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Risk and defensive practice in psychiatry

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Risk and defensive practice in psychiatry D B Double David Clark, 1995 Much has happened since 1983. The number of people in mental hospitals over Britain has ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Risk and defensive practice in psychiatry


1
Risk and defensive practice in psychiatry
  • D B Double

2
David Clark, 1995
  • Much has happened since 1983. The number of
    people in mental hospitals over Britain has
    continued to decline. The attitudes of
    denigrating public service, of running down
    public hospitals, building up private enterprise,
    and of mean-minded economising have filtered down
    through the NHS bureaucracy. ... Battered by
    public enquiries and outcries, pressured by
    harassed Ministers, the administrators and
    managers have reverted to the kind of
    administrative behaviour that marked the worst of
    the asylum days - issuing memoranda forbidding
    activities, putting up warning notices, setting
    up disciplinary enquiries and penalising staff
    who take risks or show initiative. Staff have
    learned to be cautious, to get everything in
    writing, to avoid initiative.

3
Origins of community care
  • Numbers of people in psychiatric hospitals
    increased until a peak in the 1950s in the UK and
    USA and later in other countries

4
Origins of community care
  • Numbers of people in psychiatric hospitals
    increased until a peak in the 1950s in the UK and
    USA and later in other countries
  • Motivation was to make the traditional mental
    hospital more therapeutic

5
Origins of community care
  • "Dismay and disgust with the old asylum system"

6
Origins of community care
  • "Dismay and disgust with the old asylum system"
  • David Clarks description of back ward at
    Fulbourn hospital in 1953

7
Origins of community care
  • Opening the doors of the psychiatric hospital

8
Origins of community care
  • Opening the doors of the psychiatric hospital
  • Return to moral treatment

9
Origins of community care
  • Opening the doors of the psychiatric hospital
  • Return to moral treatment
  • Hospital as a therapeutic community

10
Negative process of institutionalisation
  • Institutional neurosis (Russell Barton)

11
Negative process of institutionalisation
  • Institutional neurosis (Russell Barton)
  • Apathy, lack of initiative, loss of interest and
    submissiveness

12
Negative process of institutionalisation
  • Institutional neurosis (Russell Barton)
  • Apathy, lack of initiative, loss of interest and
    submissiveness
  • Total institution (Irving Goffman)

13
Dehospitalisation of mental health services
  • Traditional hospitals went into decline

14
Dehospitalisation of mental health services
  • Traditional hospitals went into decline
  • Alternative services developed (including
    psychiatric units in general hospitals,
    residential homes and day centres).

15
Dehospitalisation of mental health services
  • Many old long-stay patients grew old and died in
    hospital

16
Dehospitalisation of mental health services
  • Many old long-stay patients grew old and died in
    hospital
  • Bed numbers overall have steadily continued to
    decrease

17
Politics of community care
  • Many psychiatrists felt threatened by their
    perceived loss of power due to the rundown of the
    traditional psychiatric hospital

18
Politics of community care
  • Many psychiatrists felt threatened by their
    perceived loss of power due to the rundown of the
    traditional psychiatric hospital
  • Campaigning organisations, such as SANE,
    deliberately exploited public anxieties

19
Politics of community care
  • Initial concern was that homelessness was being
    increased among the mentally ill

20
Politics of community care
  • Initial concern was that homelessness was being
    increased among the mentally ill
  • Tack changed when evidence accumulated against
    this view to concern about public safety due to
    homicides by psychiatric patients.

21
Politics of community care
  • New Labour government decided community care had
    failed

22
Politics of community care
  • New Labour government decided community care had
    failed
  • Debates about community care are no longer as
    polarised as they were in the past

23
Inquiries into mental health services
  • Scandals that uncovered mistreatment of patients
    in hospital

24
Inquiries into mental health services
  • Scandals that uncovered mistreatment of patients
    in hospital
  • eg. Ely Hospital inquiry

25
Inquiries into mental health services
  • Scandals that uncovered mistreatment of patients
    in hospital
  • eg. Ely Hospital inquiry
  • eg. Whittingham Hospital inquiry

26
Inquiries into mental health services
  • Political response
  • (i) setting up of Health Advisory Service (HAS)

27
Inquiries into mental health services
  • Political response
  • (i) setting up of Health Advisory Service (HAS)
  • (ii) renewal of promotion of policy of community
    care

28
Inquiries into mental health services
  • Shift from focusing on abuses and
    over-restrictive practices within institutions to
    anxiety about the lack of control in the
    community

29
Inquiries into mental health services
  • Shift from focusing on abuses and
    over-restrictive practices within institutions to
    anxiety about the lack of control in the
    community
  • Since 1994 health authorities obliged to hold an
    independent inquiry in cases of homicide
    committed by those who have been in contact with
    psychiatric services

30
Inquiries into mental health services
  • Tragic killing of Jonathan Zito by Christopher
    Clunis on London Underground led to the formation
    of the Zito Trust

31
Inquiries into mental health services
  • Tragic killing of Jonathan Zito by Christopher
    Clunis on London Underground led to the formation
    of the Zito Trust
  • Zito Trust closed following implementation of
    Mental Health Act 2007

32
Homicide inquiries
  • Can have devastating consequences for mental
    health services

33
Homicide inquiries
  • Can have devastating consequences for mental
    health services
  • Reinforces stereotype of the dangerous lunatic

34
Homicide inquiries
  • Can have devastating consequences for mental
    health services
  • Reinforces stereotype of the dangerous lunatic
  • Public fears of the mentally ill are fuelled

35
Luke Warm Luke inquiry (Scotland et al, 1998)
  • Two volumes cost 750,000

36
Luke Warm Luke inquiry (Scotland et al, 1998)
  • Two volumes cost 750,000
  • Luke Warm Luke (formerly Michael Folkes) stabbed
    to death Susan Milner in 1994.

37
Luke Warm Luke inquiry (Scotland et al, 1998)
  • Two volumes cost 750,000
  • Luke Warm Luke (formerly Michael Folkes) stabbed
    to death Susan Milner in 1994.
  • Diagnosed as suffering from paranoid
    schizophrenia, in and out of mental health
    facilities since 1983.

38
Luke Warm Luke inquiry (Scotland et al, 1998)
  • Criticised the lack of communication in the
    community care team

39
Luke Warm Luke inquiry (Scotland et al, 1998)
  • Criticised the lack of communication in the
    community care team
  • Also criticised the decision to discontinue depot
    medication.

40
Luke Warm Luke inquiry (Scotland et al, 1998)
  • Criticised the lack of communication in the
    community care team
  • Also criticised the decision to discontinue depot
    medication.
  • Should have been discharged into a staffed hostel

41
Luke Warm Luke inquiry (Scotland et al, 1998)
  • Criticised the lack of communication in the
    community care team
  • Also criticised the decision to discontinue depot
    medication.
  • Should have been discharged into a staffed hostel
  • Attacks could have been prevented if admitted to
    hospital.

42
Luke Warm Luke inquiry (Scotland et al, 1998)
  • Unclear why Luke Warm Luke killed Susan Milner.

43
Luke Warm Luke inquiry (Scotland et al, 1998)
  • Unclear why Luke Warm Luke killed Susan Milner.
  • Simple view that schizophrenia is a biological
    illness that determines how a person behaves,
    especially if they are violent

44
Luke Warm Luke inquiry (Scotland et al, 1998)
  • History of serious violence, which antedated the
    illness, passed over without comment

45
Luke Warm Luke inquiry (Scotland et al, 1998)
  • History of serious violence, which antedated the
    illness, passed over without comment
  • Focus on mental health services tends to exclude
    the role of other actors in the drama.

46
Luke Warm Luke inquiry (Scotland et al, 1998)
  • History of serious violence, which antedated the
    illness, passed over without comment
  • Focus on mental health services tends to exclude
    the role of other actors in the drama.
  • Understanding complex cases requires an approach
    that goes beyond blaming.

47
Richard King Inquiry (Norfolk Waveney Mental
Health, 2005)
  • Convicted of the manslaughter of his
    mother-in-laws partner on 6 August 2004

48
Richard King Inquiry (Norfolk Waveney Mental
Health, 2005)
  • Convicted of the manslaughter of his
    mother-in-laws partner on 6 August 2004
  • Known to mental health services in Norfolk since
    1991
  • .

49
Richard King Inquiry (Norfolk Waveney Mental
Health, 2005)
  • Convicted of the manslaughter of his
    mother-in-laws partner on 6 August 2004
  • Known to mental health services in Norfolk since
    1991
  • Panel concluded the homicide occurred because of
    mental illness and that although it was not
    predictable, it was preventable because he should
    have been detained under the Mental Health Act.

50
Richard King Inquiry (Norfolk Waveney Mental
Health, 2005)
  • Trust panel understood public expectation that
    mental health services should exert some control

51
Richard King Inquiry (Norfolk Waveney Mental
Health, 2005)
  • Trust panel understood public expectation that
    mental health services should exert some control
  • Report was written to maintain this public
    confidence by identifying mistakes and errors of
    judgement.

52
Richard King Inquiry (Norfolk Waveney Mental
Health, 2005)
  • Trust panel understood public expectation that
    mental health services should exert some control
  • Report was written to maintain this public
    confidence by identifying mistakes and errors of
    judgement.
  • Homicide inquiries are being used to achieve
    political aims?

53
Richard King Inquiry (Norfolk Waveney Mental
Health, 2005)
  • The report did not demonstrate that staff acted
    in bad faith, nor without reasonable care.

54
Richard King Inquiry (Norfolk Waveney Mental
Health, 2005)
  • The report did not demonstrate that staff acted
    in bad faith, nor without reasonable care.
  • Written with the benefit of hindsight bias

55
Richard King Inquiry (Norfolk Waveney Mental
Health, 2005)
  • The report did not demonstrate that staff acted
    in bad faith, nor without reasonable care.
  • Written with the benefit of hindsight bias
  • Nor is it as clear that detention under the
    Mental Health Act was indicated.

56
Richard King Inquiry (NHS East of England, 2008)
  • Looking through the reeds - inherent difficulty
    of reconstructing past events

57
Richard King Inquiry (NHS East of England, 2008)
  • Looking through the reeds - inherent difficulty
    of reconstructing past events
  • Professional consequences for Trust staff

58
Richard King Inquiry (NHS East of England, 2008)
  • Looking through the reeds - inherent difficulty
    of reconstructing past events
  • Professional consequences for Trust staff
  • Six points in time which were missed
    opportunities for professionals to take an
    overview of the deterioration in mental state

59
Richard King Inquiry (NHS East of England, 2008)
  • No individual and no single act or omission led
    directly to the killing

60
Richard King Inquiry (NHS East of England, 2008)
  • No individual and no single act or omission led
    directly to the killing
  • On the balance of probabilities better quality
    care and treatment would have substantially
    reduced the increasing risk of a violent act.

61
Richard King Inquiry (NHS East of England, 2008)
  • No individual and no single act or omission led
    directly to the killing
  • On the balance of probabilities better quality
    care and treatment would have substantially
    reduced the increasing risk of a violent act.
  • But the frenzied killing could not have been
    reasonably foreseen.

62
Richard King Inquiry (NHS East of England, 2008)
  • Cannot agree with conclusion, that had Richard
    King been detained under s.3 he would probably
    have spent longer in hospital and would not have
    been given early home leave.The report gives the
    impression that the homicide could have been
    avoided if Richard King had been detained and not
    discharged in July 2004. We take the view that
    the shortcomings so evident in his care and
    treatment were longstanding and deeply rooted.

63
Richard King Inquiry (NHS East of England, 2008)
  • Recommendations may appear to replicate the
    rather imprecise recommendations and exhortations
    of the first inquiry, but they do not. All are
    addressed to the Trust or to specific individuals
    in order to bring about changes in practice.

64
Richard King Inquiry (NHS East of England, 2008)
  • Recommendations may appear to replicate the
    rather imprecise recommendations and exhortations
    of the first inquiry, but they do not. All are
    addressed to the Trust or to specific individuals
    in order to bring about changes in practice.
  • Relationship between the factors described in the
    report and the homicide was cumulative and
    complex no simple direct causative link. No
    single individual can be held responsible.

65
Risk and mental health
  • Homicide inquiries have made modern mental health
    services defensive

66
Risk and mental health
  • Homicide inquiries have made modern mental health
    services defensive
  • Ever more rigid and bureaucratic interpretation
    of Care Programme Approach and risk assessment

67
Risk and blame
  • Someone has to be blamed for misfortune

68
Risk and blame
  • Someone has to be blamed for misfortune
  • Increasingly technological society switches blame
    onto services

69
Risk and blame
  • Always a political question about what is
    acceptable risk

70
Risk and blame
  • Always a political question about what is
    acceptable risk
  • Taking risks may be an opportunity for growth not
    just something to be avoided

71
Complexity of healthcare
  • Uncertainty in clinical practice

72
Complexity of healthcare
  • Uncertainty in clinical practice
  • Guidelines and procedures cannot eliminate
    clinical judgement

73
Complexity of healthcare
  • Greater consistency and invariance cannot cope
    with the unexpected

74
Complexity of healthcare
  • Greater consistency and invariance cannot cope
    with the unexpected
  • Illusion created that can be effective in
    preventing individual tragic outcomes

75
Defensive practice
  • Fear that things may go wrong distracts from the
    task of how to make things better

76
Defensive practice
  • Fear that things may go wrong distracts from the
    task of how to make things better
  • Follow procedures more for the purpose of
    protecting staff than helping patients

77
Examples of defensive practice
  • Admitting patients overcautiously

78
Examples of defensive practice
  • Admitting patients overcautiously
  • Placing patients on higher levels of observation
    than necessary

79
Sensible accountability
  • Accountability needs to be applied sensibly

80
Sensible accountability
  • Accountability needs to be applied sensibly
  • Improvement needs to be authentic and not façade
    for placating societys fear

81
Sensible accountability
  • Fear of being criticised and unfairly judged does
    not lead to creativity

82
Sensible accountability
  • Fear of being criticised and unfairly judged does
    not lead to creativity
  • Excellent leadership provides ethos where staff
    are valued and supported

83
Conclusion
  • Possibility of rational risk governance in fact
    an elaborate technocratic fantasy and a
    bureaucratic defence against anxiety of disorder

84
Conclusion
  • Possibility of rational risk governance in fact
    an elaborate technocratic fantasy and a
    bureaucratic defence against anxiety of disorder
  • Psychiatry should know because of its history in
    the asylum
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