using parents.
Residential Treatment in Denmark: Client Characteristics and Retention
Mads Uffe Pedersen and Morten Hesse
ABSTRACT: Several different models of residential treatment exist for treating substance abuse problems, such as therapeutic communities, Twelve-Step Treatment, treatment with religious inspiration, and various other models. Little research has compared retention in these various models. Of special interest is whether specific models are better at retaining special types of patients. Three types of residential treatment were compared: therapeutic communities, Twelve-Step models and a group of varied models which was termed the ‘unspecified model’. A primary logistic regression showed that TCs were significantly better than non-specific models, which did not differ from Twelve-Step model institutions. To identify specific groups that were likely to benefit from either type of treatment, we conducted a cluster analysis based on EuropASI composite scores. Six clusters were produced, and labelled (1) Multi-problems, (2) Medical, (3) Psychiatric, (4) Legal, (5) Employed, and (6) Low severity, unemployed. Patients with only moderate problems were likely to complete regardless of treatment model. Patients with psychiatric problems did not differ by model. Patients in the multiple problem, medical problem and legal problem clusters were more likely to complete in therapeutic communities, and patients in the legal cluster were also more likely to complete in Twelve-Step centres compared with the unspecified model. The findings generally imply that unspecified models and Twelve-Step model centres are relatively inefficient at retaining patients with complex problems in inpatient treatment compared with Therapeutic Communities.
Insiders and Outsiders: Reflections of the Community Doctor at the Cassel Hospital
Jamie Wilson
ABSTRACT: No abstract.
RESEARCH COLUMN
Questioning the Community: A Guide to Research for Therapeutic Community Members
Part One: The Bare Bones of a Research Project
Mark Freestone and Chris Evans
ABSTRACT: In what is to become a regular column in the TC journal, we want to devote some time and space to ‘de-mystifying’ the practice of research: methods and methodologies (why one is not the other, and vice versa); practical applications of research; interpretations and implementations of ‘evidence-based practice’; as well as notes from our own experiences as researchers. In this issue, we will open up the debate with a quick introduction to some of the central issues in conducting research in general, and try to define some of the more difficult terms and concepts used by researchers.
Cultural Reviews
Sarah Tucker (2000) A Therapeutic Community Approach to Care in the Community: Dialogue and Dwelling. Published by Jessica Kingsley Publishers, P/B, pp.192, price p/b £18.95, 9781853027512. Reviewed by Robin Johnson.
Helen Spandler (Presenter) (2006) Asylum to Action: Paddington Day Hospital, Therapeutic Communities and Beyond. Published by Jessica Kingsley Publishers, P/B, pp.176, price p/b £25.00, ISBN 9781843103486. Reviewed by Nick Crossley.
EDITORIAL
Rowdy Yates, Eric Broekaert and Stijn Vandervelde
ABSTRACT: No abstract.
PERSONAL REFLECTIONS
Pioneering in the First Drug-Free Therapeutic Community in The Netherlands
Martien Kooyman
ABSTRACT: The author describes in this paper how he, as a doctor prescribing methadone to drug abusers, discovered the existence of drug-free therapeutic communities when he attended a play performed by residents of Daytop Village. With the knowledge that treatment of addiction is possible he started in The Hague in 1972 the drug-free therapeutic community Emiliehoeve. The initial democratic model that proved to be open to manipulation by the residents was replaced by the hierarchical structured model of the American therapeutic communities. In this paper he describes how he learned from consultants from these therapeutic communities and how he struggled with the paraprofessional-professional conflict, with abuse of power and the threat of influences from a sect. Learning from mistakes, changing what did not work and keeping what cannot be changed, the Emiliehoeve therapeutic community grew and became a role model for many programmes in Europe.
The Early History of the Ley Community – Personal Accounts
Peter Agulnik and Stephen Wilson
ABSTRACT: No abstract.
A TC on the Border of Two Cultures
Georges van der Straten
ABSTRACT: No abstract.
The Development of Drug Abuse and Addiction Services in Israel
Eitan Sela
ABSTRACT: No abstract.
BLANKENBERGE PAPERS
Transatlantic Dialectics: A Study on Similarities and Dissimilarities in Approaches to Substance Abuse Problems in the United States and Europe
Eric Broekaert, Kathy Colpaert, Veerle Soyez, Wouter Vanderplasschen and Stijn Vandevelde
ABSTRACT: Similarities as well as differences can be observed between Europe and the United States regarding the organisation of substance abuse prevention, treatment and policy. These issues were addressed during the EWODOR Symposium, which took place in Blankenberge (Belgium) in September 2005. This paper describes the complex, underlying social and ideological background to this transatlantic comparison from a historical perspective, focusing on the changing roles and positions of TCs in Europe and the United States. A number of themes are discussed here, e.g. the origins of TCs; the increasing importance of treatment evaluation and evidence-based research; the introduction of methadone as a therapeutic means; and harm reduction initiatives. In their conclusions, the authors refer to an evolution that is taking place on both sides of the Atlantic towards comprehensive or integrated treatment systems, whereby harm reduction practitioners collaborate in mutual understanding with therapeutic communities and other drug-free treatment modalities.
Women in Residential Drug-free Treatment: How to Use a Bottom-up Strategy and a Prediction of Completion Instrument to Prevent Early Dropout
Mads Uffe Pedersen
ABSTRACT: In Denmark women in drug-free residential treatment have proved to have significantly more psychosocial problems and a significantly higher dropout rate from treatment than men. The question is raised whether or not it is adequate to treat all the women with the same method, this method being an evidence-based one. It is suggested that instead we have to implement strat-egies that make it possible to identify different target groups with different needs and different risks of leaving treatment before planned. This strategy is defined as a bottom-up strategy. A prediction of completion instrument identifying such a specific target group of women is presented and the rationale behind such an instrument is discussed. It is concluded that it certainly is possible to develop a prediction of completion scale with a very strong prediction power and that such an instrument with advantage could be developed at a local level.
Seeking Desistance in the Community: Drug Users’ Experience of the Criminal Justice System
Gillian Squirrell
ABSTRACT: This paper focuses on policy developments within the UK criminal justice system and its links with treatment in working with substance-using offenders. The paper focuses on a dynamic area. Policy developments to improve access to treatment and to develop treatment opportunities are to be praised. Yet there are tensions where policies mandate treatment and mandate it to serve a criminal justice rather than public health agenda. Tensions are experienced by drug agencies as they try to work to criminal justice-funded agendas. There are risks of further excluding drug users who are drawn into a net-widening of the criminal justice system and who are subject to initiatives and policy change for which the evidence base often lags behind the speed of change.
The paper begins to unpick some complex issues and invites the reader to listen to some commentary on current practice and suggested policy changes offered by substance users and ex-users.
Dealing with Multiple and Frequent Service Utilisation in Substance Abuse Treatment: Experiences with Coordination of Care in Residential Substance Abuse Agencies in the Region of Ghent, Belgium
Wouter Vanderplasschen, Bert Mostien, Alphonse Franssen, Kurt Lievens, Jessica De Maeyer and Eric Broekaert
ABSTRACT: Frequent and multiple service utilisation is a well-known problem in residential substance abuse treatment and traditional agencies have proven to be relatively ineffective for this population. Given the lack of cooperation between treatment agencies, two alternative interventions that aim to improve coordination and continuity of care were implemented: structural inter-agency care coordination and intensive case management. Based on interviews with case managers and care coordinators and 20 clients who participated in one of both conditions, we explored how the persons directly involved themselves experienced these interventions.
Intensive case management was very much appreciated by clients, especially the comprehensive and client-oriented approach, while care coordinators – rather than clients – identified various advantages of inter-agency care coordination. We conclude that both interventions may be – for specific purposes – important additions to the existing residential agencies, if they are well integrated in a comprehensive network of services and if some prerequisites concerning implementation are addressed.
RESEARCH PAPERS
Application of Cognitive-Behavioural Therapy in a Therapeutic Community for Drug-Dependent Individuals
Peter Vassilev and Teodora Groshkova
ABSTRACT: This paper describes the establishment of TC Phoenix in Bulgaria. The paper describes the process of founding and developing a classic hierarchical TC and the contribution of this initiative to the TC movement. The authors, in addition, elaborate their introduction of cognitive-behavioural therapeutic techniques and examine the ways in which the two models can be adjusted to complement each other.
Ten Years of the Therapeutic Community, Casa Oberta (Open House)
Bartomeu Català
ABSTRACT: This paper describes the origins of a distinct client population of the TC Casa Oberta, which was established by Projecte Home Balears in June 1996. This organisation is a publicly-owned entity belonging to the Gobierno Insular of Mallorca. The TC has a number of characteristics that make it quite distinctive. In the first place, it is a harm reduction TC, since it admits not only users who are treated with methadone or users with a dual pathology, but also users wishing for a drug-free treatment. What makes Casa Oberta different from other substitute-prescribing maintenance programmes is the fact that in this TC we propose to go further than just the harm reduction; offering the possibility of following a personal growth programme within the atmosphere of a Therapeutic Community. This type of community unites the two therapeutic approaches: the one of the drug-free TC together with the harm reduction programmes based on substitutes maintenance.
Cultural Reviews
Lesley Day and Denis Flyn (Eds.) (2003) The Internal and External Worlds of Children and Adolescents: Collaborative Therapeutic Care. Published by Karnac, pp.288, price p/b Paperback £19.99, 9781855759282. Reviewed by John Diamond.
Lavinia Gomez (2005) The Freud Wars – An Introduction to the Philosophy of Psychoanalysis. Published by Routledge, pp.210, price p/b Paperback £17.99, ISBN: 1-58391-711-X. Reviewed by John Gale.
Rex Haigh and Jan Lees
ABSTRACT: This paper explores the different historical developments in the therapeutic community (TC) world, and the resulting differences in types of therapeutic community. The authors then look at more recent developments in the two main types of therapeutic community, and argue that there are increasingly more similarities than differences, often in response to external factors and constraints. They go on to suggest that there is a new model emerging, which combines aspects of the two main types of therapeutic community: the ‘fusion TC’; and they discuss this model, and its implications for the therapeutic community field. They also suggest ways of developing and extending joint working and cooperation across all types of therapeutic communities.
A ‘keen young doctor’: Hamish Anderson
David W. Millard
ABSTRACT: No abstract included.
Taking anarchy seriously: the fourth strain of organisational, therapeutic and psychic progress
Gary Winship
ABSTRACT: Anarchy here is shown to be a ‘fourth strain’ (after bureaucracy, hierarchy and democracy) that is instrumental in psychic, group and social change. The paper considers a history of the idea of anarchy in therapeutic community practice as it interleaves with democracy, hierarchy and bureaucracy. Far from being an architect of democracy, Maxwell Jones’s democratic pedigree is problematised. Michael Foulkes’s inclination towards a‘third way’ for democratic group therapy is found to lack the political follow-through of his Frankfurt associates. Wilfred Bion emerges finally as offering the theoretical footings for a theory of anarchic practice. Bion is the arch agitator, concerned mostly with the verticalities of Establishment (the big E he calls it) and unfettered with regard to democracy; ‘see these epaulettes; Major Bion, that’s me.’ Bion’s sources reveal his struggle to explain mental processes as they were tethered to mathematical developments in chaos theory. Bion’s contribution to a psychic chaos theory is considered in this paper with a view to vitalising the future arc of our understanding of individual, group and organisational psychology.
Moving into action: the use of psychodrama in the therapeutic community
Pen FitzGerald, Peter Haworth and Vanessa Queening
ABSTRACT: This paper will illustrate how psychodrama has a philosophical affinity with therapeutic communities. It will use clinically informed material to show how psychodrama can be used in therapeutic communities to link interpersonal conflict with its origin in childhood trauma and neglect. It will show how the four principles of democratisation, permissiveness, communalism and reality confrontation that characterise therapeutic communities, as described by Rapoport in ‘Community as Doctor’, also underpin psychodrama. It will also consider the connections between psychodrama and Rex Haigh’s essential ingredients of a therapeutic community.
Neville Yeomans (1928–2000): an Australian therapeutic community pioneer
Les Spencer
ABSTRACT: This paper provides a brief biography of Neville Yeomans’s (1928–2000) adapting of his father’s research in complex natural systems to the social lifeworld. There is an outline of his pioneering of therapeutic approaches as the founding director in 1959 of Australia’s first therapeutic community, Fraser House, located at North Ryde Hospital, Sydney. Yeomans’s evolving of social epidemiology, sociotherapy, clinical sociology, and community psychiatry in Australia, as well as using social forces in large group therapy, splitting into Small Groups based upon social categories, cultural localities, work as therapy, research as therapy, and the engagement of residents in domiciliary care and suicide/crisis support is briefly described. Also outlined is his adapting of Fraser House self-help ways from the late 1960s in civil society; creating therapeutic contexts and places, evolving multicultural wellbeing arts festivals, dispersed non-residential therapeutic communities, wellbeing networks, self-help groups, and his founding of community mental health in Australia.
Ideology and belief in the 21st century therapeutic community
Huw Green
ABSTRACT: It is here argued that the therapeutic community movement has been born out of a distinct ideological tradition in the history of mental health care, and retains much of this in its many current manifestations. However, in the broader climate of modern care in the community, such concerns can be neglected. In this paper I address these ideological foundations and argue that practitioners should not lose sight of them as they are a significant part of what defines the work; indeed they can be used as a source of strength. I highlight five dimensions of personal practice and illustrate how they link to the active practice of belief in the political aspects of work in a TC.
Cultural Reviews
Walsh, B. W. (2008) Treating Self-Injury: A Practical Guide. London: Guilford. Reviewed by Simon McArdle
Palmer, S. (2008) Suicide: Strategies & Interventions for Reduction & Prevention. London: Routledge. Reviewed by Simon McArdle
EDITORIAL Green Care: A Natural Resource for Therapeutic Communities?
Joe Sempik
ABSTRACT: No abstract.
Seeking Nature: A Contemporary Therapeutic Environment
Ambra Pedretti Burls
ABSTRACT: This paper introduces the concept of contemporary ecotherapy as a new practice and professional education milieu. The author’s research in this area of practice has shed light on its far-reaching therapeutic, social and environmental outcomes. The therapeutic dynamics of contemporary ecotherapy are elucidated from the backdrop of associated practice and theoretical models (ecological approach, ‘ecohealth’ and other models), which help to identify how ecotherapy can bring about useful outcomes for people, their community and their environment. This is further presented as a viable holistic and systemic approach suitable for therapeutic community settings.
Care Farming in the UK: Contexts, Benefits and Links with Therapeutic Communities
Rachel Hine, Jo Peacock and Jules Pretty
ABSTRACT: There is increasing evidence for the positive role of nature in human health, particularly in the light of the increase in sedentary lifestyles and the emergence of growing health concerns over obesity, coronary heart disease (CHD) and mental illness. This paper addresses the links between contact with nature and improved health and wellbeing, introduces the concept of various green care approaches and examines the links between care farming and therapeutic communities. Two studies (full results of both studies can be obtained from the NCFI (UK) at http://www.ncfi.org.uk) outlining care farming in the UK are described. The first is a scoping exercise to discover the current extent and diversity of care farming in the UK, in order to form baseline data on which to build future research needs and to help support care farmers. The second study is an in-depth analysis of clients from different types of care farm, and provides empirical data on psychological health and wellbeing out-comes. The aim of this study is to help build up a body of robust scientific evidence to inform health and social care providers (amongst others) of the benefits of time spent on a care farm. We conclude by setting care farming in a wider context by looking at the potential impact that an expansion of care farming could have on emergent health and social issues and policy in the UK.
Lothlorien Community: A Holistic Approach to Recovery from Mental Health Problems
Brendan Hickey
ABSTRACT: This paper describes the work of Lothlorien Community. The natural environment is a central part of the therapy, with the daily programme primarily based on organic gardening. This has a very beneficial effect on mental wellbeing. Interacting with others in a mutually supportive atmosphere and contributing to the working life of the community helps to rebuild residents’ self-esteem and self-confidence. Relaxation groups influenced by Buddhist meditation practice help to further develop the sense of mindfulness and relaxation which is gained through gardening.
Group Gardening in Mental Outpatient Care
Erja Rappe, Taina Koivunen and Elli Korpela
ABSTRACT: Several therapeutic goals, such as improvement in interaction level, communication skills and self-esteem, can be achieved by gardening activities. The aim of the study was to assess the suitability and effectiveness of group gardening in contributing to the rehabilitation of mental health outpatients. The method was a participatory study amongst mental health outpatients and their support persons gardening on a plot in Annala Manor Park in Helsinki. Ten participants completed the questionnaire about the importance and health-related effects of gardening and four returned their diaries at the end of the study. The researchers participated in 17 weekly meetings, observing and making notes in their personal diaries. The participants valued highly the opportunity to be outdoors, to do meaningful work, and to experience nature with all of their senses. They also appreciated harvesting and working together in a group. The participants reported feeling calmer and invigorated, and their ability to con-centrate was improved due to gardening. The social support of the group and the atmosphere of approval contributed to the autonomy and coping resources of the outpatients. The study indicates that group gardening can promote the development of healthy communities in which individuals have equal opportunities for a fulfilling everyday life despite their health or social state.
Companion Animals and Offender Rehabilitation – Experiences from a Prison Therapeutic Community in Scotland
Elizabeth Ormerod
ABSTRACT: Interaction with companion animals is now known to confer health and social benefits to people of all ages, whether living in the community or living within an institution. Carefully-planned Animal Assisted Therapy (AAT) programmes can be introduced to enhance the therapeutic milieu and as an adjunct to client care to help address diverse health and social needs. This paper provides an introductory overview of the role of animals in institutions. The author draws on her experience with particular reference to a programme in a prison-based therapeutic com-munity. The introduction of carefully planned AAT programmes would bring many benefits to prisoners, staff and ultimately to society. A multidisciplinary approach is emphasised. A consistent approach to animals in institutions is required and programmes should work to recognised standards. The effects of AAT on offenders requires more research including monitoring of recidivism.
Behavioural Effects of Goats on Disabled Persons
Silke Scholl, Gerlinde Grall, Verena Petzl, Marlene Röthler, Leopold Slotta-Bachmayr and Kurt Kotrschal
ABSTRACT: It is well known that contact with animals may benefit humans in a number of ways. In our pilot project we arranged weekly contacts of ten multiply-disabled adults (all deaf, four women and six men, aged 18-45) with well human-socialised goats. This is part of an effort to team up residential institutions for disabled clients with suitable farms. Over a period of three months, clients were video-taped when in contact with goats, one hour per week, 11 weeks in a row. In parallel, clients were video-taped in a dining room situation. This was done with the consent of clients and with support of the residential institution in Upper Austria. From these tapes, a number of parameters were coded for each client covering behaviour, communication and mood. Over time, attentiveness, active participation in the programme, and expression of joy increased, whereas withdrawal decreased in contact with the goats. In contrast, no changes were recorded in the dining room situation. Only in the goat situation, the population variance of most significant parameters decreased indicating an increasing homogeneity of the clients’ behaviour over the weeks. We conclude that regular animal contact had contributed to the wellbeing of multiply-disabled clients, and had a sustained effect on their behaviour when with the goats, but did not lead to a measurable behavioural change of clients in other situations.
Green Care Farms, A Safe Community Between Illness or Addiction and the Wider Society
Marjolein Elings and Jan Hassink
ABSTRACT: This paper presents the results of focus group interviews with 42 people with a psychiatric or addiction history who work on eight different green care farms. Green care farms provide an opportunity for a useful occupation activity for different kinds of client groups and are a growing phenomenon in the Netherlands. In general, participants start at green care farms without concrete expectations; most of them are looking for a useful way of spending their day. Once working on a farm, they especially come to appreciate the social aspects such as belonging to a group, feeling at ease and informality. In addition, they also appreciate the space and being involved in useful activities. Undertaking farming activities helps participants feel useful and healthier and they develop more self-esteem, self-respect and responsibility. Working on a green care farm can contribute more structure and discipline to the lives of participants, which can create the foundation for new activities or (voluntary) work elsewhere.
Theoretical Framework for Animal-Assisted Interventions – Implications for Practice
Bente Berget and Bjarne Olai Braastad
ABSTRACT: The aim of the article is to describe different aspects of the human-animal relationship, and why animals may positively impact on human health. Animals may affect their owners at home or in a more specialised setting (Animal-Assisted Interventions, AAI), e.g. in a therapeutic community. Some of the underlying mechanisms in this relationship are presented. These include animals as facilitators of social contact, providing social support, and contributing to improvement of self-esteem and self-efficacy. Animals may also serve as attachment figures, and different elements of this are presented; emotional bond, secure base, and representational models. Animals may also have direct physical effects on humans, e.g. by reducing risk factors of cardiovascular diseases. Finally, practical advice on how Animal-Assisted Interventions may be implemented in a therapeutic community is given.
EPILOGUE Growing Together
Rex Haigh.
Cultural Review
Caroline Case (2005) Imagining Animals – Art, Psychotherapy and Primitive States of Mind. Published by Routledge, P/P, pp.241, £18.99, ISBN: 1-58391-958-9. Reviewed by Anita Bracey.
Mini Therapeutic Communities – A New Development in the United Kingdom
Steve Pearce and Rex Haigh
ABSTRACT: Recent years have seen the decline of the residential TCs in the NHS, as threats to such places as the Henderson, the Cassel and Francis Dixon Lodge have led to them restructuring their programmes and assessing their future. Webb House has closed, Francis Dixon Lodge has moved to a day TC model, and the Henderson is at the time of writing (early 2008) under serious threat of closure. At the same time the number of day TCs (three to five days a week, non-residential) has expanded, and in the last couple of years ‘mini TCs’ (one to two days a week) have arrived. This paper charts the progress of these developments in the NHS, and draws conclusions and lessons from it relating to the current commissioning climate – and the need for TCs to learn and adapt. The example of the development of a mini TC in Oxfordshire is given as an illustration.
Maintaining Hope While Under Threat
David Walker
ABSTRACT: This paper will explore the impact on staff attempting to maintain and protect a long-term medication-free community for drug abusers within a health service setting. The author will describe the chaotic external context, its effect on the community and its staff group.
It is suggested rapidly changing and uncertain circumstances are now commonplace. How to survive and work effectively in such circumstances is crucial. The author will explore the despair caused through external chaos and how it is possible to maintain hope in such circumstances to maintain high quality work. Drawing from group analytic and complexity literature, the paper will suggest an approach to understanding the turmoil within a therapeutic organisation and its surrounding context. It is proposed that such understanding may be of benefit to staff working in such circumstances.
The Price of Permanency: Cost-Benefit Analysis of a Psychosocial Intervention for Children and Families
Barry Jones
ABSTRACT: This paper describes a retrospective cost-benefit analysis of families admitted to the Cassel Hospital Therapeutic Community and reaching two years post-discharge, having received a psychosocial intervention.
Following changes to the legal provision for children and families presenting via Family Courts, there exists an urgent need to quantify the expense and clinical benefits of families that had previously been funded in an assessment and treatment within such care proceedings.
Using Unit costs and through telephone interviews with the funding authority, we construct a cost-benefit analysis of children in care proceedings. We further examine the estimated prospective costs once decisions around permanent placements have been achieved and discuss both the statistical and ethical considerations in funding such interventions. In doing so, we hope to promote a discussion to secure alternative funding alternatives for vulnerable children and families.
Therapeutic Community Principles and Inpatient Care in the Greek Army Psychiatric Service
Dimitrios Moschonas and Theoni-Fani Triantafillou
ABSTRACT: The purpose of this paper is to present the Democratic Therapeutic Community (DTC) and Group Analytic (GA) principles in respect of the acute inpatient psychiatric care and therapy modifications applied in the locked psychiatric clinic of the 414 Military Hospital.
Three methods were used: (i) modified questionnaires recording the clinical experience of the staff; (ii) clinical records on groups’ supervision, i.e. session notes and statistics (data derived from the archives of the 414 Psychiatric Hospital); (iii) therapeutic community, milieu therapy, group psychotherapy, inpatient treatment, group analysis, internal care, institutionalised psychiatric treatment (MEDLINE 1995-2006).
The basic theoretic concepts and principles of the Democratic Therapeutic Community were analysed and related to their three-year application in the frame of locked inpatient psychiatric care, considering the constraints and the particularities of the present military environment.
The structure, the function, the stages and the clinical experience that have derived from the application of modified principles of a TC Model in the present military inpatient clinical context are described in comparison to the traditional Hierarchic Biomedical Model; in addition, the impact of the modified principles on the classic roles of clinical personnel involved in the therapeutic role, as well as the development of a constructive working environment among the staff and the inpatients is discussed.
A climate of constructive inquiry was encouraged by flattening the hierarchical pyramid. Both patient and personnel were encouraged to relate their novel views and experiences in the daily psychotherapeutic/sociotherapeutic group activities, contributing to the amelioration of diagnostic and therapeutic work, along with the change of attitudes about mental illness as far as the patients and the staff are concerned. Security aspects were fostered and risk problems inhibited, while relapse, re-institutionalisation, and duration of inpatient stay were decreased. Therapy compliance and active involvement of personnel in services were ameliorated, and personal responsibility and sense of satisfaction were promoted. Consequently, clinical services were upgraded and therapeutic rehabilitation was reinforced.
The importance of sociotherapy as complementary and equivalent to psychotherapy is also analysed. The application of sociotherapeutic groups, the importance of games, and the creativity in therapeutic practice, to severely-diagnosed disorders are particularly discussed. The transformation of the clinical staff (i.e. psychiatrists, nurses, psychologists) into active therapists and the constructive collaboration among them has been evaluated.
It was concluded that the application of TC and GA principles in acute inpatient psychiatric care could originate constructive therapeutic approaches, which are humanistic in nature, and gratify both the staff and the hospitalised individuals.
The suggested model could constitute a prototype of alternative functioning of therapeutic principles in a military context, as well as in a broad psychiatric environment in Greece, where acute inpatient psychiatric care bears trends of institutionalisation compromising the roles of both the patient and the therapist.
The Development of a Fantasy Modification Programme for a Prison-Based Therapeutic Community
Geraldine Akerman
ABSTRACT: This paper describes the development of a fantasy modification programme designed to integrate skills through which to manage inappropriate sexual or violent fantasies within a democratic therapeutic community (DTC) accredited for offenders. Residents participated in the programme and then continued to discuss how they applied the skills learned as part of their ongoing therapy. The programme was piloted with four participants at HMP Grendon and this process will be described and critically evaluated in this paper.
First Years in the Daytop Therapeutic Communities, Germany: Personal Point of View on the Development of a Concept-Based TC for Substance Abusers in Germany
Martin Däumling
ABSTRACT: No abstract.
AN OPEN LETTER When the Political is Personal: A Complaint Called Henderson
Martin Weegmann
ABSTRACT: No abstract.
OBITUARY Richard Wilfred Crocket : A Professional Biography
David W. Millard
ABSTRACT: No abstract.
Cultural Review
John Rowan (2005) The Transpersonal, Spirituality in Psychotherapy and Counselling 2nd Edition. Published by Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group (London), ISBN:1-58391-987-2. Reviewed by Catherine Prentice.
EFTC PAPERS
The Drug-Free Therapeutic Community: Findings and Reflections in an Evidence-Based Era
Mieke Autrique, Wouter Vanderplasschen, Eric Broekaert and Bernard Sabbe
KEYWORDS: Evidence Based Practice, Substance Misuse, Effectiveness
ABSTRACT: A growing tendency towards more evidence-based practice can be observed internationally in substance abuse treatment. Recently, a study was conducted on the state of the art and the most important challenges concerning evidence-based practice in Belgian substance abuse treatment.* This study revealed that, for treatment providers and practitioners, it is not always clear which conceptions are essential to the evidence-based paradigm and what this means for daily practice. This article discusses what is understood by evidence-based practice and describes the evidence currently available concerning interventions in substance abuse treatment. The evidence for the effectiveness of the drug-free therapeutic community is reviewed, as well as the implications of the evidence-based paradigm for daily practice in therapeutic communities.
* This study was carried out by the University of Antwerp, Ghent University and the Centre de Recherche en Défense Sociale (CRDS) in Tournai, within the context of the ‘Research Programme in support of the federal drugs policy document’, commissioned and financed by the Belgian Science Policy.
The Development of a Quality Improvement Network for Addiction Therapeutic Communities
Sarah Paget, Paul Goodman and Natalie Wood
KEYWORDS: Quality Improvement, Peer Review
ABSTRACT: The Community of Communities is a standards-based Quality Improvement Network for Therapeutic Communities (TCs) based at the Royal College of Psychiatrists’ Centre for Quality Improvement (CCQI). The network was developed in 2002 by the CCQI (previously the College Research Unit, CRU) in partnership with the Association of Therapeutic Communities (ATC) with start-up funding for three years from the National Lottery. This paper describes the background to the development of the Community of Communities’ network and maps out the progress to date. The review system is illustrated by a case study of an English therapeutic community which was part of the network from its inception.
Treatment Programme Changes for Residents with Long-Standing Learning Difficulties
Liana Gerber Bologa, Detlev Bähr and Gustavo Torres Díaz-Guerra
KEYWORDS: Learning difficulties, Learning theory, Case Study
ABSTRACT: Long-standing learning difficulties may have a medical, psychological, or social origin and may lead to difficulties within the therapy process and during the re-entry phase. Our multidisciplinary therapy concept addresses all three origins of learning difficulties. This paper considers the socio-pedagogic elements of the therapy programme aimed at the correction of this problem. The attention of the therapists concentrates on the aspect ‘learn to learn’. For clients that have demonstrated in their biography special difficulties in learning, programme changes, including formal and informal learning approaches under medical and psychological guidance, were included. The elected mix of methods led to spectacular recoveries as demonstrated by the case presentations and emphasised the relationship between the learning style, motivation and result on the one hand and the healing process on the other. The results suggest that long-standing difficulties can efficiently be treated parallel to addiction problems.
Integration of Family Treatment into the Mikkeli Community
Kaarina Peltonen
KEYWORDS: Family approaches, substance misuse, Case Study
ABSTRACT: No abstract.
Different Strokes for Different Folks: Results of a Small Study Comparing Characteristics of a Therapeutic Community Population with a Community Drug Project Population
Rowdy Yates
KEYWORDS: Dyslexia, policy, cost-benefit analysis
ABSTRACT: This paper reports the findings of a small study undertaken in Scotland and England. The Maudsley Addiction Profile (MAP) and Lucid Adult Dyslexia Screening (LADS) were used to interview a small sample of 50 drug treatment service users. Half of the sample were residing in a therapeutic community (TC), whilst the other half were attending a community drug project and, almost exclusively, were receiving long-term prescriptions for methadone. Whilst the main intention of the study was to explore the prevalence of dyslexia amongst treatment-seeking populations, this paper examines the differences found between the users of the two treatment types. The TC population was significantly more likely to have been injecting prior to treatment, was using a more extensive range of drugs and was more likely to report psychological health problems, including suicidal ideation. The paper examines whether current UK policy on residential treatment is responsible for these differences and what these findings might mean for both treatment delivery and estimating the cost-benefits of treatment interventions.
Follow-Up Evaluation of Tehran Therapeutic Community
Mohammad Reza Abdollahnejad
KEYWORDS: Substance misuse, outcomes study, effectiveness
ABSTRACT: This paper describes a research project which set out to evaluate the effectiveness of treatment in Tehran Therapeutic Community. The Addiction Severity Index (ASI) was used to collect and assess information on six domains of the subjects’ lives.
This survey was conducted over a three-year period between 2003 and 2005. A total of 43 recovered subjects, all male, who had completed their treatment in the Therapeutic Community, were evaluated.
Findings indicate that the mean scores relating to drug and alcohol use, quality of social/family relationship, psychiatric status and medical status have reduced between the pre-test phase and the post-test phase, i.e. improvements were found in all these domains. Scores for legal status show no change in the three phases of pre-treatment, post-treatment, and follow-up. Scores for employment status show a reduction in the three phases demonstrating an improvement in this domain both in the pre-test-post-test phase and in the follow-up phase.
Regarding the 12 subjects interviewed for the case studies, the study shows that relationships with employers, colleagues and family had improved, and that there were positive changes in employment status, level of offending, psychiatric status, drug and alcohol use and physical health. A brief statement is included from each of the 12 interviewed subjects on their views about the effects of the treatment.
TCA PAPERS
Integrating Vocational Services within Therapeutic Community Treatment
Sushma Taylor
KEYWORDS: Employability, Substance Misuse, Integrated Vocational Assistance
ABSTRACT: Substance abuse and unemployment are inextricably linked. Substance abusers are more likely to be unemployed than non-addicted individuals. Substance abusers face an array of psychological, educational and interpersonal barriers which hinder their pursuit of vocational opportunities. Vocational assistance includes vocational guidance, career identification and development, career counseling and skills acquisition. Skills classification assessment strategies are used to clarify occupational choice, to interpret work histories and to identify adaptive and maladaptive vocational development. Research validates the notion that employment is essential for long-term successful social rehabilitation of substance abusers. Gainful employment has also been linked to treatment retention, improved self-esteem and reduced criminal activity. Integration of comprehensive vocational services within substance abuse treatment programs can produce positive client outcomes, prevent recidivism and enhance client quality of life. This article describes a comprehensive vocational and job placement component integrated within a residential therapeutic community program.
Family-Centered Therapeutic Community Treatment: The SHIELDS for Families’ Exodus Program
Kathryn Icenhower
KEYWORDS: Substance misuse, Family Centred Approaches, Outcomes
ABSTRACT: The SHIELDS’ Exodus Program, is a family-centered therapeutic community where the entire family resides in individual family apartments in an 86-unit complex with all services offered on-site. National and local evaluation has been conducted since program implementation in 1994. Results over the past five years include an 81.2% completion rate and an average length of stay of 646 days.
Stay’n Out – The Evolution of a Prison-Based Therapeutic Community over 30 Years
Seep Varma and Ron Williams
KEYWORDS:
ABSTRACT: This article traces the evolutionary history of the Stay’n Out Program, which is a prison-based therapeutic community program in New York State. The authors describe the early challenges, essential program elements and the lessons learned over the past 30 years. The Stay’n Out Program is the oldest prison-based program in the United States.
Samaritan Village Veterans Programs: Chemical Dependence Treatment for Veterans in a Therapeutic Community
Carol Davidson
KEYWORDS: Trauma, Peer Support, War Veterans
ABSTRACT: Veterans are a special population that will benefit from chemical dependence treatment in an environment that addresses both the inherent strengths and clinical challenges associated with their military service history. Samaritan Village has a network of services that includes two residential therapeutic community programs for veterans. Both programs serve male veterans who have problems such as substance abuse, homelessness, health, mental health, vocational, family, and criminal justice system issues. The programmatic culture is enhanced by veterans-specific services including an emphasis on veterans’ pride and camaraderie, and co-located treatment for Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD). Combat trauma frequently results in PTSD, and the incidence of substance abuse among traumatized veterans is significant. Therapy groups promote recovery by providing support for the processing of unexpressed memories, cognitive reframing of experience, the development of affect regulation skills, membership in a recovery-based support network, and the ability to build toward a future life that has meaning and purpose. As American veterans return home from Operation Enduring Freedom and Operation Iraqi Freedom, the need for enhanced awareness of their needs will be crucial within the field of human services providers.
EDITORIAL
Barbara Rawlings and Simon McArdle
ABSTRACT: No abstract.
Measuring Personal Resources in a Therapeutic Community-based Treatment System: A Reliability and Validity Study of the Dutch Version of PREDI-Short Diagnosis
Veerle Raes, Wouter Vanderplasschen, Maarten De Wilde, Stijn Delputte, Veerle Soyez and Eric Broekaert
ABSTRACT: In therapeutic community-based programmes, instruments are also used to structure treatment. In line with the positive view of change, the need for a tool measuring personal resources was observed. The diagnostic system PREDI (Psychosoziales Ressourcenorientierter Diagnostiksystem) was developed to measure personal capacities and motivational aspects in 16 life areas. This instrument was translated into Dutch and implemented in a small sample (n=73) in the TC-based treatment system ‘De Sleutel’. The aim of this study was to test the internal consistency and validity of the Dutch version. Clients’ personal resources and motivation ratings showed Cronbach’s alpha and intra-class correlation coefficients >.80. Factor analyses showed four interpretable factors for the assessment of personal resources and motivation, which were close to but different from the original German PREDI. Evaluating convergent validity with EuropASI, it appeared that PREDI-personal resources’ assessment is measuring different aspects in the same life areas as EuropASI. More correspondence was found with PREDI-motivation assessment and EuropASI need-for-help. It was concluded that PREDI is a valid and reliable complementary tool to EuropASI for practice to focus on personal resources, and for research to evaluate the use of instruments in TC-based programmes.
Motivating Young People Towards Success: Evaluation of a Motivational Interviewing-Integrated Treatment Programme for COD Clients in a Residential Therapeutic Community
Stefanie Klag, Frances O’Callaghan, Peter Creed and Melanie Zimmer-Gembeck
ABSTRACT: The present study examined the effectiveness of Motivational Interviewing (MI) in the treatment of chronic substance users with high rates of comorbidity with mental health disorders (COD clients). Employing a quasi-experimental design to compare the effectiveness of standard drug and alcohol treatment with an MI-integrated approach, results revealed that the MI-integrated treatment approach was associated with improved retention in terms of keeping clients in the programme, a more autonomous motivational attitude towards treatment, and more positive and stronger treatment outcomes. These findings suggest that the MI-integrated approach was more effective in the treatment of COD clients compared to standard drug and alcohol treatment.
Connect: Residents’ Experiences of a Unique Therapeutic Community
Yvette Brown and Jonathan Rousseau
ABSTRACT: This paper provides a unique insight into Connect, a UK-based democratic therapeutic community that uses transactional analysis (TA) as its main theoretical framework. The paper explores how TA is incorporated into Connect, drawing on participants’ experiences within therapy and once discharged. Eight participants (seven females, one male) who had completed their therapy were interviewed about their experience of Connect using a semi-structured format. Thematic content analysis was used to analyse the data. A number of sub-themes were found and organised into three main themes: ‘Therapeutic Environment’, ‘Therapeutic Attainment’ and ‘Leaving Connect’. This paper builds on the small amount of qualitative research of residents’ experiences of TC living. Limitations of the study are acknowledged and suggestions made for future research.
The Illusion of Reality Some Thoughts with Maxwell Jones
Dennie Briggs
ABSTRACT: Consciousness was a recurrent theme in the life and work of Maxwell Jones. He was constantly searching for ways to alter consciousness and reach alternative states, not through hallucinogens or practices such as firewalking. Rather, he eventually took the path of the mystics and sought a more transcendental reality than that which he had experienced in his medical and psychiatric training. That route led him to embrace Jungian concepts such as archetypes and the collective unconscious. He found allies in diverse areas, biologist Rupert Sheldrake’s morphic fields or pooled memories, as one example; however, many of his colleagues were doubtful.
Nursing at the Scene of the Crime
Rebecca Neeld and Tom Clarke
ABSTRACT: Nurses caring for mothers accompanied by children not only observe but also intersect their patients’ abusive and neglectful behaviour towards their children. Thus, nurses experience to a degree the traumas that impact on the child. Nurses, like children, hold on to what is good with the mother (Blum 1981). In order to maintain hope, and possibly to avoid separation, there are occasions when nurses will turn a blind eye to abuse.
What Does The Volcano Have To Say? Integrative Arts Psychotherapy in a Therapeutic Community Setting
Jane Stewart
ABSTRACT: Upon entering therapy, many people find themselves unable to communicate their most powerful emotional experiences in a satisfying way. Many people either lack the vocabulary to articulate their feelings, or it may be that there are simply no words. Art and metaphor provide an alternative to words. Integrative Arts Psychotherapy (IAP) provides opportunities to communicate emotional experience using both verbal and nonverbal metaphor, via a range of art forms.
Therapeutic Communities in Prisons: Addiction and Democratic Therapeutic Communities for Offenders in Custody in the UK
Barbara Rawlings
ABSTRACT: The Prison Service of England and Wales provides two kinds of therapeutic community (TC), one based on the ‘democratic’ model developed originally at the Henderson Hospital and one based on the self-help model, developed originally at Synanon in California. Both models have evolved considerably over the years, but their roots are still discernible in current practice. In the prisons, the differences between the two are enshrined in their different Theory Manuals (HM Prison Service 2007 and 2008), on the basis of which each model has been accredited by the Ministry of Justice to operate in prisons. Part One of this paper outlines the two models and describes a different therapeutic focus of each. Part Two describes how aspects of the prison context impact on the service the TCs can provide.
Review
Robert A. Neimeyer (Ed.) (2009) Constructivist Psychotherapy. Published by Routledge (2009) P/B, pp. 150, price P/B Not included, ISBN 978-0-415-44234-3.Reviewed by Simon McArdle.
EDITORIAL
Penelope Campling and John Diamond
ABSTRACT: No abstract.
MAXWELL JONES MEMORIAL LECUTRE 2008
Therapeutic Communities: A Natural Impulse or An Evolving Technology?
David Kennard
ABSTRACT: No abstract.
MAXWELL JONES MEMORIAL LECTURE 2008
Therapeutic Communities: A Natural Impulse or An Evolving Technology?
Responding to David Kennard
Penelope Campling
ABSTRACT: No abstract.
WINDSOR PAPERS
Lost in Translation: Experiences at an Italian Group Relations Conference
John Diamond
ABSTRACT: This paper is an experiential account of attending a Group Relations conference (delegates’ names and some roles have been anonymised) in Italy. The Group Relations model sets out to maximise the learning of delegates in understanding the relationships and assumptions that exist in and between individuals within a human group context. The conferences are designed to amplify and change the ‘normal’ conditions of group life, by accentuating and bringing to the surface unconscious dynamics that might otherwise lie dormant. Group Relations conferences therefore create disorientation from our ‘day-to-day’ experiences of group life, seeking to maximise the impact and the learning of these underlying processes on all aspects of the experience. The paper explores the impact of the Italian language on two non-Italian-speaking delegates, and how this increased the complexity of our attempts at a ‘search for meaning’ in order to understand the conference process.
The Large Group at Windsor: A Strange Situation
Christopher Holman
ABSTRACT: The large group at the Windsor Conference of the ATC is experienced as problematic. The difficulties that group analysis sees in large groups are explored, as well as its relationship with psychoanalysis. Ideas emerging from attachment theory are offered as the foundation for the proposition that a special kind of mirroring occurs in large groups, in which the individual sees itself in the self-description, the mythology, of the group as a whole. This is enabled by bringing aspects of oneself to the group to allow identification and to demonstrate that the group can indeed be trustworthy. Such interventions should be in plain language and not have any immediate intention to produce specific change in any individual. A kind of ‘radical ordinariness’ is advocated.
Taking Experience Seriously: Personal and Professional Boundaries in Supervision
David Walker
ABSTRACT: For staff living and working within the hectic atmosphere of therapeutic communities (TCs), supervision, professional development and personal learning are crucial aspects of survival. This paper will explore the development of personal development groups for staff members and their place in mental health work. How can such groups function in TCs, can they be used for a blend of personal and professional development and learning? What is possible and ethical? If we expect our patients to be open and willing to self-disclose, is it appropriate to expect our staff team and ourselves as leaders to do the same? What are the boundaries between supervision, therapy and inservice training and how do we as leaders function effectively in such situations? The author will draw on his own experience facilitating such groups and the tensions and problems met. Taking one’s own experience seriously and understanding this experience theoretically is crucial for changing and developing practice.
Directing Therapy at HMP Grendon: Learning by Experience
Michael Brookes
ABSTRACT: This paper will describe the author’s learning experience of being responsible for the management of the six therapeutic communities (TCs) at HMP Grendon, a Category B prison with a unique remit to provide therapy for up to 240 residents/prisoners.
The paper describes why the changes were necessary and how staff, in applying successfully TC principles in their work with residents, can fail to adhere to these in their staff-staff relationships. Reasons for this are explored, with the conclusion reached that one of the responsibilities senior TC managers carry is to ensure that staff members are able to process the emotional demands of their work so that their relationships with other members of staff are of a similar professional quality to those developed with residents.
Experts by Experience: Discovering the Heart of a Therapeutic Group IQ
Peter R. Holmes and Susan B. Williams
ABSTRACT: This article explores the centrality of the contribution of experts-by-experience in a non-residential therapeutic community (TC) that is also a local church, in Deal, Kent, UK. Selected conceptual findings from two doctoral research programmes are discussed and illustrated in the context of the practices of the community.
We suggest that the combined ongoing contribution of expertsby-experience creates a ‘group IQ’ with an explicit therapeutic dynamic, a synergy of social processes at the heart of the life of the community. This ‘therapeutic group IQ’ enables the community as a whole to support the ongoing change of its members.
Experts by Experience: A Community Chair Model Managed By Residents of Glebe House Therapeutic Community
Tony Hockley
ABSTRACT: This paper offers a context for, and report of, a workshop delivered by resident Chairmen living and working at Glebe House Therapeutic Community, to the Association of Therapeutic Communities Conference at Windsor in September 2008. The Community Chair Model is integrated with Rapoport’s Four Cornerstones and has been adapted to create an inclusive, accessible and vibrant vehicle by which our young people can contribute to the management of Community life. The Community Chair Model is fundamentally connected to our core principles and is designed to support residents in developing skills likely to promote pro-social attitudes and behaviour. The model forms an important element of our treatment intervention, enabling residents to engage with one another around issues such as the use and abuse of power, the taking of responsibility for themselves and for one another, the management and containment of powerfully difficult feelings and the recognition that they can both nurture and be nurtured.
OBITUARY Enrico Pedriali [1942-2009]
John Gale
ABSTRACT: No abstract.
Reviews
Anne Aiyegbusi and Jenifer Clarke-Moore (Eds.) (2009) Therapeutic Relationships with Offenders An Introduction to the Psychodynamics of Forensic Mental Health Nursing. Published by Jessica Kingsley, pp. 240, Price p/b £22.95, ISBN: 978-1-84310-949-5. Reviewed by Richard Byrt.
Stephen Briggs, Alessandra Lemma and William Crouch (Eds.) (2008) Relating to Self-Harm and Suicide – Psychoanalytic Perspectives on Practice, Theory and Prevention. Published by Routledge, Paperback, pp. 247, £19.99, ISBN: 978-0-415-42257-4. Reviewed by Kevin Healy.
Gwen Adshead and Caroline Jacob (Eds.) (2009) Personality Disorder. The Definitive Reader Forensic Focus Series 29. Published by Jessica Kingsley, pp. 278, P/B, price not included, ISBN: 978-1-84310-640-1. Reviewed by Simon McArdle.
Joyce Scaif (Ed.) (2009) Supervision in Clinical Practice: A Practitioner’s Guide. Published by Routledge, 2nd edition, pp. 410, £24.99, ISBN: 978-0-415-45000-3. Reviewed by Julia Telfer.
Alan Carr (2009) What Works with Children, Adolescents, and Adults? A Review of Research on the Effectiveness of Psychotherapy. Published by Routledge, pp. 388, Paperback, £24.99, ISBN: 978-0-415-45291-5. Reviewed by Alan Worthington.
Nicholas J. Long
ABSTRACT: No abstract.
Life Space Crisis Intervention as a Modern Manifestation of Milieu Therapy and Orthopedagogy
Eric Broekaert, Bram Soenen, Ilse Goethals, Franky D’Oosterlinck and Stijn Vandevelde
ABSTRACT: This article concerns the historical and particular position of ‘Milieu Therapy’ and ‘Life Space Crisis Intervention’ at the Department of Orthopedagogics of the Ghent University Association. Life Space Crisis Intervention (LSCI) is a therapeutic, verbal method of intervention for young people in crisis. It is an ego-strengthening approach and part of the milieu-therapeutic tradition. During its long history the Department of Ortho-pedagogics at Ghent University has never adhered to one dominant paradigm of care. Milieu therapy has, however, played an important role in the department’s development and offered fertile soil for the implementation of new methodologies such as LSCI..
Conflict Management for Children and Adolescents with Emotional and Behavioural Disorders
Franky D’Oosterlinck, Ilse Goethals, Eline Spriet, Bram Soenen and Eric Broekaert
ABSTRACT: This article will summarize the main results of a PhD dissertation that emerged from several studies focusing on Life Space Crisis Interventions (LSCI) with children and adolescents with emotional and behavioural disorders (EBD). The different studies revealed that the characteristics and problems of children and adolescents with EBD are of a serious nature. This finding is reflected in the high number of crises and conflicts as mentioned by staff of Flanders’ facilities regarding this area. The dissertation searched for a comprehensive method to deal with these problems and to empower staff to handle conflicts and crises. The evaluation by staff, and children and adolescents in this target group, of the verbal therapeutic method LSCI showed that this model is valuable in both long-term and short-term benefits. Suggestions for a more widely LSCI-oriented treatment are discussed. Finally, the limitations of the studies and recommendations for the level of scientific research and orthopedagogical treatment will be presented.
Perceptions of Staff Members on the Implementation of Conflict Management Strategies in Educational and Therapeutic Environments for Children and Youths with Emotional and Behavioural Disorders
Franky D’Oosterlinck, Bram Soenen, Ilse Goethals, Stijn Vandevelde and Eric Broekaert
ABSTRACT: A common experience for staff members working in educational or therapeutic settings for children with emotional and behavioural disorders (EBD) is the lack of coping strategies in dealing with conflict and crisis situations. The aim of this study is to evaluate whether or not the training and implementation of Life Space Crisis Intervention (LSCI), a conflict management model, empowered the staff members in handling conflicts. This objective has been investigated by feedback forms filled in by the staff at two specific periods: (1) immediately after the LSCI training, and (2) after one year of using the LSCI method in daily practice. An in-depth qualitative analysis reveals an enhancement of staff members’ knowledge and coping strategies in handling conflicts. Additionally, they stress the need for sufficient staff resources and time to implement and sustain LSCI. Despite these difficulties, the majority of the participants strongly believe in the applicability of the method and the usefulness of the training.
Positive Education Program’s Day Treatment Centers
Frank Fecser
ABSTRACT: The Positive Education Program in Cleveland, Ohio, is grounded in the Re-EDucation philosophy and serves more than 700 students with emotional and behavioral disorders in ten day-treatment centers. The centers blend special education with mental health in a school environment in which students and families are both supported and challenged as they work together to bring stability to their lives. Encouraging outcome data demonstrates the effectiveness of this community-based program.
Implementing Choice Theory with Life Space Crisis Intervention in a Residential Treatment Setting
Mitchell Beck
ABSTRACT: This paper will describe, in detail, the process of supplementing William Glasser’s Choice Theory/Quality School Principles on Fritz Redl’s Life Space Crisis Intervention at a residential treatment facility for an emotionally disturbed youth.
Struggling with Power: Making Sense of Supervision
Mark D. Freado and Lisa M. Shepard
ABSTRACT: The position of supervisor in therapeutic communities requires preparation, skill acquisition and the understanding that the connection of substantive supervision to supervisees is paramount. However, quite often supervisors are not prepared adequately for the challenge and find themselves struggling with their new found power. Supervisors promoted within organizations are colleagues one day and managers the next; managers who now have a certain power and authority over their one time peers. Preparing and mentoring supervisors to be good stewards of the organization’s philosophy and core values requires a service model that encourages teaching and learning for both the supervisor and the staff members. The focus of this article will be on how super-visors prepare and perform the management and leadership tasks related to substantive supervision.
Effects of the Combination of Life Space Crisis Interventions and a Level System at the Therapeutic Treatment Centre ‘Heynsdaele’ – A Special School and Home for Youth with Behavioural and Emotional Problems
Bram Soenen, Ilse Goethals, Eline Spriet, Franky D’Oosterlinck and Eric Broekaert
ABSTRACT: In 2005, the Province of East-Flanders (Belgium) approved the project ‘Heynsdaele’. The Provincial Institute Heynsdaele consists of a residential facility and a school for special education for boys aged 12 to 21 with emotional and behavioural disorders (EBD). It was the goal of this project to meet the needs of this target group by using appropriate strategies.
In the process of the project the problem areas of the whole institute were identified, by performing interviews, observing classes and living groups, and by collecting documentation on the organization. Based on the data collected, three problem areas were identified: aggression, illicit drug abuse and non-attendance. In order to address these problem areas, two strategies were implemented. The first, Life Space Crisis Intervention (LSCI), is a therapeutic and verbal strategy used to intervene when children are in crisis. The other, a level system, was meant to set limits to severe disruptive behaviour, to reward positive behaviour in different levels and to identify non-responsive students.
Regarding the population of this research, several questionnaires showed that the behaviour problems of these youngsters remained stable over the three years of the project, according to teachers, educators and youngsters. Next to that, LSCI and the level system have been proven to have a positive effect on the academic performances and on reducing the disruptive behaviour of the youngsters. During one month in both 2006 and 2008, pre-post measurements of school results, conflicts, signalization moments and the amount of non-attendance were registered by educators and teachers. Positive results were found on all of these themes. Because of the promising results of this project, the authors emphasise the value of coaching and supporting staff members in using these strategies in daily practice.
The Mulberry Bush as a Therapeutic Community – Context and Culture 1948-2008
John Diamond
ABSTRACT: This paper was written for the occasion of the sixtieth anniversary of the founding of the Mulberry Bush School, and presented at the Community Housing and Therapy Conference ‘therapeutic environments’ held in London, December 2008. The paper explores some historical influences on the development of the school and how these have shaped the evolution of the relationship between the theory and practice of the therapeutic task.
Reviews
Adrian Ward, Kajetan Kasinski, Jane Pooley and Alan Worthington (Eds.) (2004) Therapeutic Communities for Children and Young People. Published by Jessica Kingsley, pp. 336, P/B, ISBN: 1-84310-096-7. Reviewed by Eian Gault.
Janie Rymaszewska and Terry Philpot (2005) Reaching The Vulnerable Child – Therapy with Traumatized Children. Paperback, pp. 200, 1-84310-329-x. Reviewed by Juan Doblado Pavon.
In 1994, Nick Heather, Alex Wodak, Ethan Nadelmann and Pat O’Hare published the book Psychoactive Drugs and Harm Reduction: From Faith to Science (Heather, Wodak, Nadelmann & O’Hare, 1994). This edited collection, based largely upon the proceedings of the Third International Conference on the Reduction of Drug-related Harm, effectively set a new agenda for the addiction field and heralded the gradual demise of abstinence-based treatments in Europe.
In part, this slow fall from grace was due to the failure of therapeutic communities (TCs) and other abstinence-based services to respond positively to the challenges posed by the advent of HIV/AIDS. The new urgency with which governments and public health officials harnessed the work of drug treatment agencies to the broader public health imperatives of infection control and the promotion of safer sex effectively caught TCs napping. Whilst the rest of the addiction field moved to accommodate these new objectives in some form, TCs remained obdurately opposed to developments which they saw as undermining the purity of their purpose and were, as a result, diminished in relative importance.
But in part, too, this reduction in influence – and in the early days of drug treatment, TCs enjoyed influence far greater than might have been expected given their relatively small footprint (Yates, 2003) – also stemmed from the perception that the ‘new harm reductionists’ had captured the higher ground of scientific evidence and that the rest was simply smoke and mirrors.
It has taken a long time for TCs and other abstinence-based services to recover from this period. But the recovery is under way and this issue is yet another step along that journey.
What is offered here is proof that the need to establish a scientific basis for our work is being taken seriously. In addition, the recent rebirth of interest in ‘recovery’ sparked, at least in part, by the exponential growth of self-help recovery movements (Alcoholics Anonymous of course, but both Narcotics Anonymous and Smart Recovery and even some non-aligned groups have grown dramatically over the past few years) has allowed the TC movement to re-establish its scientific credentials.
Thus, in this issue of the journal, several articles detail work under way to improve performance and outcomes. Others examine the relationship between TCs and mutual help fellowships and their impact on the wider community.
The paper by Kressel et al. describes the trialling of a protocol to improve TC staff performance. The subsequent paper by Burkett describes a small study to examine the correlation between improved social and coping skills in TC residents and their drug/alcohol-related outcomes. Addazi, Marini and Rago examine the relationship between length of time in treatment, the nature of the termination of the treatment etc., and treatment outcomes with a sample of residents in an Italian TC. In a similar study, Freestone and Goodman explore the treatment outcomes and treatment experiences of a group of drug users entering the Ley Community in Oxford.
The drugs-crime axis has been a preoccupation of many European governments in the past few years and has, to some extent, overtaken the public health imperatives which drove the expansion of the treatment field in the last decades of the 20th century. In the UK in particular, these issues have been compounded by political and public concerns over public drunkenness and the resultant public disorder.
In her article, McDonald considers the impact of a prison-based TC in America upon the social and coping skills of the women prisoners involved, whilst Deaner and colleagues explore the impact upon local crime levels of the establishment of Oxford Houses in certain residential areas (and found that there was none!).
Oxford Houses emerged in the latter half of the last century as a fascinating example of a fusion between mutual-aid fellowships like AA and NA and self-generating sober-living movements. Certainly, mutual-aid fellowships, sober-living initiatives and TCs have much to learn from each other, and the final article by Weegmann examines the similarities and differences between AA and the British democratic TCs.
All told, we believe that this is an impressive and interesting contribution to the development of a robust and defensible evidence-base for the abstinence-based sector of the addiction treatment field both in the UK and further afield.
References
Heather, N., Wodak, A., Nadelmann, E. & O’Hare, P. (Eds.). (1994). Psychoactive Drugs and Harm Reduction: From Faith to Science. London: Whurr Publications.
Yates, R. (2003). A brief moment of glory: the impact of the therapeutic community movement on drug treatment systems in the UK. International Journal of Social Welfare, 12(3): 239-243.
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Rowdy Yates is Senior Research Fellow at the University of Stirling, UK. Email: p.r.yates@stir.ac.uk
Barbara Rawlings is an Honorary Fellow at the University of Manchester, UK. Email: barbara.rawlings@talk21.com
Simon McArdle is Senior Lecturer in Mental Health at the School of Health and Social Care, University of Greenwich, London, UK. Email: s.p.mcardle@gre.ac.uk
A Protocol to Improve Clinical Practice (PICP) in Therapeutic Community Treatment
David Kressel, Keith Morgen, George De Leon, Gregory Bunt and Britta Muehlbach
ABSTRACT: This study addresses the critical need to utilize research findings in real treatment settings. It examines the clinical utility of a protocol designed to improve the way therapeutic community (TC) treatment is provided. The protocol uses psychometrically-tested staff and client-rated instruments that measure client progress on 14 theoretically-based practitioner-validated goals of TC treatment. Clients in Daytop Village residential treatment facilities are randomly assigned to an experimental (protocol is operating; N=111) or control (protocol is not operating; N=214) condition, and compared on seven variables correlated with effective treatment. It is hypothesized that clients in facilities where the protocol is operating will exhibit greater improvements on these variables than clients in equivalent facilities where the protocol is not operating.
Repeated measures ANOVA with the between-subjects covariate of condition (protocol or control) was conducted on all the measures. Significant time by condition interactions were found for counselor competency and staff helpfulness. Within the protocol condition, counselor competency significantly increased between time point 1 and time point 2. Similarly, within the protocol condition impressions of staff, quality significantly increased between the two time points. All seven dependent measures show increases from time 1 to time 2 in the protocol group, while the same is true for only three in the control group.
The results are encouraging not only because the protocol shows promise as an effective tool for improving treatment but also because it utilizes evidence-based research instruments that measure client progress in real treatment settings.
Author disclosure
1) Acknowledgement and role of funding source
Funding for this study was provided by NIDA Grant R01 DA3075; the NIDA had no further role in the study design; in the collection, analysis and interpretation of data; in the writing of the report; or in the decision to submit the paper for publication.
2) Contributors
David Kressel and George De Leon designed the study and developed the instruments in the protocol. Keith Morgen undertook the statistical analysis. Britta Muehlbach managed the literature searches and summaries of previous related work. David Kressel, Greg Bunt and Britta Muehlbach developed the protocol. David Kressel wrote the first draft of the manuscript.
3) Conflicts of interest
There are no conflicts of interest.
4) Acknowledgements
Special thanks to the residents of Daytop Village. Their willingness to share in their struggle will hopefully benefit those that follow.
1. Introduction
There is a growing gap between research and practice in the drug treatment field evidenced by insufficient application of current research findings in actual treatment settings. The gap is due in part to the youth of the drug treatment field and the lack of consensus on how to view the problem of drug dependence (Etheridge & Hubbard, 2000). For instance, medical, psychological, social work, addiction counseling, milieu-therapy and cognitive approaches each have a unique and varied perspective on the causes and treatments for drug dependence.
This paper presents the results of a randomized study of a new protocol for improving clinical practice (PICP) in the therapeutic community (TC) setting. The protocol, a comprehensive application of research to practice, utilizes evidence-based instruments that measure client clinical progress in real treatment settings. These instruments were constructed on the basis of a theoretical view of TC treatment (De Leon, 2000). The protocol is a counseling intervention where both client and counselor can re-focus efforts, examine client strengths and needs, mutually design treatment plans and track achievement of goals.
The seven dependent measures are chosen because the literature shows these variables are correlated with effective treatment. For example counseling requires a strong therapeutic alliance (Horvath, 1991). Within the PICP this alliance is facilitated via the counselor listening to and respecting the client’s perspective of treatment progress and by working with the client to establish mutually agreed upon treatment goals.
Studies of treatment seek to identify the ‘active ingredients’ that contribute to positive outcomes (Moos, Finney & Cronkite, 1990).
These ‘active ingredient’ variables include therapeutic alliance, client engagement and participation, and program structure. Studies have demonstrated there are beneficial effects of increased therapeutic alliance between staff and client for treatment outcomes. Research by Simpson and colleagues with a sample of methadone maintenance clients indicates that the strength of the therapeutic relationship between client and counselor is positively correlated with client attendance, lower drug use during treatment, and retention in the program (Simpson, Joe, Rowan-Szal & Greener, 1997). A study of probationers in short-term residential treatment found that recidivism rates are negatively correlated with client ratings of counselor competence and peer support (Simpson, Joe, Broome, Hiller, Knight & Rowan-Szal, 1997). Similarly, staff perceptions of client therapeutic involvement is positively correlated with client retention in a TC. Other research has identified affiliation, connection and trust between staff and clients as essential elements of effective TC treatment (Bell, 1994).
Extent of client engagement and participation in program services is another ‘active ingredient’ correlated with positive treatment outcomes. One study of TC programs shows that greater resident participation in treatment increases length of stay in the program (Condelli & Dunteman, 1993). In other treatment modalities involvement in social activities predicts length of treatment and program completion (Burling, Seidner, Robbins-Sisco, Krinsky & Hanser, 1992; Moos, King, Burnett & Andrassy, 1997). In addition, residents who develop social relationships with their peers in treatment have higher retention rates than those who do not (Bauman et al., 1988). These findings are especially relevant in TCs where interaction with peers is a major component of treatment and residents are typically held partially responsible for the recovery of their peers. Research studying treatment progress using client, staff and peer ratings reveals high correlations between the three scales (Czuchry, Dansereau, Sia & Simpson, 1998). The same study reports that progress measures have the potential to provide clients with valuable therapeutic feedback.
Besides program evaluation (which determines program effectiveness), quality assurance has become an important research area, with questions focusing on client use and satisfaction with treatment services (Wilkerson, Migas & Slaven, 2000). A positive correlation exists between client satisfaction and retention (Chan, Sorenson, Guydish, Tajima & Acampora, 1997).
Traditional psychotherapy has long been aware that client progress in treatment and treatment outcomes is correlated with the strength and quality of the therapeutic alliance between client and primary therapist (e.g. Bordin, 1979; Saunders, Howard & Orlinsky, 1989). In fact, Luborsky and Auerbach (1985) find that 70% of some 85 studies show evidence of a positive relationship between therapeutic alliance and treatment outcome. Therapeutic alliance is a predictor of outcome in different types of individual psychotherapy, in group settings, in residential treatment and across different client populations (Bergin & Garfield, 1994). In the clinical counseling literature, the counseling alliance is considered crucial to therapeutic outcomes (Gelso & Carter, 1985). This link between alliance and outcome is shown in the substance abuse treatment field (Broome, Knight, Hiller & Simpson, 1996). In work from Project Match (Connors, Carroll, DeClemente, Longabaugh & Donovan, 1997), client self-report ratings of alliance with counselors predict treatment participation and positive drinking-related outcomes. Although the TC relies heavily on peer interaction and community as method (De Leon, 2000), individual counseling still plays an important role. In the NIDA Cocaine Treatment Study, several types of counseling interventions are examined. Findings highlight that individual counseling coupled with group work is more effective in treating cocaine addiction than supportive-expressive psychodynamic and group therapies, cognitive therapy and group therapy, or group therapy alone (Crits-Christoph et al., 1999).
Similarly, brief counseling focuses on client strengths (O’Hanlon & Weiner-Davis, 1989). Goals met, progress made, and responsibilities earned within the TC are all discussed during the dialogue central to the protocol used in this study. The protocol underscores client strengths and successes, not only weaknesses. Although these matters may be discussed in regular counseling sessions, the protocol formalizes a structure and schedule for these discussions.
Clients in facilities where the PICP is operating are expected to exhibit greater improvements on these types of ‘active ingredients’ than clients in equivalent facilities where the protocol is not operating.
2. Methods
2.1 The agency
Daytop Village, Inc. is one of oldest TCs in the United States. Founded in 1963 as a pilot project funded by the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH), Daytop has grown to be one of the largest drug rehabilitation programs in the country, operating from twenty-one sites in two states. Over the course of one year, Daytop Village services up to 8,500 adult and adolescent clients as well as their families, with an average census of about 3,000 clients a day.
In New York State, Daytop’s clients are placed in long-term, intermediate or short-term residential treatment, or outpatient treatment, according to their specific needs. The short-term residential program has a planned duration of one to three months, and the ‘core’ phases of intermediate and long-term resid-ential treatment last approximately six and twelve months respectively. Residential treatment has three components: an assessment and referral stage, a primary treatment stage, and a re-entry stage.
Daytop employs a comprehensive approach to the treatment of substance abuse utilizing a network of clinical and auxiliary services within both residential and ambulatory settings. Within the framework of the TC approach, group therapies, individual counseling, self-help principles, behavior management tools, as well as emotional/psychological, intellectual/spiritual, and vocational interventions are applied to address and change the client’s substance abuse and the accompanying behavior patterns. Daytop also provides medical services, mental health care, vocational and educational counseling and training, and legal assistance to all clients as well as specialized services for women and HIV positive clients. Daytop International has assisted 80 countries worldwide in establishing substance abuse treatment programs, adapted for the particular culture of the country in which it is located (Daytop Village, Inc., Annual Report, 2002-2003).
2.2 The protocol
The PICP has three components: a) theory-based staff training, b) monthly repeated assessment of client change by both clients and staff using instruments that measure client progress towards treatment goals, and c) procedures for tracking and utilizing the recorded progress information to improve clinical practice.
a) On-site staff training consisting of three 90-minute sessions preceded implementation of the protocol. The first session covers basic TC theory (De Leon, 2000). The second session is an overview of the instruments that measure client progress in treatment including the definitions of the competencies they measure. The third session describes the operation and logistics of the protocol; specifically how to use the progress instruments in routine treatment. The curriculum for the training sessions covers:
Session 1
1) The distinctions between the terms ‘progress in treatment’, ‘treatment process’ and ‘treatment outcome’.
2) The lifestyle and identity change that treatment strives to achieve in the individual.
3) The unique TC approach to treatment: ‘community as method’.
4) A description of what is expected of the client during the various phases of treatment.
Session 2
1) The definitions of the 14 behavioral, attitudinal, and cognitive competencies measured by the progress instruments.
2) A discussion of what these competencies look like in practice, how they serve as in-treatment goals, and how specific competencies are clinically relevant to individuals.
Session 3
1) An overview of the purpose of the protocol, procedures and responsibilities of clients and staff for implementing the protocol, and instructions for orienting new clients.
2) A description of the structure, time frame, and format for completing the progress instruments and the system for recording, tracking, and sharing this information.
3) Instructions to staff explaining that information from client progress instruments is not to be used as the basis for punitive measures against clients.
4) A discussion of the techniques and procedures for staff and clients to utilize the recorded client progress information to improve treatment. Topics include using the information to: clinically assess clients, enhance client problem recognition, guide clinical decisions, provide focused treatment, and direct clients towards strategies for using the program to work on needed treatment areas or deficits.
5) The schedule and format for meeting with clients and techniques for using the progress information to develop treatment plans.
6) Ethical issues and confidentiality of the data. Data are coded by number with no names or identifying information and kept in locked cabinets. In addition, client self-evaluations are not used by staff to administer privileges or sanctions.
Clients were initially skeptical about confidentiality and the potential for losing privileges but after reassurances from the research team and the facility director followed by actual experience they saw this promise was kept as evidenced by their continued willingness to sign an informed consent to participate.
To minimize training effects both the experimental and control facilities receive session one (TC theory). Only the experimental condition receives the last two training sessions (protocol implementation) since the experimental condition is where the protocol operates.
b) The PICP uses two psychometrically tested staff and client rated instruments to measure client progress on fourteen theoretically based, practitioner validated competencies in TC treatment (Table 1). The Staff Assessment Summary (SAS) is completed by the counselor. It contains 14 items, one for each competency. It is designed to help staff document client progress and identify specific issues clients need to address. The Client Assessment Summary (CAS) is completed by the client. This self-report instrument is designed to accelerate client problem recognition. It contains the same 14 items in the SAS but the items are worded in the first person. This enables direct comparison of staff and client ratings to assess the accuracy of client self-report and to provide information for focusing treatment. All 14 items are measured along a 5-point Likert Scale ranging from Strongly Disagree to Strongly Agree.
Table 1: Competencies or goals of client change in TC treatment
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Developmental Dimension: Evolution of the individual in terms of personal growth
1. Maturity (self-regulation, social management)
2. Responsibility (accountability, meeting obligations)
3. Values (integrity)
Socialization Dimension: Evolution of the individual as a pro-social member of society
4. Drug/Criminal Lifestyle (social deviancy)
5. Maintains Images (social vs. antisocial lifestyle)
6. Work Attitude (attitude appropriate for work world)
7. Social Skills (ability to relate to people)
Psychological Dimension: Basic cognitive and emotional skills
8. Cognitive Skills (awareness, judgment, insight, reality testing)
9. Emotional Skills (communication and management of feeling states)
10. Self-Esteem/Self-Efficacy (sense of wellbeing)
Community Membership Dimension: Evolution of the individual’s relationship to the TC
11. Understands Program Rules, Philosophy, and Structure
12. Community Engagement and Participation
13. Attachment and Investment in the Community
14. Role Model (lives by example, teaches others)
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In an earlier study the CAS and SAS were used with a sample of 346 TC clients and their primary counselors. Results show the instruments reliably measure client clinical progress in treatment (Kressel, De Leon, Palij & Rubin, 2000). The PICP utilizes these instruments in two main ways: 1) staff and clients use the SAS and CAS to measure and record client progress along the 14 competencies and, 2) staff and clients use this recorded information in groups, one-to-one sessions and other program activities to accelerate problem recognition and to develop treatment plans.
c) After thirty days and then every two months progress scores are recorded on a staff and client tracking form (Figure 1). Clients meet with their counselor to review progress scores and examine any discrepancies between counselor SAS and client CAS ratings. The counselor helps the client identify clinically relevant areas (where deficits exist) and suggests individual, group and other program activities to work on these areas. If counselor and client views are very discordant, peer support strategies are utilized to examine differences in closer detail.
Fidelity of implementation is measured by examining clinical folders of clients in the protocol group to see if they contain the progress surveys. More than 91% of the surveys were completed on a timely basis.
2.3 The design and sample
The project is conducted at adult residential Daytop TC facilities. This study compares clients (Table 2) randomly assigned to the experimental condition (protocol is operating; N=111) to clients randomly assigned to the control condition (protocol is not operating; N=214). Repeated Measure Analysis of Variance of seven dependent measures is used to compare clients in the two conditions. The sample consists of clients with CAS, SAS and dependent measure data collected at 30 days (N=660) and at 90 days (N=415). However, only 325 participants had data assessments at both 30 and 90 days.
Table 2: Client demographics (N=325)
The Swan Lake facility located in Sullivan County, New York was randomly assigned to the experimental condition. Two comparable adult residential facilities, Parksville, New York (Sullivan County) and Springwood, New York (Dutchess County), were assigned to the control condition. Random assignment is by facility rather than by client to minimize contamination of protocol implementation. The Swan Lake and Parksville facilities have an average daily census of 200, whereas Springwood’s was 160 at the time of the study.
The protocol and non-protocol client samples exhibit no significant differences in ethnicity, gender, education and treatment history. Clients in the experimental and control condition also do not significantly differ in age, drug use, employment, and legal status. The average client age is 36 years. Alcohol (70%) is the most commonly reported substance used (however, mostly as a secondary or tertiary drug), followed by marijuana (54%), cocaine (48%), crack (45%), and heroin (34%). Nearly 73% of clients are unemployed or not in the labor force, and approximately 50% have not earned a high school diploma or GED when entering treatment. Fifty-nine percent report at least one active legal case when entering treatment and clients at each facility enter, transfer, and leave treatment at nearly identical rates.
Treatment is uniform across the facilities, consisting of a structured TC environment providing similar daily schedules, routines, treatment requirements, staff involvement, and client-counselor interactions. Staffing patterns are also consistent across the three facilities including: counselors, social workers, nurses, physicians, dieticians, HIV coordinator, vocational counselor, educational counselor, teachers, administrative personnel, facility director and assistant directors.
2.4 The dependent measures
The seven dependent measures include satisfaction with treatment, two self-perception measures and four measures of client perceptions of staff.
Client satisfaction with treatment. Satisfaction with treatment is measured with the short-form of the Service Evaluation Questionnaire, SEQ-8 (Nguyen, Attkinson & Stegner, 1983). Measured dimensions of satisfaction include type of treatment, amount of treatment, quality of treatment, and general satisfaction. The SEQ-8 contains eight self-administered items on a 4-point Likert scale (low to high satisfaction). Within our sample (N=325) the SEQ-8 has high reliability (α=0.91) and inter-item correlations ranging from r=0.50 to 0.72.
Client therapeutic engagement, personal progress and the four measures of client perception of staff (counselor trust, helpfulness, rapport, and competence). These are measured using subscales of the Evaluation of Self and Treatment Survey developed at the Institute of Behavioral Research at Texas Christian University (Hiller, 1996). These scales contain items measured on a 5-point Likert scale ranging from ‘strongly disagree’ to ‘strongly agree’. Reliability for all these scales was strong within our sample (α ranging between .86 and .95).
The dependent measure surveys are administered to clients at two time points: 30 days and 90 days after entering treatment. This coincides with the CAS and SAS data collection time points.
2.5 The analytic approach
It is hypothesized that clients in facilities where the protocol is operating will exhibit greater improvements on the dependent measures than clients in facilities where the protocol is not operating. To test this hypothesis, repeated measures ANOVA is used. Typically at least three time points are examined with this procedure, so a between-subjects’ covariate of condition (protocol or control) is included. Specifically we are looking at a between-subjects’ effect interacting with time. In this way the comparison between the protocol and control group is analyzed along with the comparison between time 1 and time 2 in each group.
3. Results
Repeated measures ANOVA with the between-subjects’ covariate of condition (protocol or control) was conducted on all the measures. Time 1 and time 2 means all dependent measures are presented in Table 3. Within the protocol condition, counselor competency significantly increased between time point 1 (M=29.23, SD=6.66) and time point 2 (M=30.68, SD=6.87). Similarly, within the protocol condition, impressions of staff helpfulness significantly increased between time point 1 (M=7.64, SD=1.81) and time point 2 (M=7.94, SD=1.63).
Repeated measure ANOVA results are presented in Table 4. Significant time by condition interactions were found for counselor competency (Wilk’s λ=.99, F=4.62, p=.03) and staff helpfulness (Wilk’s λ=.99, F=4.26, p=.04). Client perceptions of staff competency and helpfulness are the two variables that most significantly improved in the protocol group compared to the control group. Because the protocol is designed for use by both staff and clients together, this finding is relevant to the TC treatment approach.
There was no significant interaction but only a significant main effect for time for the personal progress variable (Wilk’s λ=.91, F=33.53, p<.001), indicating that overall perception of personal progress significantly increased between time point 1 (M=14.26, SD=3.35) and time point 2 (M=15.52, SD=3.06).
Correlations across all seven dependent measures demonstrated significant and positive relationships between the variables, with correlation strengths ranging between .20 and .66, with one outlier at a high of .81 (see Table 5). With the exception of .81, the correlations are in a range indicating the measures relate to each other but do not overlap.
Table 3: Dependent measure means and SD
All seven dependent measures show increases from time 1 to time 2 in the protocol group while the same is true for only three measures in the control group. Admittedly not all increases are significant but it is extremely unlikely that this desired directional change will occur in all seven out of seven variables purely by random chance.
4. Discussion
These findings are encouraging in that they are consistent with the hypothesis that the protocol improves treatment. The study addresses a significant issue: whether the attainment of specific milestones during treatment can be assessed in a clinically useful way. An important potential benefit is that the effectiveness of new interventions can be evaluated against the reference point of during-treatment progress rather than post-treatment outcome. This saves time and resources and yields the added benefit of providing the foundation for future studies that will examine the relationship between proximal progress and long-term outcome. Such studies could help inform the appropriateness of current treatment goals and ways to modify and improve them.
With the single exception of client evaluation of the helpfulness of treatment staff (where the protocol group is greater than the non-protocol group) all dependent measures show no significant baseline differences (p>.10) between the groups. Consequently study condition differences are generally not attributable to baseline differences.
Additional studies are needed to replicate the findings. However preliminary support for validity emerges for three reasons. First, facilities exhibit few base-line differences in client characteristics, staffing patterns, and treatment regimens. Second, the longitudinal data, as opposed to single-point data, minimizes the influence of time-specific unique facility events (e.g. large number of dropouts). Third, the findings are consistent across a range of dependent measures, and results in a parallel study in outpatient facilities (to be presented in a separate article) show significant protocol effects with precisely the same dependent measures.
Although very encouraging, study findings are limited by the relatively short time (60 days) between data collection points 1 and 2. Future research should utilize Latent Growth Curve Modeling with three or more time points out beyond ninety days to better assess the trajectory of client change over time during treatment. Findings are further limited by the need to control for client dropout during treatment, and certainly by the fact that these findings are restricted to facilities in one agency. The dependent measures consist of self-report data; therefore, clients may be reluctant to fully disclose. This limitation is somewhat mitigated by the fact that the treatment environment encourages and supports personal disclosure.
A critical component of this protocol is its clinical utility in practice; potentially benefiting clients, agencies and staff in the following ways.
1. Assisting in the determination of when a person is ready to advance to the next phase of treatment.
2. Accelerating client ‘problem recognition’ and focusing treatment on clinically relevant areas.
3. Helping inform program-wide treatment issues, e.g. appropriate planned duration of treatment and the relationship between progress in treatment and treatment outcome.
4. Assisting in staff orientation, training and paperwork preparation, e.g. treatment plans, progress reports, etc.
5. Evaluating the effectiveness of new treatment techniques in the context of in-treatment progress rather than long-term follow-up.
The clinical utility of the protocol in actual practice is supported by these findings; however the mechanism by which the protocol influences treatment is yet to be determined. Measurement of client and counselor appraisal of treatment progress may lead to a more active stance by the counselor during the period leading up to the next progress assessment. The counselor, in anticipation of this assessment, will likely pay closer active attention to clients so they can more accurately evaluate client progress. The protocol may actually enhance counselor engagement with clients in and out of counseling sessions. Goals are discussed, progress measured, and new treatment goals are reviewed as components of the protocol. This is precisely the purpose of treatment planning; therefore the protocol holds promise for writing more concise yet clinically relevant treatment plans. Improving the quality and ease of staff preparation of paperwork is a valuable benefit in itself. Although competent counselors routinely review goals with their clients, the implementation of this protocol formalizes this process. Specifically, goals are not just discussed but also tracked and measured.
The progress instruments used in the protocol may have applicability beyond the TC. The 14 competencies reflect areas of change relevant to substance abuse treatment in general. Baseline differences, change rates and the relationship between progress during treatment and treatment outcome likely vary by treatment modality but are relevant to a range of treatment approaches. These issues are currently being addressed in future studies.
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David Kressel, PhD and George De Leon, PhD are at the National Development and Research Institutes, New York, USA. Contact email: kressel@ndri.org
Keith Morgen, PhD, is Assistant Professor of Psychology, Department of Behavioral and Historical Studies, Centenary College, Hackettstown, NJ, USA.
Gregory Bunt, MD and Britta Muehlbach, MSc are at Daytop Village, Inc., New York, NY, USA.
The Development of Self-efficacy and Coping Skills Within a Drug-free Therapeutic Community
Clive Burkett
ABSTRACT: This study explores the relationship between self-efficacy, performance-based coping skills and positive outcome expectancies for drugs and alcohol. It employed four questionnaires in a prospective, cross-sectional survey design utilising a between-groups sample. Participants comprised ninety-six individuals assigned to three groups ranging from active drug/alcohol users, to drug/alcohol-free clients in primary treatment, and aftercare. It predicted a significant difference between all groups on the investigated variables suggesting that, as self-efficacy and coping skills increase, positive outcome expectancies for drugs and alcohol would decrease. Results of ANOVA and correlation coefficient analysis validated all five hypotheses yielding significant difference at p<0.01 and p<0.05 levels (2-tailed). Analysis and discussion focus on a cognitive-behavioural perspective to glean greater understanding of the dynamic relationship between these variables, and attempt to improve applied practice in this area.
Introduction
Full recovery from drug and alcohol addiction requires cessation of substance use and the adoption of a global lifestyle change (De Leon, 1997) if abstinence is to be maintained. This process of change requires incremental stages of learning and motivational shifts (Prochaska & DiClemente, 1984; De Leon, 1997) that promote a sense of self-control with the availability of workable coping techniques that reinforce feelings of control even further (Marlatt & George, 1988). Marlatt and Gordon (1985) put forward a model of relapse prevention, grounded in social learning theory (SLT) (Bandura, 1969, 1977) that explained how deficits in coping and self-efficacy, plus specific outcome expectancies interact and can lead to relapse.
Many theories abound as to the aetiology and precipitating factors that lead individuals on a path to substance misuse and eventual dependency. Accordingto psychoanalytic theory, Rado (1933) considered addiction as a narcissistic disorder where the use of psychoactive substances allowed the individual to return to this state of ego disruption where the full impact of reality is muted. Most psychoanalytic theories suggest factors in early childhood development as having aetiological foundations for later dependence to drugs. Savitt (1963) believed the lack of maternal love and affection plus a passive, ineffectual father result in the development of a personality that is imbued with a state of intolerable tension. The use of psychoactive substances allows for the release of this tension, which in turn perpetuates addiction as a coping strategy. Others suggest significant disappointment and unfulfilled object relations for the child with the same-sex parents throughout the Oedipus complex as influential factors in the onset of addiction (Federn, 1972).
Drive theory suggests a purely biological influence relative to the onset and development of physical and psychological addiction. In principle, any human being who is continually exposed to the euphoric effects of a psychoactive drug will develop dependence sooner or later. The stronger and more pleasurable the effect, the more rapid actual dependency will develop (Bejerot, 1972). Genes that predispose young adults towards drug misuse include those that attract them continually to excitement and thrill seeking and that manifest intolerance to frustration and vulnerability to depression. Genetic vulnerability relative to these personality traits, coupled with strong environmental influences push individuals in the direction of abuse and dependency (Berger, 2005).
SLT (Bandura, 1969, 1977) encompasses the main psychological models of learning and human social development. The basic premise is that addiction is a social phenomenon that is learned, reinforced, and ultimately conditioned within the individual through contact with his/her environment (Butcher, Mineka, Hooley & Carson, 2004). SLT also accepts the role of biological and genetic influences on addiction in conjunction with psychosocial factors (Abrams & Wilson, 1986) rendering a bio-psychosocial model (Monti, Kadden, Rohsenow, Cooney & Abrams, 2002). The concept of modelling within the SLT paradigm accounts for the basic principles of vicarious learning. Attempts to emulate and adapt certain attributes of others’ behaviour become an implicit learning process (Crain, 2005). Children who are exposed to dysfunctional families where parents are emotionally absent, abusive or who have substance dependency themselves are presented with poor role models where the acquisition of the ability to monitor and judge their own conduct through internalised standards is severely impaired (Heather & Robertson, 1997).
Most theorists and practitioners are in agreement that the use of Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT) as an interventional technique is applicable. CBT interventions for alcohol dependence have repeatedly demonstrated that they are effective strategies in reducing drinking in randomised trials (Morgenstern & Longabaugh, 2000). A significant number of reviews on treatment regimes have also indicated a high evidence of effectiveness in treating alcohol dependence through the medium of CBT (Holder, Longabaugh, Miller & Rubonis, 1991; Miller et al., 1995; Finney & Monahan, 1996; Roth & Fonagy, 1996). Its use is considered to be effective in that it is a collaborative approach with short-term intervention, that is flexible, structured, goal-oriented, specifically focused, and provides strong empirical support (Carroll, 1998).
The emergence of Cognitive Behavioural Coping Skills (CBCS), which has adapted the basic elements of CBT and Motivational Interviewing, also employs the essential components of functional analysis, training skills around coping with cravings, problem solving, cognitive processing of drug use, refusal skills, and client homework assignments (Dunn, Morrison & Bentall, 2002; Carroll, Nich & Ball, 2005; Gonzalez, Schmitz & DeLaune, 2006) that allow for practice and rehearsal of these skills.
Self-efficacy
In the context of recovery from addiction, an individual’s belief that he can successfully cope and overcome temptation to drink or use drugs is referred to as self-efficacy (Monti et al., 2002). Introducing performance-based techniques into the recovering person’s repertoire of behaviours through modelling, intrapersonal and interpersonal heightened awareness (Monti et al., 2002), cognitive processing, and mental rehearsal of coping responses can raise the belief and feelings of self-efficacy for the recovering person, particularly in high risk situations (Taylor, 2006). As self-efficacy develops through specific treatment intervention, the likelihood that performance-based coping skills will improve is further enhanced (Velicer, DiClemente, Rossi & Prochaska, 1990). The development of coping skills where individuals have strong belief in their ability to resist temptation to lapse/relapse has been negatively correlated with relapse (Abrams et al., 1991; Wunschel, Rohsenow, Norcross & Monti, 1993; Miller, Westerberg, Harris & Tonigan, 1996; Moser & Annis, 1996). Integral to this is that relapse prevention strategies are fully integrated into recovery programmes from the very outset of treatment (Taylor, 2006).
Self-efficacy is a dynamic construct that is constantly reappraised in the light of new information and experiences (DiClemente, Cabonari, Montgomery & Hughes, 1992). These self-efficacy evaluations are considered to be influential to motivation, information processing, effort, and effective action (Bandura, 1977, 1986) and form the basis of valuable information regarding behavioural change (Marlatt & Gordon, 1980; Rollnick & Heather, 1982; DiClemente, 1986). The belief of a recovering person in their ability to overcome temptation in high-risk situations is a crucial component in protecting against relapse, thus placing the development of these skills high on the list of priorities for recovering individuals (DiClemente et al., 1992). Self-efficacy theory assumes a central belief that the strength of individual self-efficacy will determine the nature of coping skills and their effectiveness as a response, across time and situations (Annis, 1986).
Coping skills
People who develop the skills to be able to perceive and overcome events within their environment as controllable and regard their coping strategies as being effective are more likely to experience less stress and its associated consequences (Benight et al., 1997). Coping is the process of managing demands both internal and external, which are evaluated as being taxing or exceeding the personal resources of the individual (Lazarus & Folkman, 1984). Treatment interventions to raise the level of awareness of exteroceptive and interoceptive cues to drink or use drugs allow the recovering person greater autonomy to make informed decisions and indicate better outcomes relative to sustained abstinence (Monti et al., 2002).
The effectiveness of these approaches in conjunction with social skills training (Freedberg & Johnson, 1978) and cognitive restructuring (Meichenbaum & Cameron, 1974; Oei & Jackson, 1982) has also led to the development of interpersonal and intrapersonal treatment adjuncts, resulting in better out-comes (Monti et al., 2002). Cognitive restructuring (Meichenbaum & Cameron, 1974), or reframing (Miller & Rollnick, 2002), involves the modification of internal monologues that are unhelpful to the individual. For example, it assists the client to overcome the abstinence violation effect (Marlatt & Gordon, 1985) by learning to perceive a lapse as a mistake rather than a complete failure, thus altering cognitive processing that sets a perception of catastrophe or ‘all or nothing’ thinking (cf. Ellis, 1970; Bandura, 1978).
A study with twins by Kendler, Kessler, Heath, Neale and Eaves (1991) identified three general coping styles: direct problem solving, turning to others for support and advice, and using denial or avoidance of the problem; all constitute the main coping styles that individuals resort to in a crisis (Taylor, 2006). Other research in this area has indicated that avoidance coping techniques not only lead to higher levels of distress in the long run, but that this method of coping has serious psychological ramifications for adverse responses to stressful life circumstances (Holahan & Moos, 1986).
Problem-focused and emotion-focused coping styles generally work in conjunction with each other. Problem-focused coping involves tackling a problem or situation head on by attempting to find logical and pragmatic methods and solutions (Folkman & Lazarus, 1980). Emotion-focused coping involves efforts to self-regulate one’s emotional response to a crisis. Within emotion-focused coping, two subscales of coping are identified. In the former, rumination, which involves recurrent negative thoughts that assume a more pessimistic perspective, forms the self-appraisal of low self-efficacy and coping skills to overcome the problem. Conversely, the latter, referred to as emotional-approach coping, allows for the disclosure and clarification of a problem with a view to working through the emotional experience with one’s social support structures (Stanton, Danoff-Burg, Cameron & Ellis, 1994).
Outcome expectancies
Considerations pertaining to an individual’s outcome expectancies (Bandura, 1977) will also determine the likelihood of lapse/relapse. Positive outcome expectancies consider the consequences and rewards associated with a given behaviour, in this case substance misuse. Individuals who have experienced and perceive the use of alcohol and drugs as pleasurable and reinforcing as a relief from social stressors, upsetting life events, or as a form of relaxation have in a sense developed their own ineffective coping strategies. Research indicates that individuals who drink more tend to have higher expectations relative to the positive effects of alcohol (Carey, 1995). Negative outcome expectancies on the other hand allow for value judgements that attempt to support and maintain the recovery process by continual review of the negative consequences associated with substance dependency. Positive outcome expectancies in relation to alcohol or drugs, which are proximal, tend to overshadow the negative outcome expectancies, which are distal, with the former playing a salient role in relapse where high-risk situations are experienced (Carey, 1995). Individuals who are engaged in a process of change can be further assisted in developing the perspective that changing their addictive habits and behaviours involves skill acquisition rather than a test of willpower (Larimer, Palmer & Marlatt, 1999). Treatment interventions that emphasise a continued series of setting small, achievable goals build upon the person’s belief and ability to achieve certain objectives while nurturing feelings of empowerment and self-mastery (Bandura, 1977; Larimer et al., 1999).
The present study
Using the central components that empirical research in this area has studied and recognised as essential ingredients for sustained recovery from substance dependency, this study attempted to demonstrate the progressive and incre-mental nature of this important change process. It utilised a client base ranging from active drug/alcohol users, to drug-free clients in primary treatment and in an integration and aftercare stage of a therapeutic community (TC). It focused on, measured, and compared the coping skills’ acquisition of clients at various stages of change, assuming that abstinence and the development of enhanced self-efficacy and performance-based coping skills are essential to the recovery process.
In order to fully consider the antecedent, behavioural response and consequential aspects of sabotage to recovery, this study examined the relationship between self-efficacy and performance-based coping skills with addicted and recovering individuals who were classed at different motivational stages of the Trans-Theoretical Model (TTM) of change (Prochaska & DiClemente, 1984). The relationship and interaction between the non-existence and development of self-efficacy and coping skills for these individuals was examined in conjunction with the residual existence of positive outcome expectancies for drugs and alcohol. The variables under investigation were self-efficacy, both generalised and specific to refusal confidence relative to temptation to use drugs or alcohol; performance-based coping skills that focus on avoidance-focused coping, problem-focused coping and emotion-focused coping; and positive outcome expectancies concerning drugs and alcohol that perceive these substances as pleasurable, rewarding and stress-reducing.
Programme involvement should influence self-efficacy and coping skills, while self-efficacy will ultimately influence and reinforce performance-based coping skills. Positive outcome expectancies will be determined by positive, negative and punishment contingencies relative to past conditioning and reinforcement factors. Likewise, the development of self-efficacy and coping skills will influence whether recovering individuals perceive drinking and drug use as having positive outcomes. For the recovering addict, the notion that positive outcome expectancies can be immediate, pleasurable and stress-reducing, in contrast to the long-term pay-offs of negative outcome expectancies on physical health, relationships, and mental wellbeing, plays clearly to the addicted mindset of instant gratification.
(i) It was predicted that substance abusers who are still actively using will show lower levels of self-efficacy and performance-based coping skills than those in treatment.
(ii) It is proposed that there will be a positive correlation between the development of performance-based coping skills and self-efficacy in individuals actively engaged in treatment.
(iii) There will be a negative correlation between the development of self-efficacy, performance-based coping skills in relation to positive outcome expectancies for drugs, and alcohol for individuals in treatment. Where high levels of self-efficacy and coping skills are identified, low levels of positive outcome expectancy will be predicted.
(iv) There will be a significant difference reported between positive outcome expectancies for drugs and alcohol where problem-focused and emotion-focused coping skills are employed as against avoidance-coping techniques. It is expected that active drug users will show a greater tendency than those in treatment to use coping techniques that help them to avoid their problems.
(v) There will be a significant difference between people at the early stage of treatment regarding their self-efficacy and coping skills than those at the later stages.
Methodology
Materials
The materials used in this study were four questionnaires designed to elicit generalised self-efficacy, alcohol/drug refusal self-efficacy, performance-based coping skills, and positive outcome expectancy for drugs and alcohol.
Internal consistency
An alpha reliability test was undertaken to assess alpha coefficient values (Cronbach, 1951) for all items within the four questionnaires. Apart from the Brief Cope Scale (BCS), all constructs of the alpha coefficient were found to be satisfactory with high internal consistency found above the 0.7 level. Table 1 outlines these findings.
The Generalised Self-Efficacy Scale (Schwarzer & Jerusalem, 1993) is a 10-item questionnaire designed to measure perceived self-efficacy with a 4-point Likert scale ranging from Not at all true=1; Barely true=2; Moderately true=3; Exactly true=4. Scores range from 10 to 40 with low scores representing low self-efficacy and high scores representing high levels.
The Alcohol/Drug Refusal Self-Efficacy Scale is a modified version of the Situational Confidence Questionnaire (Annis, 1982), which is a 100-item scale to test levels of confidence in high-risk situations. The ADRSE is a 12-item questionnaire that identifies a series of recognised antecedents of an extero-ceptive and interoceptive nature (Monti et al., 2002) that generally precipitate relapse. This questionnaire employs a 6-point scale ranging from Not confident at all=0; Little confidence=2; Slightly confident=4; Reasonably confident=6; Confident=8; Extremely confident=10. Scores on this scale range from 0 to 120, with low scores representing little or no confidence and high scores representing good confidence to resist temptation.
The Brief Cope Scale (Carver, 1997) is a 21-item questionnaire that identifies specific coping skills and strategies that can be employed in a wide range of difficult situations. It combines a subscale of avoidance coping, and problem-focused and emotion-focused strategies (Taylor, 2006). Avoidance-coping items within the questionnaire required a re-coding as this form of coping is acknowledged as an ineffective coping strategy. Items are scored by a 5-point Likert scale ranging from Never=0; Seldom=1; Sometimes=2; Often=3; Always=4. Scores on this scale range from 0 to 84, with low scores representing poor coping skills and high scores representing good coping skills.
The Alcohol/Drug Expectancy Questionnaire III (Brown, Christiansen & Goldman, 1987) is a 120-item questionnaire designed to assess positive effects attributed to alcohol consumption. For this particular study the need for some modification of the ADE was deemed necessary. Firstly, the use of the full instrument would have implications for client responses based upon the fact that three other questionnaires were also employed. It was considered that the accumulated battery of questionnaires would create some frustration for respondents if the full 120-item questionnaire was used. With this in mind, only sections 1, 3, 4, and 5 from the subscale were used, thus rendering a 48-item questionnaire. Additionally, the inclusion of the words Drugs and or Alcohol into each of the 48 items broadened the scope of the questionnaire in order to make it applicable to respondents. This questionnaire employed an Agree or Disagree response for each item, with an Agree response weighted as one point and a Disagree response weighted as two points. Where all 48 items were responded to, a range of 48 to 96 points was calculated, with high scores representing high positive outcome expectancy and low scores representing low outcome expectancies.
Participants
Participants comprised 96 individuals (24 female and 72 male) involved at various stages of a continuum of care at Coolmine Therapeutic Community in Dublin. This continuum commences with outreach and drop-in services engaging with active drug users to assess individual readiness and suitability to engage. Clients involved at this stage fall into the pre-contemplation, contemplation, and preparation stages of the TTM (Prochaska & DiClemente, 1984). This group was referred to as Group A or Active Drug/Alcohol Users. The majority of this group were categorised as having poly-drug use difficulties as assessed by the Maudsley Addiction Profile (MAP) (Marsden et al., 1998). Participants numbered (N=28) twenty-three male and five female.
Once clients have achieved drug/alcohol-free status they are ready to move to primary treatment. Primary treatment in this case includes full-time residential care or community-based day programme options, both having a minimum stay of six months. Clients involved at this stage are classed at the action stage of the TTM and fall into Group B or drug/alcohol-free clients in primary treatment. Participants numbered (N=42) 30 male and 12 female.
Clients who successfully complete primary treatment move to the next phase of the Coolmine continuum by entering an Integration and Aftercare (IAC) service, which is divided into two stages, both involving a six-month stay. These clients have re-entered mainstream society and are in full-time employment or further education. Drug/alcohol-free status is a requirement of these phases and these individuals fall into the maintenance stage of TTM. This group is referred to as Group C or Aftercare clients and participants numbered (N=26) nineteen male and seven female.
All clients in Groups B and C have experienced a standardised approach of therapeutic intervention and involvement that included ongoing assessment, supervised case management with regular review, group therapy, psycho-educational workshops, community living based upon SLT (Bandura, 1969, 1977), relapse prevention, and the concerted development of self-efficacy and performance-based coping skills.
Design
A cross-sectional survey design was utilised with the use of four separate questionnaires. This design was quantitative and prospective in nature and focused on three separate groups using an independent or between-groups sample. A correlation coefficient method using Pearson’s r and a one-way analysis of variance (ANOVA) was also undertaken in order to establish any significant relationships between the investigated variables of self-efficacy, performance-based coping skills, and positive outcome expectancies. The mean age of clients participating in this study was 28 years.
Procedure
Participants in Groups A, B, and C were all interviewed in small groups. In all interview scenarios, participants were instructed to carefully read all questionnaire details and complete all items within each questionnaire. Participants were also briefed in advance on the confidentiality aspects and were instructed not to place their names on the questionnaires. Female participants were asked to place the letter ‘F’ on the top right-hand page of each questionnaire to distinguish gender. On completion of all questionnaires respondents were debriefed, at which point they were given an opportunity to withdraw their specific questionnaires.
Results
Descriptive statistics outlined in Table 2 present the mean scores, standard deviation, and score range on each questionnaire for the three individual groups.
In the Alcohol/Drug Expectancy (ADE) questionnaire, a summed score range from 48 to 96 indicates that high scores on this questionnaire demonstrate higher positive outcome expectations for drugs and alcohol. Conversely, lower scores indicate lower expectations as a desired outcome for psychoactive substances. Group A shows a mean score of 85.14 (SD=5.66) in comparison with Group B at 77.40 (SD=8.83) and Group C at 64.16 (SD=9.71). A total mean score of 76.20 (SD=11.41) was reported for all three groups. Results indicate that Group A shows higher scores on positive outcome expectancies in comparison to Groups B and C, and Group B also shows higher scores in comparison to Group C.
In the Generalised Self-Efficacy (GSE) questionnaire notable levels of self-efficacy were reported between the three groups with high scores indicating high levels of self-efficacy and low scores indicating lower levels. With a score range of 10 to 40, the mean score for Group A was reported at 18.71 (SD=5.30); for Group B the mean score was 28.33 (SD=3.52); and for Group C the mean score was 30.23 (SD=3.70). A total mean score of 26.04 (SD=6.31) was reported for all three groups on this questionnaire. Results here indicate an ascending level of self-efficacy for Groups B and C in comparison to Group A.
Table 2: Descriptive statistics for group scores on the four questionnaires
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The BCS presents with a summed score range from 0 to 84 with higher scores indicating higher levels of coping skills and lower scores indicating poorer levels. The mean score for Group A was reported at 39.03 (SD=6.70); for Group B at 44.14 (SD=6.68); and for Group C at 46.23 (SD=7.71). A total mean score of 43.21 (SD=7.46) was reported for all three groups on this questionnaire. In this case, an ascending rate of mean scores between the three groups suggests improved coping skills for Group C over Group B and for Group B over Group A. Three subscales within the BCS were identified as (a) avoidance-focused coping, which was re-coded to allow for negative scoring, (b) problem-focused coping, and (c) emotion-focused coping.
The ADRSE questionnaire presents a summed score range of 0 to 120 with high scores indicating greater self-confidence to overcome temptation to use drugs or alcohol. Conversely, lower scores indicate poor levels of self-efficacy and coping skills. The reported mean score for Group A was 36.71 (SD=16.22); for Group B the mean was 79.23 (SD=19.88); and for Group C it was 88.69 (SD=19.46). A total mean score of 69.39 (SD=28.36) was reported for all three groups on this questionnaire. These results indicate a marked difference in the three groups’ ability and confidence to deal with and overcome temptation to use when presented with high-risk situations.
Analysis of variance
A one-way analysis of variance (ANOVA) was carried out on the total scores for each questionnaire. This was performed in order to establish any variance of a significant difference between responses on the four questionnaires pertaining to the three groups.
On the ADE questionnaire a statistical significance of positive outcome expectancy of F(2,92)=43.07, p<.001 was reported, indicating a significant difference between groups on this questionnaire. Of the 96 respondents involved in this study, only 95 fully completed the ADE questionnaire.
The GSE questionnaire also produced a significant difference between groups F(2,93)=62.90, p<.001 indicating ascending levels of self-efficacy as clients progress.
In relation to the BCS a statistical difference of F(2,93)=7.81, p<.001 was reported between Group A and Groups B and C, with lesser variation between Groups B and C. Variation on scores between Groups B and C will be discussed in greater detail in the post hoc report to follow.
Finally, statistical significance was also reported between all three groups on the ADRSE questionnaire with F(2,93)=61.90, p<.001. These results also indicate a significant difference between groups regarding the levels of confidence and the performance-based coping skills required to overcome temptation. Table 3 sets out the source of variation of the above results.
Post hoc analysis using Bonferroni correction was also performed to examine the multiple comparisons between groups on all four questionnaires. On the ADE a mean difference of 7.74* between active drug users and primary treatment clients was reported. When clients in primary treatment are compared with aftercare clients, a mean difference of 13.24* was reported. In relation to Group A and Group C, a mean difference of 20.98* was reported. These figures indicate a gradual and incremental improvement in relation to all three groups in the way that drugs and alcohol are perceived as a result of programme intervention.
[* Indicates mean difference is significant at the .05 level.]
GSE results reported a mean difference of -9.62* between Group A and Group B. However, the mean difference between Group B and Group C was reported at -1.90, not showing any significant difference between these two groups. A statistical significance was reported regarding the mean difference between Group A and Group C at -11.52*. These results indicate a significant improvement and development in generalised self-efficacy between Group A and Groups B and C.
Examining the total BCS mean scores for all three groups, a mean difference of -5.10* was found between Group A and Group B. The mean difference between Group B and Group C was reported at -2.08 showing no significant difference in relation to these two groups. Group A and Group C showed a mean difference of -7.19* indicating a significant difference between these two groups in coping skills.
Post hoc analysis on the ADRSE yielded a significant mean difference of -42.52* between Group A and Group B. The mean difference reported between Group B and Group C was -9.45* indicating a significant statistical difference between these groups. Finally, results of the mean difference between Group A and Group C indicated a significant difference of -51.97*. In all cases the mean difference is significant at the .05 level. Table 4 indicates the mean difference between groups on all four variables.
Correlations
A Pearson’s coefficient analysis was conducted on all four total scores of each questionnaire with the addition of the three subscales associated with the BCS questionnaire, which included avoidance-focused coping, problem-focused coping, and emotion-focused coping factors. The strongest significant association was found between problem-focused coping relative to the overall coping strategies with r=.738 (p=.000) indicating the use of problem-focused coping as an overall efficacious coping strategy in comparison to avoidance and emotionfocused coping. Refusal self-efficacy was also reported to be highly significant with a correlation of r=.698 (p=.000) indicating that those scoring higher on this measure would have higher levels of refusal self-efficacy. The GSE also showed highly significant correlation with r=.694 (p=.000) again indicating strong association between coping skills and self-efficacious beliefs.
In relation to the ADE, a negative correlation of r=-.685 (p=.000) was reported indicating an overall negative association between generalised, refusal self-efficacy and performance-based coping skills and its associated subscales. The ADE showed other strongly significant negative correlations in relation to GSE with r=-.503 (p=.000); the ADE when contrasted against the BCS showed a weak to moderate correlation of -.244 (p=.000); against the ADRSE, the ADE reported a moderate negative correlation of r=-.480 (p=.017). All this indicated that, where self-efficacy and performance-based coping skills are high, positive outcome expectancies towards drugs and alcohol are low.
When the subscales within the BCS were analysed, the variable of avoidance-focused coping showed some significant negative correlations in relation to GSE with r=-.385 (p=.000); in relation to ADRSE a moderate to strong correlation with r=-.451 (p=.000) was reported; avoidance-focused coping also showed significant negative correlations in relation to problem-focused coping and emotion-focused coping with r=-.413 (p=.000) and r=-.442 (p=.000), respectively. Additionally, a strong positive correlation was reported between problem-focused coping and emotion-focused coping of r=.664 (p=.000) supporting previous research by Folkman and Lazarus (1980). Table 5 shows Pearson’s correlation coefficient between the measured variables.
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Discussion
This study set out to investigate the relationships between self-efficacy, performance-based coping skills, and positive outcome expectancies towards drugs and alcohol. It proposed that the incremental and ongoing development of self-efficacy and performance-based coping skills were essential ingredients in relation to sustained recovery from drug/alcohol dependency. The study postulated the assumption that, because these substances are perceived as pleasurable, rewarding and stress reducing, individuals who are in early recovery from substance dependency still crave for and perceive these substances as rewarding.
Five main hypotheses were set out. Firstly, that there would be a significant difference in levels of self-efficacy and coping skills between active drug users and individuals engaged in treatment. It claimed that as refusal self-efficacy developed and grew so too would performance-based coping skills. It also predicted that where high levels of self-efficacy and coping skills were identified, low levels of positive outcome expectancies for drugs and alcohol would also be found. It identified three sub-factors within coping strategies that would have positive and negative implications for desired outcomes. It predicted that avoidance-focused coping would be more synonymous with proximal and ineffective outcomes and employed more extensively by active drug users. Finally, it predicted a significant difference between levels of self-efficacy and coping skills relative to individuals in early treatment and those in aftercare.
Results from this study validated all hypotheses. Analysis yielded a significant difference between all three groups on the acquisition and development of self-efficacy and performance-based coping skills. The most obvious and significant difference relates directly to the variation between Group A (active drug users) and Group B (primary treatment) on levels of confidence and ability to cope and deal effectively with high-risk scenarios. In comparing results of self-efficacy and coping skills for active drug users and aftercare clients, a significant difference was reported also. The results exceeded the mean difference between active drug users and clients in primary treatment, not only suggesting a greater overall gap in learning and time spent in a recovery process, but also clearly indicating the transitory and evolving dynamics of Group B.
A positive correlation between the development of self-efficacy and performance-based coping skills was reported. A strong positive correlation was found between the GSE and the ADRSE. Further comparisons of the GSE against the sub-factors of the BCS yielded much stronger correlations in relation to problem-focused coping and emotion-focused coping. Analysis found a significant negative correlation between GSE and avoidance-focused coping, suggesting that as self-efficacy increases ineffective coping strategies diminish. When compared with the BCS, the ADRSE reported a weak correlation, significant at the 0.05 level (2-tailed). Although this association may be deemed as weak, much stronger correlations on problem-focused and emotion-focused coping were identified. A moderate to strong negative correlation between the ADRSE and avoidance-focused coping was reported indicating that as refusal self-efficacy improves more positive and viable coping strategies manifest.
From perusal of the results section of Table 4, one can see the validation of the predicted negative correlation between positive outcome expectancies and the development of self-efficacy and coping skills. When the ADE is contrasted against GSE and the ADRSE, negative correlations are also reported. These findings clearly suggest that as self-efficacy grows and develops a significant decrease in positive outcome expectancies for drugs and alcohol is perceived. These findings are supported by the assertion that self-efficacy evaluations are hypothesised to mediate all behavioural change by having a direct influence on motivation, information processing, personal effort, and effective action (Bandura, 1977, 1986).
A study by Hasking and Oei (2004) concluded that coping, self-efficacy and outcome expectancies are crucial variables in governing drinking behaviour and that the development of self-efficacy is integral to self-regulatory mechanism by which humans exhibit control over their behaviour. An earlier study by Annis and Davis (1988) found that self-efficacy increased significantly from intake to a six-month follow-up treatment trial among problem drinkers. Research on alcohol and drug expectancies (Goldman, Brown & Christiansen, 1991; McMahon, Jones & O’Donnell, 1994) suggests that higher positive outcome expectancies are associated with higher levels of consumption and, conversely, higher negative outcome expectancies are associated with lower levels or no consumption at all.
As predicted, a positive relationship between positive outcome expectancies and avoidance-focused coping in contrast with problem-focused and emotion-focused coping was reported. This indicates that individuals who tend to avoid their problems rather than deal with them directly are more likely to turn to drugs or continue using as a solution to their problems. Individuals who have learnt other ways of coping, such as addressing their problems pragmatically and regulating their emotional responses to crises are less likely to lapse. The development of pragmatic, solution-focused coping to overcome encountered stressors is a vital deterrent in preventing the escalation of positive outcome expectancies for substance use. Furthermore, it suggests that the combination of problem-focused coping and emotion-approach coping further reduces stress and upset, thus enhancing sustained recovery. The relationship between posi-tive outcome expectancies and avoidance-focused coping in this study suggests that this style of coping feeds into and increases positive outcome expectancies towards substance misuse.
Finally, a significant difference between primary treatment clients and aftercare clients in relation to self-efficacy, coping skills, and positive outcome expectancies was also found. However, a significant difference was established in relation to positive outcome expectancies for drugs and alcohol in relation to refusal self-efficacy, suggesting that as one’s refusal confidence grows when presented with high-risk situations positive outcome expectancies for alcohol and drugs diminishes.
In comparison to aftercare clients, primary treatment clients have not had full opportunity to return to normal social living and put into practice all aspects of their lifestyle change. Aftercare clients have more direct contact and experience with real life scenarios and continue to work through the daily challenges of recovery from substance dependency. They may have reached crucial points where certain contingencies relative to past conditioning have and are being extinguished. This research also suggests that, although primary treatment clients are in transition, both groups have interpreted and integrated generalised self-efficacy and basic coping skills into their repertoire of behaviour. Additionally, it suggests that, although generalised self-efficacy and coping skills may be similarly weighted for the two groups, experience, confidence and ability to deal with high-risk scenarios and stressful situations, where temptation to use is experienced, give aftercare clients a definite edge over primary treatment clients.
Conclusion
The term ‘ambivalence’, often referred to as the dilemma of change (Miller & Rollnick, 2002), highlights the inherent contradictions often associated with human behaviour and change. Individuals in the throes of addiction frequently vacillate between over-indulgent behaviour and repeated attempts to give up (Miller & Rollnick, 2002). Temporal considerations must also be factored into this equation, where proximal and distal influences have direct effect on behavioural intention and response. Reconciliation of this ambivalence requires individuals to maintain an unequivocal position that results in overall improvement and quality of life, or alternatively return to the addicted lifestyle.
The removal of substance misuse from an individual’s life creates a vacuum that must be replaced by other activities; likewise the removal of cognitive processes and associated conditioned responses that reinforce positive outcome expectancies towards substance misuse must also be balanced and replaced by the ongoing development of negative outcome expectancy, self-efficacy and performance-based coping skills that sustain recovery. According to The Addicted-Self Model (Fiorentine & Hillhouse, 2003), the onset of stressful stimuli, situational risks and maladaptive coping responses may not necessarily lead to relapse. Fiorentine and Hillhouse claim that in some cases relapse may be precipitated more so by positive outcome expectancies and that a negative expectancy balance in relation to mood altering substances may prevent relapse even when high risk or situational stress is experienced.
The overarching hypothesis clearly indicates that ongoing development of self-efficacy and performance-based coping skills are crucial components to sustained recovery from active substance dependency. Further research in this area may well be directed towards the ambivalent dynamics of negative and positive outcome expectancies for drugs and alcohol in conjunction with self-efficacy and coping skills. This may allow for some form of psychometric assessment that could evaluate a plotted balance between positive and negative outcome expectancies, using the TTM to plot temporal considerations regarding the stages of change.
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Clive Burkett, BA psy. is Programme Development Manager for Coolmine Therapeutic Community, Dublin, Republic of Ireland. He has 20 years’ experience of work within the TC and has memberships of the IAAAC, EFTC and WFTC. Email: clive@coolminetc.ie
Effective Treatment, Ineffective Treatment: What Makes the Difference?
Some Indices of Predictability Taken from a Follow-up Study
Anna Addazi, Roberto Marini and Nicolino Rago
ABSTRACT: The article summarises the most salient data of a follow-up study that constitutes the third part of a more in-depth investigation into a sample of drug-addicted people from Città della Pieve residential community. We focused our attention first on the outcome of the period of therapy in terms of whether the therapeutic aims of treatment were met, roughly defined by the way in which individuals concluded the programme, and subsequently we measured the efficacy of the treatment through a follow-up interview of the remaining 63 of the original 121 members of the initial sample. Finally, we looked for those variables which correlated significantly with the results of the treatment, with reference both to the variables of the process and to variables relating to the history and psychological diagnoses of the individuals concerned.
Keywords: outcome of treatment, efficacy of treatment, follow-up interview, depression, family problems, duration of treatment, treatments already undergone
Introduction
The follow-up study that this paper focuses on is the third part of a more in-depth investigation into a sample of drug-addicted people from Città della Pieve residential community. Due to obvious space limitations we are unable to set forward the research in its entirety. We limit ourselves to point out that, after having gathered information regarding the general condition of 121 people who took part in the service from 1999-2002 (first part), and, after having carried out a diagnostic valuation comprising every area of their lives – revealing in particular the gravity of their psychological problems (second part), we extended our analysis to the results of the residential treatment carried out by the subjects themselves, concentrating our analysis as much on the outcome of their treatment path as on its efficacy (third part). Besides including a descriptive analysis of the results of the follow-up research, in this article we will include the most significant evidence obtained by cross-referencing this data with some variables that are relative to the history and psychopathological condition of the sample. These were indicated in the previous two sections of the research.
The three research branches had the same sample of subjects in common, even if in the case of the follow-up investigation the number of people traced in the final interviews was almost cut in half compared to that of the first two parts (63 out of 121 subjects).
There were therefore three goals of the third part of the research.
1) To verify the treatment’s efficacy by monitoring the process of emancipation from drug addiction in the time following the treatment, the average time from programme closure being about 30 months. It was important to take behaviour resulting from drug abuse into account as well as a series of indicators of the psychosocial situation, family and working conditions of subjects. This information was gathered using the EUROPASI (European adaptation from the Addiction Severity Index) follow-up interview predictions (Pozzi & Tempesta, 1995).
2) To more deeply investigate the outcome of the programme, which intended to reach goals of change that were fixed before and during the therapeutic path. This complex procedural variable was to be largely measured by the different methods through which people completed their stay on the programme.
3) More specifically: having codified information regarding the users’ conditions for variables that rested along three temporal dimensions (before, during and after the treatment), our objective was to verify which of these variables were most closely correlated with the efficacy of the treatment path.
A selection of the most significant data regarding the above-mentioned points will be put forth in this publication.
Presentation of the service
The research targeted the community for drug addicts of the municipality of Rome, which is managed by the organisation (Cooperativa Sociale) ‘Il Cammino’ in convention with the city’s Agency for Drug Addiction Policies (Agenzia Comunale per le Tossicodipendenze, Comune di Roma). The community has been active since 1982 and rests in the territory of Città della Pieve, a town in the province of Perugia, from which it takes its name. It is made up of three operatives of rural homes situated in the Umbrian countryside and which house 45 users from the city of Rome.
A period of preparation precedes entrance into the community (detoxing, health screening, information about how the service functions) as well as an analysis of the application managed in collaboration with the SER.T (Service for Drug Dependency) that referred the user. This consisted of interviews and group work carried out in the region of Rome.
The first phase of the community programme (residential welcoming) takes place in the rural home ‘La Villa’, which also serves as a Diagnostic Observatory: the other two rural homes have the same function and are appointed to the second and third phases (treatment and clearance). Average programme length oscillates around 24 months, with staying periods in the community that alternate with periods outside the community of a progressively longer duration (from 48 hours to 20 days, starting from the seventh/eighth month of residence).
Once the residential phase is concluded, a re-entry phase begins, in which the individual is placed once again in urban territory. This uses resources ranging from psychological support (interviews as well as individual, family and couple psychotherapy) to work training and temporary relocation in protected apartments for those lacking housing. The service involves fourteen workers, of which six are psychologists, five are psychotherapists, two are community workers and one is a professional educator.
Materials and methods
The follow-up sample was made up of 63 out of the 121 from the original sample; for the remaining 58 it was not possible to administer the research instrument for the following reasons:
– for 21 people (17.4%) the telephone number was wrong or had been changed
– 12 people (9.9%) were in communities, the same or others
– 3 people (2.5%) were in prison
– 9 people (7.4%) had passed away
– 13 people (10.7%) refused to answer.
Out of the 63 subjects interviewed, 51 were male (81%) and 12 female (19%). At the time they entered the community their average age was 34.2 years (d.s.=5.3; min 22-max 45), while at the time of the follow-up interview their average age was 36.8 years.
EUROPASI’s Follow-up Interview was the instrument used, which is made up of twenty-six items that investigate the following five areas of the subject’s life: working conditions, alcohol and drug consumption, legal status, family and social relations, and psychological condition.
The questionnaire was administered via telephone interviews carried out over a five-month period. The two interviewers – not strangers to the line of work – remained strangers to most of the subjects interviewed. They introduced themselves as colleagues of a worker known to the ex-user, explaining the point and objective of the interview and guaranteeing that all received information would be used anonymously.
The data analysis was carried out according to a descriptive standard based on percentage estimates; the chi-square (χ2) test was used in order to verify the differences regarding the way attendance was distributed in the various contingency tables.
Figure 1 shows how the traced and non-traced populations are distributed based on the number of months they stayed in the community (in columns, from 1 to 42 separated by class). The figures in parentheses indicate the number of subjects.
It was evidently easier to trace those who had stayed longer in the structure, the difference being statistically significant [χ2(6)=19.642, p=.003]; quite probably, those who had an important and lasting relationship with community workers tended to stay in touch with them for a longer period of time after the end of the programme. This fact takes on a certain relevance for our investigation; in fact, it is important to keep in mind that most of our data refer to those who went through long-lasting programmes who were therefore more likely to have positive results (Figure 3).
A – Results of the follow-up investigation: descriptive section
In this section the data describing the conditions of the sample will be listed according to every variable investigated by the interviewer.
Working conditions
In the post-treatment period 69.8% of those interviewed were hired full-time, 22.3% were hired part-time, while only 7.9% didn’t work; 54% of the subjects were satisfied with their occupation.
Alcohol and drug consumption
As far as relapse was concerned, the questionnaire asked about possible return to abusive behaviour in the following arcs of time:
1. in the period extending from the end of treatment to the 30 days preceding the interview (for brevity’s sake we’ll call it the post-residence period);
2. in the last 30 days before the interview;
3. in both periods.
Based on this temporal distinction, the following observations came forth: out of 63 ex-users interviewed, 30 had never relapsed (47.6%) and 33 had instead started up their abusive behaviour once again (52.4%): of these, 17 ‘relapsed’ in the post-residence period, 2 in the last 30 days before the interview, and 14 had abused substances in both periods. At the time of the interview, there were therefore 47 (30+17) who were abstinent, or 74.6% of the sample, against 16 (2+14) who still had drug addiction problems (25.4%). This means that the 17 ‘relapsed’ subjects after the end of treatment had already reached a drug-free condition at the time of the interview.
Furthermore:
– the percentage of relapses passes from 52.4% to 44.4% if those who chose to abuse only cannabis are extracted from the number of relapses;
– a good part of the sample that ‘relapsed’ went back to abuse more than one substance, sometimes simultaneously (‘mix of substances’ in 12.5% of the cases) and sometimes in succession. (The substances that were used the most were: heroin in 37.5% of cases, methadone (18.8%), cannabis (14.6%), alcohol (8.3%), cocaine (6.3%) and psycho-pharmaceuticals (2.1%).)
– 83.9% of those interviewed did not return to drug addiction treatment after resigning from the programme; most of those who requested intervention (12.9%) turned to territorial services to ask for non-residential substitution programmes, while the remaining 3.2% turned to semi-residential services.
Legal condition
The items that indicated the legal condition of subjects gave information on the relationship between the people in the sample and the justice system at the time of the interview: 79.4% of the sample left the programme free, that is, they were not put under restrictive measures, while 69.8% had no legal proceedings underway. All 19 subjects (30.2%) with pending lawsuits said that the problems related to crimes committed before beginning treatment.
Familial and social relations
Almost two-thirds (63.5%) of the subjects were single or celibate. Most of those interviewed (49.2%) lived with a partner or with a partner and children; another 22.2% lived alone or with friends and 25.4% lived with their parents. Over half (58.7%) of the sample were satisfied with their situation while 33.4% said they would like to change it. A large number (66.6%) of those interviewed affirmed that they have close friends, 44.4% spent free time with family members who did not use substances, while 41.3% spent time with friends who did not have drug addiction problems. In 65.1% of the cases, the subjects interviewed were satisfied with how they spent their free time.
Psychological condition
Just over a third (39.9%) of the sample demonstrated symptoms of serious depression in the post-residence period, 42.9% complained about intense anxiety and nervous tension, while 4.8% of those interviewed claimed to experience concentration, comprehension and memory difficulty. In 20.6% of the sample, they had trouble controlling violent behaviour, while 1.6% had attempted suicide or had had serious suicidal thoughts.
B – Results: treatment outcome
Outcome of treatment was evaluated according to the programme’s various closure methods. Outcomes were as follows: twenty-one people (33.3%) stopped treatment (dropout); thirty-five (55.6%) finished it (‘programme end’) and seven people (11.1%) resigned from the programme (‘spontaneous closure’).
As previously stated, the high percentage of users in the sample that concluded the programme fully is explained by the fact that these were the easiest to trace. Spontaneous closure or self-resignation differs from pro-gramme end in that it is a form of closure that isn’t supported by a joint goal-reaching valuation (social worker-user), but is instead initiated by the subject, who experiences a condition of greater wellbeing and considers it is good enough or not liable to further improvement. At times this form of resignation coincides with recognising a limit that can’t be overcome at the time, such as a belief in the impossibility of freeing oneself completely from substance use. This is the case for those who decide to turn towards substances that are seen as less dangerous and taken in more controlled ways (i.e. in greatly reduced quantities or with a medical prescription). This conclusion to treatment differs from abandonment because it occurs in an advanced phase of the programme and because it implies a negotiation with the team, which results in a form of official recognition by the workers of the progress that has been made by the user.
Using the closure methods of the programme, the research discovered the following:
– gender of interviewees – women were found to be more prone to abandon the programme (50% versus 28.6% of men), but this item is not statistically relevant;
– number of months’ stay in the community, shown in columns and subdivided in classes of six (Figure 2).
The relationship between the ‘programme end’ and the number of months’ stay appears curvilinear: 66.7% of those who completed the programme stayed in the community for a period of between 19 and 30 months; the percentage of people who finished treatment at programme end decreased if the period of stay was shorter or longer. Obviously, programme abandonment is concen-trated in the first year and a half. The percentage of spontaneous closures had peaks that corresponded with the third and sixth semester.
The reason why only two resignations from the programme are registered in the first semester is due to the fact that the sample is composed only of those who have decided to enter the treatment phase after having passed the residential welcoming phase, the phase with the greatest number of dropouts.
Residential treatments already carried out
At the ‘programme end’ there are many more subjects who are having their first experience of residential treatment, 41.7% against 33% of those who have already had an experience of such treatment. There is a progressive reduction in the percentage of ‘agreed upon closures’ and this reduction increases with the number of treatments already experienced. Those who have already gone through residential treatment are mostly distributed within ‘spontaneous closure’ methods (29.7%).
C – Analysis of the results: treatment efficacy
The phenomenon of relapse will now be more deeply examined by analysing the difference between the group that relapsed (33 subjects) and the drug-free group (30 subjects) according to the following variables:
– gender of interviewees – a higher percentage of women relapsed (58.3% compared to 51% of men), although the difference was not statistically significant;
– number of months’ stay in the community (Figure 3): if those who stayed in the community for less than six months are excluded (there were only two of these), those who stayed for a period of time between thirteen and eighteen months had a higher probability of relapsing (90%) and the difference between all length groupings is statistically significant [χ2(6)=15.27, p=.018].
• Programme closure standards (Figure 4): 80% of the subjects who concluded their relations with the community in the time and way agreed upon did not go back to abusing substances in the period following programme resignation whilst 19% of those who interrupted treatment did. This difference is statistically significant [χ2(2)=18.327, p=.0001].
• Residential treatments already carried out: the highest percentage of drug-free subjects (52.4%) is traced to those who are in their first community programme, a percentage that decreases the more programmes a subject participates in.
• Presence of alcoholic family members: those who have family members with alcohol problems are less likely to ‘relapse’ (30.6% versus 84.2%). This difference is statistically significant [χ2(1)= 11.050, p=.001].
• Presence of family members with drug addiction problems: those with family members who had drug problems relapsed less (41.7%) compared to those that didn’t (66.7%). This difference is statistically significant [χ2(1)=3.866, p=.049].
• Serious depression in the post-treatment period: relapse in substance use happened to 60.2% of those who suffered from serious depression against 43.8% of those who claimed not to suffer from depression. This difference is statistically significant [χ2(1)=3.384, p=.05].
• Intense anxiety in the post-treatment period: this variable doesn’t seem to discriminate between those who relapsed and those who remained abstinent (51.9% of subjects who complained about frequent anxiety relapsed, while 52.8% of those that did not mention it relapsed).
• Psychological diagnosis formulated during the sample’s stay in the community (Figures 5 and 6).
The presence or absence of an Axis I mental disorder* does not help us foresee substance abuse behaviour in the period after leaving the programme. Even though it missed statistical significance, the diagnosis of depression was the component that appeared to be the most associated with relapse. Other relevant mental health categories could not be taken into consideration due to the small numbers of subjects who exhibited them.
* This diagnosis was arrived at as the result of an evaluation done by a team of psychotherapists based on clinical observation, on the relationship between therapist and patient and on the results of a battery of psychological tests. These were the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory – 2 (Butcher, Dahlstrom, Graham, Tellegen & Kaemmer, 1989), the Defence Mechanisms Inventory (Ihilevich & Gleser, 1986) and the Holtzman Inkblot test (Holtzman, 1974).
The presence or absence of an Axis II personality disorder does not help us foresee substance abuse behaviour in the period after leaving the programme. Although all those diagnosed with paranoid and narcissistic disorders relapsed, the numbers were too small to be helpful in making predictions. The high number of subjects in the sample with a narcissistic personality disorder made it the only diagnosis from which it was possible to trace an indication: those with this diagnosis relapsed less compared to the total sample, but this does not reach statistical significance.
Discussion
Programme length and closing methods
The best results in terms of reaching a drug-free condition after treatment were obtained by those who had participated for a period of between 25 and 30 months (only 23.5% of ‘relapses’; Figure 3), a population that was largely the same as that which completed the programme in the time and way agreed upon by social workers: 80% of those who duly completed the programme did not ‘relapse’ (Figure 4). Figure 2 helps us in this regard by clearly showing how the closure agreed upon by the programme reaches the peak of its concentration (41.7%) during the time band that goes from a 25- to a 30-month stay in the community. The joint valuation of reaching goals of change – that shared by both social workers and users – seems therefore to be the most trustworthy base on which the highest chance of a drug-free future can be based.
The percentage of relapses increased remarkably in groups of those who stayed in the programme for less than 25 months or more than 30 months, and the curvilinear relation between the two variables indicated that the probability of success is not directly proportional to the length of treatment (Figure 3). The fact that programmes longer than 30 months do not manifest better results than those that last less time (19-30 months) can be attributed to a greater resistance to treatment in those who, for self-perceived difficulties, prolong their stay in the community without this improving the efficacy of the therapeutic process.
Spontaneous closures
According to Figure 2, 30% of spontaneous closures are spread out over a 31-36 month stay in the community; this could be attributed to a perceived lack of strength and lack of faith in bringing the programme to a successful close. This perception could be linked to repeated relapses in the ‘clearance’ phase and was often resolved by falling back on spontaneous closure followed by a new entrance to the programme a few months later. Another 30% of spontaneous closures were concentrated in the temporal interval extending from 13 to 18 months and were probably sustained by a wish to end the need for treatment because one is convinced of having reached therapeutic goals.
Treatment interruptions
From Figure 2 it is deduced that the highest percentage of abandonment (31.1%) is situated around the second temporal interval (7-12 months in the community); abandonment between seven and eighteen months in the community (51.4%) should probably be related to factors that are linked to the asperity and effects of the therapeutic path in course. Programme interruptions are less frequent after 18 months, and the reasons are probably traced to reinforcing support and in the fact that those who do not manage to achieve the ‘programme end’ goal are nevertheless able to put other forms of closure in place such as resignation, which is more considered and less based on impulse. From a statistical point of view, another significant fact is the increase in the percentage of ‘relapses’ in those who leave the programme during the third semester compared to those who leave during the second semester (90% in the first case and 58.3% in the second). This can mean that a therapeutic process that is launched and endures for some time, but is not consolidated, has a greater relapse risk than a process which has just been put into place. This is perhaps because the first is associated with a bigger vulnerability of those who no longer recognise themselves in what they had been before, but have not yet formed a new and more functional self-identity.
Other family members with drug addiction problems
Another variable that is worth considering in depth is the presence of family members with alcohol and drug problems in the families of our sample subjects. Statistical evidence shows that those who have one or more persons in their family with alcohol problems (84.2% of drug-free subjects) or drug problems (66.7% of drug-free subjects) were more able to abstain from substance abuse in the post-residential period. This was not a foreseen result and posits questions that deserve additional reflection. For now, we limit ourselves to suggest that in multi-problematic families the possibility of taking leave of the role of the carrier of the symptom is more easily contemplated, a possibility that is presumably more accessible to the member that actively and knowingly searches for it and is possibly supported by a relational network of orientation such as the community. On the other hand, the systemic-relational theory gives us an interpretive key that confirms the importance of the ‘rigidity/flexibility of roles’ variable in configuring family dynamic and movement: we can hypothesise that a family with only one problematic member has less flexibility regarding family roles due to the concentration of negative expectations on one of its members.
Weight of the psychological diagnosis
From Figures 5 and 6 it is deduced that there are no important differences between the various diagnostic groupings as far as programme end standards are concerned. If the diagnosis of major depression is excluded (68.2% of relapses between those who suffered depression in the post-residential period; Figure 5), all the other diagnoses are irrelevant in determining the probability of relapse in the post-treatment period. In other words, they don’t have value in predicting return to abusive behaviour. Relapse seems more greatly associated with variables that have to do with the environment or processes such as the socio-familial condition and the treatment path (Figures 3 and 4). In any case, it seems that it is the quality and dynamic of life relations rather than individual characteristics fixed by diagnostic features that weighs on the futures of our users, creating chances for change which are as rich as the potentialities contained in relationships and occasions of encounters. On this subject we suggest consulting the following authors: Galanter and Kleber (2006), Clerici, Bertolotti Ricotti and Malagoli (2000), Gori (2001), Putt (2001) and Serpelloni (2004).
Acknowledgements
Those who conducted the research have worked for various years in the community of Città della Pieve; they consulted Massimo Clerici while carrying out this study, whom they thank; a warm thanks is also extended to Federica Volpi for precious statistical consultation.
Bibliography
Butcher, J.N., Dahlstrom, W.G., Graham, J.R., Tellegen, A. & Kaemmer, B. (1989). The Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory-2 (MMPI-2): Manual for administration and scoring. Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press.
Clerici, M., Bertolotti Ricotti, P. & Malagoli, M. (2000). Epidemiologia e diagnosi della comorbilità psichiatrica nei disturbi da uso di sostanze. Quaderni di Itaca numero 6. Roma: Cedis.
Galanter, M. & Kleber, H.D. (2006). Trattamento dei disturbi da uso di sostanze. Masson Italia.
Gori, E. (2001). L’esito a distanza dei trattamenti riabilitativi per chemiodipendenti. Quaderni di Itaca numero 7. Roma: Cedis.
Holtzman, W.H. (1974). New developments on the Holtzman Inkblot Technique. In P. McReynolds (Ed.), Advances in Psychological Assessment, Vol. 3. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.
Ihilevich, D. & Gleser, G.C. (1986). Defense Mechanisms. Their Classification, Correlates, and Measurement with the Defense Mechanism Inventory. Psychoanalytic Quarterly, 57, 459-461.
Pozzi, G., Tempesta, E. et al. (1995). Europasi. Adattamento europeo dello Addiction Severity Index. Bollettino per le Farmacodipendenze e l’Alcoolismo, XVIII (2), 7-41.
Putt, C.A. (2001). La ricerca sull’esito nel trattamento dell’abuso di sostanze. In E.T. Dowd & L. Rugle (Eds.), La tossicodipendenza. Trattamenti a confronto di (pp. 9-52). Milano: McGraw-Hill Libri Italia.
Serpelloni, G. (2004). Modello concettuale per la valutazione dell’outcome nei trattamenti delle tossicodipendenze. Quaderni di Itaca numero 11. Roma: Cedis.
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Anna Addazi is a psychologist and coordinator at Città della Pieve TC, Italy. Email for correspondence: addazi.anna@libero.it
Roberto Marini and Nicolino Rago are psychologists and operative unit co-ordinators at Città della Pieve TC, Italy.
Mental Health and Engagement Outcomes for a UK Addiction TC: The Ley Community
Mark Freestone and Paul Goodman
ABSTRACT: This paper considers outcomes data from the Association of Therapeutic Communities’ research project relating to the Ley Community, a therapeutic community (TC) for the treatment of drug addictions located near Oxford, UK. A total sample of 150 clients were recruited into the study from the community, 49 of whom were in treatment at the commencement of the study (the ‘baseline’ sample) and 101 of whom began treatment after commencement (the ‘sequential’ sample). The sample populations are described in terms of basic demographics, presenting psychopathology and presence of personality disorder. Longitudinal outcomes data is then considered relating to length of stay and change in psychopathology. Broad conclusions are then drawn about the effectiveness of the Ley Community as an intervention for clients with complex needs.
Introduction
In 1999, the Association of Therapeutic Communities, together with the University of Nottingham, funded by the then National Lottery Charities Board, began a naturalistic, comparative, cross-institutional study ‘in the field’ to evaluate the effectiveness of therapeutic community (TC) treatment for people with personality disorders (Lees, 2004). Twenty-one TCs took part in the study, drawn from the following categories: Day TC, Residential TC, Prison TC, Addiction TC and Private Sector TC. Data were returned from 507 clients.
This paper will concentrate on the data returned from the 150 clients who were treated at the Ley Community, an Addiction TC located on the outskirts of Oxford, UK. The Ley Community’s contribution to the overall n of the study was large (over a fifth of the total respondents with excellent survivability) and the data of a very high quality due to the involvement of an internal ‘on-site’ researcher in the project; thus we have elected to use this data to present a fuller picture of the impact of residence at the Ley Community that may not have been apparent from previous papers (Lees, Evans, Freestone & Manning, 2006; Freestone et al., 2006).
The Ley Community
The Ley Community was established in 1971 at Littlemoor Hospital in Oxford under the guidance of Drs Bertram Mandelbrote and Peter Agulnik. The programme was based on that developed in New York at Phoenix House. The first Director, John McCabe, was a graduate from Phoenix House, New York, who had been involved as a staff member in setting up the London Phoenix House in 1969 (see Agulnik & Wilson, 2007, for an account of the early history of the Ley Community). In 1979, the Ley Community moved to its current site now containing residential accommodation for up to fifty-eight residents in six acres of land fifteen minutes by bus from the centre of Oxford City.
The programme in an Addiction TC is based on the theoretical approach of ‘Community as Method’ (De Leon, 1997). There is a substantial body of research, mainly from the United States, that points to the efficacy of this treatment approach. The concept of a drug-free TC is defined as:
a drug-free environment in which people with addictive (and other) problems live together in an organised and structured way in order to promote change and make possible a drug-free life in the wider society. The therapeutic community forms a miniature society in which residents, and staff in the role of facilitators, fulfil distinctive roles and adhere to clear rules, all designed to promote the transitional process of the residents. Self-help and mutual help are pillars of the therapeutic process in which the resident is the protagonist principally responsible for achieving personal growth, realizing a more meaningful and responsible life, and of upholding the welfare of the community. The programme is voluntary in that the resident will not be held in the programme by force or against his/her will.
(Ottenberg, Broekaert & Kooyman, 1993)
Kaplan, Broekaert and Morival (2001) add that
every (addiction) therapeutic community has to strive towards integration into the large society; it has to offer its residents a sufficiently long stay in treatment; both staff and residents should be open to challenge and to questions; ex-addicts can be of significant importance as role models; staff must respect ethical standards, and therapeutic communities should regularly review their ‘raison d’être’.
The Ley Community is targeted at entrenched addicts who have reached a point where they desperately want to change. The treatment programme is divided into four phases that cover twelve months, though no two residents will go through an identical programme. Central to the process is building relationships in peer groups based on ‘trust, respect and honesty’ where residents can safely challenge each other’s behaviour and attitudes, and change. All activities – therapeutic groups, work on maintaining the grounds and fabric, cooking, housework, leisure and therapeutic games – provide material for learning and developing new skills. As trust grows, residents start to work on their ‘issues’ and frequently share early traumas of neglect and abuse. Through acceptance by others, a gradual process occurs whereby acceptance of ‘self’ takes place.
After nine months or so within the safety of a ‘closed community’, residents start preparing to move on. At this point, residents undertake voluntary work and begin socialising in Oxford with their peers. They take on the responsibility within the Community as senior peers, but begin looking outwards and start the preparing to look for work through putting together a CV and practising interviews. Once a full-time job has been secured (and approved by the staff team), a resident will move into the resettlement phase of the programme and for three months continue to live at the Ley Community, cater and budget for themselves, attend two weekly therapeutic groups, and act as auxiliary staff on a rota to support paid staff at weekends and in the evenings. Within three months, residents will have saved sufficiently to put a deposit down on a privately-rented house, usually with a couple of their peers. Over 50% of residents admitted into treatment at the Ley Community leave the programme in full-time employment having been drug free for over 12 months.
The Ley Community programme attempts to provide residents with the ‘opportunity to overcome serious drug and/or alcohol problems, and subsequently to lead full and fulfilling lives’ (Ley Community Mission Statement). Research undertaken at the Ley Community has demonstrated that, after six months in treatment, residents felt less anxious and depressed, less angry, more in control of their lives, and significantly more self-confident (Small, 2001; Small & Lewis, 2003, 2004). Research carried out in 1978 and repeated in 2001 demonstrated that the longer a resident remains in treatment, the less likely they are to subsequently be convicted of a further offence, with the outcome for those who complete the programme being particularly impressive (Wilson & Mandelbrote, 1978; Small, 2001).
The residential treatment sector for substance misuse in the UK has struggled in the last few years in face of the huge expansion of community treatment, mainly centred on substitute prescribing. Within the residential sector, TCs have been particularly hard hit with many commissioners not prepared to fund residential treatment for more than three to six months. The lack of objective research within the field in the UK into the treatment process leaves Addiction TCs vulnerable. Hence the involvement of the Ley Community in this research project. The current study provided an opportunity to compare the characteristics of the client group in treatment at the Ley Community with those in treatment at other TCs, and explore the impact that the programme had on them. This paper will highlight the most significant findings from the study.
Method
The ATCs’ study had a number of research aims (see Lees, 2004, for a full description of all the research aims of this project), of which five will be partially addressed in this paper, namely:
1. describe and measure the populations of the TCs involved, in terms of their background characteristics and their symptoms and behaviours at admission
2. compare the population characteristics of the different subgroups of TCs in the sample (e.g. non-secure/secure; residential/day)
3. particularly measure and discuss the profiles, or social climates, of these communities, and compare them to typical TC profiles
4. measure changes in symptoms and behaviours over time in treatment, and, for some of the population sample, after discharge
5. lastly, attempt to identify how the population characteristics at intake, and the various elements of the treatment environment and process are related to good outcome for members.
Thus the study would be a within-subjects’ (many administrations over time) and between-subjects’ (comparison of different subject groups) multivariate design.
These aims were to be met in two ways: firstly, there was to be a snapshot, or baseline, sample including everyone who was in the 19 TCs (i.e. those 19, out of the 21 TCs providing both environmental and client member data, which provided useable baseline or sequential admission client member data), when the data collection started on 1 April 2001, and who was willing to participate in the research project; and the second, sequential, sample included everyone who was admitted to these TCs after 1 April 2001 for a period of 18 months. Both of these samples were followed up, and retested at three-monthly intervals until the end of the data collection period, 30 September 2002. Members of both these samples were requested to complete a complete battery of environmental and psychometric measures at their first test, either on day one of the project (1 April 2001) or on their admission to the Ley Community, during the life of the project (i.e. between 2 April 2001 and 30 September 2002).
Ethical clearance for this study was obtained through multi-site clearance from the National Research Ethics Committee (NREC), and all respondents, including those at the Ley Community, were required to have signed consent forms before participating in the study.
An interesting aspect of the ATC project in relation to an addiction TC is that no psychometric outcomes measures dealing with substance misuse per se were employed; thus, the data presented here are at once somewhat tangential to the essential aims of the Ley Community, whilst also providing an interesting insight into the ‘generic’ effects of involvement in a TC where the focus is not directly on improving psychopathology or everyday functioning.
Initial description of the sample population
The ATC National Lotteries project surveyed a total of 150 residential clients at the Ley Community between April 2001 and October 2002. One hundred and twenty-two clients (85%) were male and twenty-two clients (15%) were female. The mean age of the clients at point of entry to the study was 29 years (M=28.97, SD=5.98).
For this sample, the mean length of stay in the community was 272 days (SD=184), a figure that reflects well on the Ley Community as a 12-month time-bound intervention, and there was no significant difference in length of stay between the two gender groups, nor was length of stay correlated with age (F(141)=.39, p=.53). The distribution of lengths of stay is represented graphically in Figure 1.
Cursory examination of Figure 1 shows that the length of stay of client members is not normally distributed (K-S D=1, p<0.001). Consistent with other findings (Chiesa, Drahorad & Longo, 2000; Lees et al., 2003; Birtle et al., 2007), there seem to be two ‘peaks’ in discharges: one at around the three-month mark (the ‘early dropouts’) and a second at formal discharge at around 500 days (the ‘completers’); this lends the histogram in Figure 2 a ‘saddle’ or inverse Gaussian (‘normal’) shape. This might suggest two separate populations.
In terms of presenting difficulties, the Ley Community sample was compared with the overall sample of the ATC/NLCB project for the four main change measures considered: the Clinical Outcomes Routine Evaluation: Outcomes Measure (CORE-OM) (Evans et al., 2000); Borderline Syndrome Index (BoSI) (Conte, Plutchik, Karasu & Jerrett, 1980); the EuroQol (EuroQol Group 1990); and the Brief Symptoms Inventory (Derogatis, 1983).
Table 1: Comparison of the Ley Community sample with other TCs in the NLCB study Outcomes measure
These initial descriptors would tend to indicate that the Ley Community population presented with significantly less severe symptoms across the measures used, than the remainder of the study sample.
Data were also available on the presence of personality disorders in the TCs considered for the study, using the Personality Diagnostic Questionnaire 4+ (Hyler, Reider, Spitzer & Williams, 1987): although prevalence of individual personality disorders varied (e.g. incidence of Antisocial PD was noticeably higher – see also Lees, Manning, Freestone & Evans (2003, unpublished)), overall prevalence of the ten DSM–IV Personality Disorders was not significantly different in the Ley Community from the remaining sample (χ2(10)=12.942, p=.227).
Results and analysis
Psychometric change
As described above, client members’ global symptomatology was assessed using the Brief Symptoms Inventory (BrSI) (Derogatis, 1983) global severity index (GSI) at three-monthly intervals. Boxplots showing longitudinal change in scores across these time intervals are shown in Figure 2. Each boxplot shows the median score (the thick central black line) of all participants at each administration; the ‘notches’ show the confidence interval for the median; and the blocky ‘shoulders’ show the inter-quartile range. Broadly speaking, if the ‘notches’ do not overlap, there will be a statistically significant difference between the two medians shown in the boxplots; so, from this figure, we would expect administration 2 to be significantly lower than administration 1 and administration 3 lower than 2.
In these circumstances, we can test for statistically significant change by comparing pre- and post-treatment measures, i.e. those taken at the first administration and then again at the nine-month stage for those in the sequential sample (i.e. those admitted after the study commenced and hence would not have any ‘prior’ treatment at the Ley). The underlying population is approximately normally distributed (K-S Z(133)=1.169, p=.13) and so a paired samples t-test was employed. This test suggests that, between the first administration and the nine-month stage, there is a significant mean reduction in GSI total score by 0.682 (t(21)=5.802, p<.001), implying an effect size of r=.78.
A second outcome measure used in the ATC study is the Borderline Syndrome Index (BoSI), a brief and fairly sensitive measure of general presenting difficulties (Conte et al., 1980) with excellent validity within this study (α=0.95). Figure 3 shows notched boxplots for client scores at each administration (‘1’ being entry to the study and ‘6’ being at 15 months).
Outcomes data generated by the BoSI are ordinal and do not follow a normal distribution (K-S D=0.97, p<0.001), meaning that non-parametric tests were used to ascertain the significance of change over time in individuals’ scores.
Value of n for the sixth administration is very small (n=3), so we looked at the significance of the reduction in BoSI total scores over a nine-month period, or to the fourth administration (n=21). This change was highly significant at the 99% level (Wilcoxon V(37)=604, p<0.001), and suggests an effect size of r=.78, or a strong reduction in Borderline symptomatology following nine months of treatment. For the three clients who stayed on in treatment for fifteen months, this effect size increases to r=–.92, although the result is not statistically significant (p=.11).
The final longitudinal outcome measure considered by this study is the CORE-OM (see Figure 4). Again, the data were normally distributed so parametric tests were employed: these suggested a significant reduction in mean score after nine months (t(22)=6.507, p<0.001) with effect size r=.70.
Quality of life
Another way of looking at Ley Community clients’ improvement over time is to explore the relationship between length of time spent in the community and self-reported improvement in clients’ quality of life, as measured by the EuroQol tool (EuroQol Group, 1990). The EuroQol tool features a graphical ‘barometer’ that requests clients mark their overall quality of life on a scale of 0–100. The EuroQol was administered to each client twice: once at entry to the community, and once at discharge; Figure 5 shows a scatterplot of discharge scores against length of stay.
The correlation in Figure 5 is fairly weak, but it is positive (τ=.173) and significant (one-sided p<0.05), which would tend to indicate that a longer stay in the Ley community was associated with improved self-reported quality of life.
Early dropouts and long-stayers
Previously cited work completed at the Ley community (Wilson & Mandelbrote, 1978) suggested that ‘long-stay’ members completing six months or more of treatment obtained better outcomes in relation to drug relapse and criminality. We can identify from the sequential sample (that is, those clients who joined the community during the study) a subset of cases who then stayed on through treatment for over 180 days after joining the study. For this sample n=36, and the presenting difficulties were not significantly different from the remainder of the Ley community sample for the EuroQol, BoSI, CORE-OM or BrSI–GSI; nor were outcomes.
However, research performed in other TCs (Chiesa, Wright & Need, 2003) has suggested a link between borderline personality disorder and dropout rates in a TC. When we analyse the prevalence of personality disorders in the ‘long-stay’ sample, we find significantly lower incidence of Narcissistic (χ2(1)= 5.118, p=.025) and Borderline (χ2(1)=5.697, p=.020) personality disorders in this population.
Reliable change
A final test we can make, based on a method developed by Jacobson, Follette and Revenstorf (1984) and further clarified by Evans, Margison and Barkham (1998), utilises the reliability coefficients for the various outcome measures for the study (previously published in Lees et al., 2006) in order to calculate whether or not the levels of change experienced by those in the treatment sample are reliable; that is to say, they are not simply due to inconsistencies or reporting quirks in the measures. Using this technique, a threshold for mean change is calculated, above which the change experienced by the clients becomes ‘reliable’ (i.e. there is a 95% chance that this is not a spurious finding due to unreliability of the psychometric itself). The results of these calculations are given in Table 2.
Table 2: Reliable change for Ley Community clients using the BrSI and CORE-OM Outcome measure
Measures of therapeutic environment
A final aspect of the ATC/NLCB study worth considering in understanding outcomes at the Ley Community would be to look at measurements of the therapeutic environment, in an attempt to understand ‘what kind of place’ clients find when they are accepted for treatment. Of particular interest might be how the Ley differs from other TCs in the various cultural aspects of its programme delivery.
The measure used by the study to assess the ‘quality’ of the therapeutic environment was the Community Oriented Programmes Environment Scale (Moos, 1997). This measure poses a series of 100 true/false statements about the environment of their community to client and staff members (e.g. ‘This place always looks clean and tidy’, ‘Client members are not afraid to speak their minds’). The responses are then factored into 10 subscales, relating to various aspects perceived as relevant to a ‘healthy’ community.
For the purposes of this paper, the largest available data ‘snapshot’ – from October 2001 – was taken of completed COPES measures for the Ley Community and for the rest of the ATC/NLCB sample. These were then plotted onto a line graph (Figure 6) and differences tested. Significant differences at the 95% level were present for all subscales except for ‘Support’ (p=.08) and ‘Staff Control’ (p=.133).
Discussion and conclusions
Several findings of interest arise from the foregoing study that certainly merit further discussion and possibly further investigation, including the following.
1. There are substantial differences between the severity of presenting psychological differences within clients attending the Ley Community and those within the national sample, with the Ley clients presenting with much lower levels of psychopathology.
2. There is significant and reliable clinical improvement in the presenting difficulties of clients who remained in treatment at the Ley Community for at least nine months (aggregate effect size r=.75).
3. There was a modest but significant correlation between length of stay in the Ley Community and improved self-reported quality of life.
4. There were significant differences between various facets of therapeutic environment at the Ley Community when compared to the overall ATC/NLCB sample; of particular note were the higher levels of Involvement, Practical Orientation and Order and Organisation in the Ley programme relative to the sample.
5. The significantly higher prevalence of narcissistic and borderline personality disorders in clients who leave treatment before the expected duration (six months or more) suggests that individuals presenting with these difficulties are at particular risk of ‘early dropout’.
These results are encouraging, as they suggest that treatment in the Ley Community is associated with a strong, reliable reduction in presenting psychopathology across a number of variables and outcome measures for clients who remain in treatment for at least nine months. The extant question for the community is not so much ‘is this intervention effective?’ (repeated studies have now shown that it is), but rather ‘why do some people leave the community early?’ This is not a question that can be explored through psychometric outcomes data; it necessitates another investigation in its own right, one that might be based on long-term follow-up and collaborative, non-judgemental exit interviews.
This study may be perceived as limited in the sense that the outcomes considered are largely only proxies for the true outcomes of the Ley Community: i.e. enabling clients to remain drug-free post-treatment. Reduction in psychological symptomatology may be a necessary and desirable part of such an outcome, but it is not sufficient in its own right. As well as repeated work on reconvictions, such as that performed by Wilson and Mandelbrote (1978) and Small (2001), it would be desirable to consider follow-up factors such as employment, relapse into drug use and hospital admissions.
References
Agulnik, P. & Wilson, S. (2007). The early history of the Ley Community – Personal accounts. Therapeutic Communities, 28(1), 11–16.
Birtle, J., Calthorpe, B., McGruer, F., Adie, L., McCullagh, G. & Kearney, S. (2007). Preparing to go to main house – this week, maybe next week! Therapeutic Communities, 28(2).
Chiesa, M., Drahorad, C. & Longo, S. (2000). Early termination of treatment in personality disorder treated in a psychotherapy hospital. British Journal of Psychiatry, 177, 107–111.
Chiesa, M., Wright, M. & Need, R. (2003). A description of an audit cycle of early dropouts from an inpatient psychotherapy unit. Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy, 17(2), 138–149.
Conte, H.R., Plutchik, R., Karasu, T.B. & Jerrett, I. (1980). A self-report borderline scale: discriminative validity and preliminary norms. Journal of Nervous Mental Disorders, 168, 428–435.
De Leon, G. (1997). Community as Method: Therapeutic Communities for Special Populations and Special Settings. New York: Praeger.
Derogatis, L.R. (1983). SCL–90R: Administration, Scoring & Procedures Manual for the R(evised) Version. Towson, MD: Clinical Psychometric Research.
EuroQol Group (1990). EuroQol–a new facility for the measurement of health-related quality of life. Health Policy, 20(3), 321–328.
Evans, C., Margison, F. & Barkham, M. (1998). The contribution of reliable and clinically significant change methods to evidence-based mental health. Evidence Based Mental Health, 1, 70–72.
Evans, C., Mellor-Clark, J., Margison, F., Barkham, M., McGrath, G., Connell, J. et al. (2000). Clinical Outcomes in Routine Evaluation: The CORE-OM. Journal of Mental Health, 9, 247–255.
Freestone, M., Lees, J., Evans, C. & Manning, N. (2006). Histories of Trauma in Client Members of Therapeutic Communities. Therapeutic Communities: The International Journal for Therapeutic and Supportive Organizations, 27(3), 411–434.
Hyler, S., Reider, R.O., Spitzer, R.L. & Williams, J. (1987). Personality Diagnostic Questionnaire – Revised. New York: New York State Psychiatric Institute.
Jacobson, N.S., Follette, W.C. and Revenstorf, D. (1984). Psychotherapy outcome research: methods for reporting variability and evaluating clinical significance. Behaviour Therapy, 15, 336–352.
Kaplan, C.D., Broekaert, E. & Morival, M. (2001). Improving social psychiatric treatment in residential programmes for emerging dependence groups in Europe: cross-border networking, methodological innovations and substantive discoveries. International Journal of Social Welfare, 10(2), 127–133.
Lees, J. (2004). Practice Evaluation of Therapeutic Communities. In J. Lees, N. Manning & N. Morant (Eds.), A Culture of Enquiry: Research Evidence and the Therapeutic Community (pp. 76–90). London: Jessica Kingsley.
Lees, J., Evans, C., Freestone, M. & Manning, N. (2006). Who comes into therapeutic communities? A description of the characteristics of a sequential sample of client members admitted to 17 therapeutic communities. Therapeutic Communities, 27(3), 411–434.
Lees, J., Manning, N., Freestone, M. & Evans, C. (2003, unpublished). Some Preliminary findings from the ATC/NLCB Therapeutic Communities Project – A comparative evaluation of Therapeutic Community effectiveness for people with personality disorders. Association of Therapeutic Communities Annual Conference, Windsor.
Moos, R.H. (1997). Evaluating Treatment Environments: the quality of psychiatric and substance abuse programs. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers.
Ottenberg, D.J., Broekaert, E. & Kooyman, M. (1993). What can and cannot be changed in a therapeutic community. Orthapedagogische Reeks Gent, 2, 51–63.
Small, M. (2001). Two Year Reconvictions in a Rehabilitation centre. Therapeutic Communities, 22(2), 153–166.
Small, M. & Lewis, S. (2003). Six-month follow-up of anxiety and depression in polysubstance misusers undergoing treatment in a therapeutic community. Therapeutic Communities, 24(4), 142–160.
Small, M. & Lewis, S. (2004). Changes in hostility in residents undergoing treatment for drug and/or alcohol misuse in a residential centre. Therapeutic Communities, 25(3), 219–235.
Wilson, S. & Mandelbrote, B. (1978). The relationship between duration of treatment in a therapeutic community for drug abusers and subsequent criminality. The British Journal of Psychiatry, 132, 487–491.
______________________________________________________________________________________
Mark Freestone is Senior Clinical Forensic Research Officer, East London Forensic Personality Disorder Service, London, UK. Email: mark.freestone@eastlondon.nhs.uk
Paul Goodman was Chief Executive at The Ley Community, UK from 1998 to 2008.
Empowering Female Inmates: An Exploratory Study of a Prison Therapeutic Community for Substance Abuse and its Impact on the Coping Skills of Substance Abusing Women
Danielle McDonald
ABSTRACT: Robert Johnson’s model of mature coping was applied to a therapeutic community (TC) for women to better understand if the women were learning positive coping skills that would replace their prior negative coping skill of substance abuse. Face-to-face interviews were conducted to examine the differences between women in the TC and women on the waiting list for treatment. Data from this study suggest that women involved in the TC were able to improve their problem-solving and seeking social support skills, while many still struggled with avoidance techniques.
The Relationship Between Neighborhood Criminal Behavior and Oxford Houses
Jeffrey Deaner, Leonard A. Jason, Darrin M. Aase and David G. Mueller
ABSTRACT:
Experts by Experience: Discovering the Heart of a Therapeutic Group IQ
Peter R. Holmes and Susan B. Williams
ABSTRACT: The present study investigated crime rates in areas surrounding 42 Oxford Houses and 42 control houses in a large city in the Northwestern United States. A city-run Global Information Systems’ (GIS) website was used to gather crime data including assault, arson, burglary, larceny, robbery, sexual assault, homicide, and vehicle theft over a calendar year. Findings indicated that there were no significant differences between the crime rates around Oxford Houses and the control houses. These results suggest that well-managed and governed recovery homes pose minimal risks to neighbors in terms of criminal behavior.
Is Alcoholics Anonymous a Therapeutic Community?
Martin Weegmann
ABSTRACT: Alcoholics Anonymous and other Fellowship groups are effective and sustaining organisations for many addicted individuals. This paper notes elements in common between such mutual-help groups and formal therapeutic communities, arguing that they can be regarded as being special therapeutic communities (TCs) in their own right. Premised on recognition of mutual vulnerability and appreciation of the role of human defences and assets, AA addresses change through lay processes of group psychology and involvement in a sense of community
Cultural Reviews
John Dowsett and Jackie Craissati (2007) Managing Personality Disordered Offenders in the Community – A Psychological Approach. Published by Routledge, pp. 215, price p/b £19.99, Paperback, ISBN: 1-58391-739-8. Reviewed by Simon McArdle.
A. Washton and J. Zweben (2006) Treating Alcohol and Drug Problems in Psychotherapy Practice. Published by Guildford Press (New York), pp. 312, Paperback, ISBN: 978-1-59385-980-0. Reviewed by Martin Weegmann.
John Gordon and Gabriel Kirtchuk (2008) Psychic Assaults and Frightened Clinicians: Counter-transference in Forensic Settings. Published by First edition published by Karnac, pp. 152, Paperback, £????, ISBN: 978-1-85575-562-8. Reviewed by Phil Garnham.
L.A. Jason, J.R. Ferrari, M.I. Davis and B.D. Olson (Eds.) (2006) Creating Communities for Addiction Recovery: The Oxford House Model. Published by Binghampton, NY: Haworth Press Inc., pp. 180, £24.99, ISBN-10: 0789029308, ISBN-13: 978-0789029300. Reviewed by Rowdy Yates.
EDITORIAL: Evidence of Evidence
Rex Haigh, Steve Pearce and John Diamond
ABSTRACT: No abstract.
Death, Taxes, Certainties, Groups and Communities Or NICE and the Deathly Hallows
Chris Evans
ABSTRACT: This paper argues that the laudable wish to fund health and social care through taxes makes governments desperate for rigorous probabilities to contain these costs. Statistical analysis of double-blind randomised controlled trials (DBRCTs) is beautifully adapted to this task for drug interventions. However, statistical analyses of experiments have been worshipped as if they were not just excellent methods to describe uncertainty but elevated as they provided certainties. Interestingly, the statistical logic that enables the randomised controlled trial (RCT) to test differences between two drugs does not work for therapeutic communities (TCs), nor for interactive therapy groups nor a number of other psychosocial interventions. This paper sketches out why the statistical logic for cannot distil certainties from RCTs of TCs. However, it argues that this a point of contact enabling us to work with governmental evaluators to help them retain the strengths of their own methods and community processes while perhaps gaining from some of ours.
Manual or Matrix
How Can We Know Our Outcomes?
R.D. Hinshelwood
ABSTRACT: The assumption that all forms of medical and psychological therapy should conform to the production of evidence advocated by NICE (The National Institute of Clinical Excellence) appears to evade the question whether they all can. In certain kinds of therapies within the mental health field, from psychoanalysis to the therapeutic community, there are significant issues about the applicability of these standard scientific methods. In this paper, I highlight some of the issues.
On the Need for Randomised Trials of Therapeutic Community Approaches
Steve Pearce and Mieke Autrique
ABSTRACT: A number of objections have been raised in response to calls to carry out randomised experimental studies in therapeutic community (TC) settings. In the context of an increasing emphasis on particular kinds of evidence to demonstrate the usefulness of health care interventions, a meeting of experts was convened in Oxford, UK, in 2008 to examine the question of whether such studies were desirable and possible. Taking these discussions as its starting point, this paper examines the objections to carrying out a randomised trial of TC treatment, and describes how a randomised controlled trial of health TCs for personality disorder currently underway in Oxford has addressed them.
A Synthesis of Outcome Research at Grendon Therapeutic Community Prison
Michelle Newberry
ABSTRACT: This paper summarises outcome research conducted at Grendon therapeutic community prison. Research into the quality of prison life has shown that, overall, prisoners perceive their quality of life at Grendon more positively than offenders in other prisons of the same category, particularly with regard to dignity, personal development, and relationships between prisoners and staff. In addition, prisoners and staff at Grendon tend to perceive the social climate to be more positive than that of other secure settings in the UK. Studies which have evaluated changes in the psychological wellbeing and attitudes of prisoners have found that, following treatment at Grendon, offenders experience less anxiety and depression, are less hostile, tough-minded and impulsive, and have fewer negative relating tendencies. Furthermore, Grendon residents are less likely to be reconvicted than prisoners selected for Grendon but who do not come to Grendon, and those who remain in treatment for at least 18 months demonstrate a reduction in reconviction rate of between one-fifth and one-quarter.
An Achievable Standard for In-house TC Evaluation?
Service, Individual and Group-level Outcome Data for CHT Therapeutic Communities
Mark Freestone, Beatriz Sánchez España, Nesha Kelly and John Gale
ABSTRACT: This paper presents the results of a naturalistic evaluation of the therapeutic community (TC) projects comprising Community Housing and Therapy (CHT), a network of TCs in the South East of the UK. A panel sample design was used and data were collected at set periods by in-house research assistants working at the TCs, which were then gathered and analysed centrally, with reference to previous studies performed by the Association of Therapeutic Communities and others. The project was conducted without significant external funding and was intended to demonstrate what could be achieved by a motivated in-house research team.
The study had a high initial take-up from clients, and regular recruitment, but experienced a high dropout rate over its 12-month duration. The results suggested the heterogeneous nature of presenting difficulties residents experienced with mental health and social functioning when entering CHT, which were equivalent in many respects to those individuals admitted to NHS psychotherapy services and in some cases more severe than those in all but prison TCs. They also indicated that those admitted to CHT during the study showed statistically significant overall improvement on most psychometric measures, with 31% reporting reliable and clinically significant positive change and 11% a reliable deterioration.
Evaluating the Effectiveness of Treatment in the Therapeutic Community: CORE Outcomes and Health Care Contacts
David Rawlinson and Chloe Bennett
ABSTRACT: This study took place within the Complex Needs Service at the Winterbourne House Therapeutic Community in Reading.
The aim of this investigation was to evaluate the effectiveness of the therapeutic community (TC) for individuals with complex needs (Personality Disorder), with regards to health care service usage pre- and post-treatment. The average number of health care contacts made by patients in the two years before they entered the TC was significantly higher than the number of contacts made in the two years following discharge from the TC. In the 2-8 years after TC treatment, the number of health care contacts slowly increased, and more steeply so for those who had left the TC in an unplanned manner compared to those who left the TC in a planned manner.
Another aim of the study was to evaluate the effectiveness of the TC according to treatment outcomes measuring functioning, wellbeing, presenting problems, and risk. A comparison of CORE scores at the beginning and end of treatment revealed that CORE scores were significantly lower at the end of treatment in the TC.
Therefore, this investigation indicates the clinical effectiveness of treatment in a TC for complex needs patients, and suggests cost-effectiveness with regards to significantly reduced health care service contacts post-treatment.
The Longer-term Clinical Outcomes of a DBT-informed Residential Therapeutic Community; An Evaluation and Reunion
Mark McFetridge and Julia Coakes
ABSTRACT: A new synthesis of therapeutic interventions (dialectical behaviour therapy within a therapeutic community) developed from the growing evidence of positive outcomes for these apparently distinct approaches for people with the complex difficulties currently considered to represent a borderline personality disorder. All clients who joined between 2000 and 2007 completed a brief self-report measure and gave information about their experience of therapy. With the questionnaire, they received an invitation to a reunion group/day to further share and discuss their experience. Participants were women from across the UK with a history of severe self-harm and self-defeating behaviour. People responding to postal contact included those who left without completing the therapy programme. Responders were indistinguishable from those who did not respond on a range of indices. However, there was a clear difference between those women who completed the programme and those who had not at a mean follow-up period of five years. Those completing therapy had highly significant reductions on the CORE-OM in contrast to those not completing, who did not improve on this measure. Further qualitative analysis of written and verbal responses using interpretative phenomenological analysis indicated three major themes concerning change for clients: changes in sense of identity, changes in life, and changes in thinking. The longer-term changes in individuals that may be attributable to participating in a DBTinformed therapeutic community are explored.
Implementing Routine Outcome Measurement Within a Therapeutic Community Setting: The Ashburn Clinic Experience
Brett Ferguson
ABSTRACT: Ashburn Clinic is a general psychiatric hospital which functions as a democratic therapeutic community. For over a decade both patients and clinicians have participated in measuring outcome in day-to-day clinical practice. This paper describes the planning, implementation and development of a system for routine outcome measurement (ROM). With an emphasis on practical issues, it discusses ways of facilitating the involvement of staff and patients in the outcome assessment process, and describes some of the main factors to be taken into account in selecting outcome instruments. Both the potential gains and difficulties of ROM are considered, with regard to the collection and utilisation of outcome data. It is concluded that, in this therapeutic community setting, the costs of routinely assessing outcome are outweighed by the benefits both for individual patients and staff and for the community as a whole.
MAXWELL JONES LECTURE
What Should Social Psychiatry Say to Neuroscience?
Chris Holman
ABSTRACT: No abstract.
Maxwell Jones Lecture: Response
Kath Lovell
ABSTRACT: No abstract.
WINDSOR PAPERS
Managing and Adapting to Increased Security and Audit Requirements Within a Prison-based Therapeutic Community: The Recent Experience of HMP Grendon
Michael Brookes and Patrick Mandikate
ABSTRACT: This paper describes ways in which HMP Grendon, a prison establishment in which there is a series of discrete therapeutic communities (TCs), has adapted to increased security and audit requirements. Set out are the reasons why those adjustments were important and necessary. Some were a function of revised Prison Service priorities alongside a changing management culture within the National Offender Management Service. Others were in response to specific establishment deficits or to enable the work undertaken within HMP Grendon to be better recognised and acknowledged as an effective intervention in reducing offending behaviour.
Explained will be the reaction to these developments, as accepted routines and assumptions were challenged and altered. This adaptation and change, although part of normal organisational life, especially within TCs, was met with doubt and suspicion. Fears and concerns were acted out. The introduction of a new senior management team added to these anxieties.
How these concerns were addressed, especially within the wing therapist team, is detailed. Identified are the important therapeutic principles that were maintained and developed as well as the nature of the relationship change between the old and new managers. The paper concludes with indicators of how successful these adaptations and corrections have been.
Compromise or Collaboration: How to Stay Focused on What Really Matters in a Chaotic Changing Environment
David Walker
ABSTRACT: Compromise or collaboration? Competition or cooperation? What is the difference?
How does one survive in today’s public service arena, getting one’s hands dirty, being pragmatic so money comes in, explaining and arguing for what we do? But perhaps more importantly how do we develop our services or the principles underlying them? When do we hold to tradition and established practice and when do we adapt and introduce novelty? In effect what do we let go of or hang on to? What are the ethical issues and moral dilemmas that face us daily in our work? What effect do these have on our staff, ourselves as leaders, and ultimately our patients?
This paper will explore the author’s experience of his expanding leadership role in an attempt to protect one therapeutic community and transfer the principles into other clinical settings; in particular, the importance of relationship and understanding the real pain underlying many of our clients’ difficulties. How do we develop services that stay with this pain rather than take part in the medicalisation of human suffering in a culture based on performance and deceit?
In particular, this paper will explore the professional and personal dilemmas confronted. Through taking this everyday experience seriously and drawing on complexity and group analytic theories of change and organisations, the author will explore ways to survive and develop services.
The Naked TC: Can a TC Prosper Without Finance, Buildings or Staff?
Peter R. Holmes and Susan B. Williams
ABSTRACT: Without funding, without its own building and without any paid therapeutic or medical staff, Christ Church Deal is a therapeutic community (TC) with a difference. For 12 years it has relied on its social and relational processes for the continuity of the therapeutic dynamic in the community. The authors, who were co-founders of the community, suggest that equipping members to carry personal and mutual responsibility has been a core element in the maintenance of the life of the community. They also highlight several other aspects of the TC that have contributed to its survival without the support of finance, buildings or staff.
OTHER PAPERS
An Informal Review of the Literature on Community Meetings and the Potential for their Application in a Secure Adolescent Service
Marilyn A. Sher
ABSTRACT: An informal review of the literature pertaining to Community Meetings (CMs) was undertaken. This involved defining CMs, exploring their purpose, process, structure and leadership. Therapeutic approaches and techniques relevant to CMs as well as the role of group processes were also examined. Brief reflections on the existing evaluations undertaken so far in the literature were considered. Finally, the application of such a meeting in a secure adolescent service was discussed. This discussion centres on some of the challenges secure adolescent services may face when implementing CMs, mainly due to the culture of forensic services focusing on risk management, lack of adequately trained staff and the initial expected ‘hostility’ both staff and patients perceive will occur. However, valuable contributions of CMs were evident in terms of developing social perspective-taking skills, self-awareness, use of support and empathy. This indicates the importance of implementing CMs in secure adolescent services to enhance client skills and complement the therapeutic approaches utilised with this client group.
Staff Perceptions About Stress and Staff Burnout in Drug Treatment Organisations: A Qualitative Comparative Study in Greece and the UK
Charalampos Poulopoulos and Kim Wolff
ABSTRACT: Burnout is a significant issue in drug treatment organisations and it can be linked with high turnover staff rates. However, not many studies have been carried out in this field, although burnout has received significant attention in education, health care and social welfare fields and an extensive literature has developed around the model, the theory and the process of burnout. The aim of the current study is to understand burnout in the drug treatment field. Using a focus group interview, the study tries to explore staff perceptions of burnout working in the drug treatment field in Greece and Britain in various organisations. The study reveals that there are many similarities in the way in which professionals from the two countries perceive the phenomenon. Both groups seem to agree that burnout is related with organisational function and policies. The paper concludes by suggesting organisational and personal measures in preventing burnout.
Review
C. Bollas (2009) The Evocative Object World. Published by Routledge
together with
C. Bollas (2009) The Infinite Question. Published by Routledge.
Reviewed by Simon McArdle.
EDITORIAL Straw Men: Exploring the Evidence Base and the Mythology of the Therapeutic Community
Rowdy Yates, George De Leon, Rod Mullen and Naya Arbiter
ABSTRACT: No abstract.
Juan Corelli (Parés y Plans): An Appreciation
David Turner
ABSTRACT: No abstract.
Is the Therapeutic Community an Evidence-based Treatment? What the Evidence Says
George De Leon
ABSTRACT: Despite decades of Therapeutic Community (TC) outcome research, critics have questioned whether the TC is an evidenced-based treatment for addictions. Given the relative lack of randomised, double-blind control trials (RCTs) it is asserted that the effectiveness of the TC has not been ‘proven’. Such assertions have serious implications for the acceptance and future development of the TC. The purpose of this paper is to foster consensus among researchers, policy makers, providers and the public as to the research evidence for the effectiveness of the TC. Main findings and conclusions are summarised from multiple sources of outcome research in North America including multi-programme field effectiveness studies, single programme controlled studies, meta-analytic statistical surveys and cost-benefit studies. The weight of the research evidence from all sources is compelling in supporting the hypothesis that the TC is an effective and cost-effective treatment for certain subgroups of substance abusers. However, full acceptance of the TC as a bona fide evidence-based approach will require a generation of studies that include RCTs as well as other quantitative and qualitative designs.
Cost Benefits of Therapeutic Community Programming: Results of a Self-funded Survey
James Pitts and Rowdy Yates
ABSTRACT: This paper explores the economic evidence base for residential rehabilitation in general and therapeutic communities (TCs) in particular, and describes in detail a small-scale, self-funded survey undertaken by member organisations within the Australasian Therapeutic Communities Association (ATCA) in order to better understand the lives and lifestyles of the typical TC population; their economic impact upon the communities in which they live prior to treatment; and any savings which might be achieved through treatment intervention. The study echoed previous research which suggested that treatment interventions of this kind can deliver significant savings to society even where no behaviour change is assumed and only time in treatment is measured against pre-treatment behaviour.
Recovery We Can Afford: An Analysis of a Sample of Comparative, Cost-based Studies
Rowdy Yates
ABSTRACT: This paper describes a brief literature search and analysis of cost-related studies which compared the total costs (expenditure and benefits) of residential and non-residential treatments for addiction. Despite the widespread assumption in the field that community-based treatments ‘must’ be cheaper, the number of studies actually located was surprisingly small and their findings were less than definitive. Most studies support the view that treatment interventions save society money overall. Most also recognise that the population seen by drug-free therapeutic communities is more damaged than those presenting to other modalities, but few studies actually weight their findings for this significant difference. Few studies are conducted over a long enough time period to demonstrate the real, relative achievements of the various modalities in delivering permanent (cost beneficial) change to a disturbed and disturbing section of the population.
Therapeutic Communities in United States’ Prisons: Effectiveness and Challenges
Harry K. Wexler and Michael L. Prendergast
ABSTRACT: The therapeutic community (TC) has become widely accepted and utilised throughout the US criminal justice system and is considered the treatment of choice for the more difficult to treat prison inmates (Prendergast & Wexler, 2004). The acceptance and proliferation of TCs in prisons, which are highly coercive environments and have been historically resistant to rehabilitation, is an intriguing story that may provide useful lessons for other countries interested in providing effective prison treatment for substance abusers. Research has played a central role through federally-funded rigorous evaluations of multiple prison TCs that have consistently demonstrated significant reduction in recidivism, for some studies up to five years post-prison TC treatment followed by aftercare. This report provides a brief history of correctional TCs, including a review of research findings with a focus on several classic studies, a discussion of enhancing correctional TCs in the current environment that increasingly requires ‘evidence-based’ treatment. Finally, lessons learned and recommendations will be offered for future research and practice.
Research on the Effectiveness of the Modified Therapeutic Community for Persons with Co-occurring Substance Use and Mental Disorders
Stanley Sacks and JoAnn Y. Sacks
ABSTRACT: This paper reviews the development of the modified therapeutic community (MTC) as an integrated approach to the treatment of co-occurring disorders. Four research studies are presented, each of which examined the effectiveness of the MTC within a particular population and a particular setting; all 902 volunteer subjects had mental disorders (most of these were serious disorders) co-occurring with substance use disorders, and all four studies were undertaken by the same investigative team. Significantly better outcomes were observed for the MTC group in every study, but the measures and domains in which differences were detected varied from study to study. A quantitative synthesis (using meta-analysis) detected significant improvements in outcomes for the MTC group in five of six outcome domains (substance use, mental health, crime, employment and housing); no significant differences were detected in HIV-risk. The review of research concludes with brief summaries of preliminary findings from two current studies. The paper then transitions to a closing discussion of staff training, aftercare services, and future directions for research related to the MTC. The substantial base of research supporting the efficacy of the MTC approach for persons with cooccurring disorders that has accumulated should encourage programme and policy officials to consider using MTC programmes for populations with co-occurring disorders.
Reviews
George De Leon (2000) The Therapeutic Community: Theory, Model and Method. Published by Springer Publishing Company, New York. Reviewed by Anthony Slater and Rune Hafstad.
George De Leon (Presenter) (2005) The Therapeutic Community (DVD) . Directed by: Rod Mullen, Produced by: Amity Foundation, Distributed by: psychotherapy.net (Worldwide), psychotherapy.com (UK). Reviewed by Rowdy Yates.
Martien Kooyman (1993) The Therapeutic Community for Addicts: Intimacy, Parent Involvement and Treatment Success. Published by Swets & Zeitlinger, Lisse. Reviewed by Bob Campbell and Dan Richter.
Barbara Rawlings and Rowdy Yates (Eds.) (2001) Therapeutic Communities for the Treatment of Drug Users. Published by Jessica Kingsley, London. Reviewed by Wendy Dawson.
Hybrid Vigour: Integration of Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy (MBCT) into the Therapeutic Community
Mary Stanton and Rod Mullen
ABSTRACT: Fifty years of therapeutic community (TC) experience and practice have informed a theory of the essential elements necessary to facilitate change. Much of the success of the TC can be attributed to its flexibility: adapting to changing populations, diverse cultures, national and local health care priorities and funding while retaining the essence of the TC model. In recent years there has been a growing interest in the application of mindfulness-based meditation practices as an intervention in the treatment of psychological difficulties and physical illnesses. An extensive review of current literature, randomised controlled trials, and results from clinical studies provided our theoretical rationale for piloting mindfulness practices at Amity Foundation’s TC in Tucson, Arizona. In this paper we illustrate how this innovative approach addresses a variety of challenges facing today’s TCs while the basic tenant of ‘Community as Method’ remains the essence of the process. The key elements of Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy (MBCT) as a treatment approach are detailed, and we outline the modifications made to this approach in adapting MBCT to a residential TC setting. Initial outcomes illustrate the variety of ways that mindfulness-based meditation practices increase engagement and enhance the TC experience. Questionnaires administered pre- and post-session along with self-reporting of participants were used to establish baseline data, evaluate shifts in attitude, and assess the quality, relevance, and content of the course. Data collected from these attitude instruments are discussed in terms of directions for future research and potential implications for further development in the TC setting.
Structured Interviews in Drug-Free Treatment – A Validity Study of the DOK Interview
Mats Anderberg and Mikael Dahlberg
ABSTRACT: Within the field of addiction treatment it is common to use different kinds of structured interviews as a method for treatment planning and evaluation. For that reason it is important to empirically examine the methodological qualities concerning reliability and validity. This paper presents the results from a study of concurrent validity of the Swedish DOK interview via analyses of the agreement and association between data from the structured interviews DOK and ASI. Most of the interviews were carried out in therapeutic communities and the remaining inter-views came from outpatient care. The degree of agreement between the two different interviews was compared and analysed for a total of 79 items. The study demonstrates that 69 of the 79 items have high levels of agreement, as well as significant values for correlation when this factor has been considered. The client ratings show a systematically low level of agreement. That may indicate that they are not valid or accurate enough to form the basis for treatment planning or to be used for research. A second important conclusion to be made is that DOK and ASI in essence are comparable as structured interviews and thus interchangeable. Another implication of fundamental importance is to use relevant statistical methods for identifying strengths and weaknesses in these kinds of instruments in order to gain valid and reliable results.
A Comparison of Affirmations Given and Received by Minority and Non-Minority Status Men in a Correctional Therapeutic Community
Jessica Veneskey Linley, Keith Warren and Tamara S. Davis
ABSTRACT: Racial tension has been a persistent problem in the American correctional system. This poses a challenge to corrections-based therapeutic communities (TCs) since they depend heavily on peer interactions. This article presents three analyses of the differences in one type of peer interaction, the peer affirmation, as given and received by ethnic majority and ethnic minority residents in one American TC. In those analyses that control for auto-correlation, we find no statistically significant differences between ethnic groups. There is a small but statistically significant negative relationship between scores on the Level of Service Inventory-Revised (LSI-R) and affirmations given and received. The strongest predictor in all models is simply time spent in the TC.
Developing Therapeutic Communities for the 21st Century: Bringing Traditions Together Through Borrowing and Adaptation
Michael G. Young
ABSTRACT: A substantial body of research shows that Modified Therapeutic Communities (MTC) can be effective in dealing with addiction. MTCs have evolved to deal with clients who are considered quatra-diagnostic. These individuals suffer from co-occurring disorders involving homelessness, substance abuse, mental health and criminal behaviour. However, the diverse nature of these problems, and the complex makeup of the populations involved, adds to the challenge of simultaneously dealing with them in one therapeutic context. This paper explores a therapeutic community (TC) in Western Canada developed with the purpose of serving quatra-diagnosed clients starting with the least challenging of these problems, homelessness, followed with the expansion of services to other clients. This study identifies the fourth moment of TCs as a new direction in MTC development, which includes an emphasis on combining TC models and evaluation research in the provision of services to growing and diverse populations.
HMP Dovegate’s Therapeutic Community: An Analysis of Reconviction Data
Sarah Miller and Jennifer Brown
ABSTRACT: This study reports the reconviction data for n=94 prisoners who had attended Her Majesty’s Prison Dovegate therapeutic community (TC) and been released back into the wider community. The 48% reconviction rate amongst those liberated was lower than previously found in other prison treatment programmes. The majority of reconvictions (74.5%) were breaches of licence involving absconding. There were no reports of serious violent offending and only one report of sexual re-offending. Most re-offenders (87.5%) did so within a year of being released into the community. Analysis also revealed that 70% of reconvictions were committed by those who had spent less than 18 months in the TC suggesting a treat-ment dosage effect. Whilst the results are encouraging, limitations and problems with re-offending as a treatment outcome measure are discussed.
‘Being Real and Being Therapeutic’ Revisited
Rachel Clements, Vishwanath Ramakrishna and Graham Mackay
ABSTRACT: Therapeutic communities’ demand for staff reflexivity is not limited to the therapy hour, but extends to all the staff’s daily interactions, meaning that previously reliable professional roles no longer apply. This paper brings alive the difficulty of working in such an environment through a discussion-style interview between two staff members, a psychiatric trainee and a social therapist, about their experiences of joining, and working in, a therapeutic community (TC). A thematic analysis draws three themes from the interview: ‘finding a way in’, ‘the impact of authentic connection’ and ‘inside and out’. The article argues that these themes all relate to the tension between being real and being therapeutic, and that, although living in this tension can make life difficult for staff members, it is not simply an unpleasant side-effect, but a key element of TC treatment.
Reviews
Sue Parker Hall (2009) Anger, Rage and Relationships. An Empathic Approach to Anger Management. Published by Routledge. Reviewed by Simon McArdle.
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