Wednesday 14 December 2022

Hopes for launching the 'Relational Practice Movement'

Some of us have always seen the progression of TC principles as an 'obviously good thing', but for many it seems to sound a bit out-of-date, fringe, or even anarchic. David Kennard wrote of the 'TC impulse' which -to my mind- was just a matter of getting on with what you need to, not worrying too much about the formalities, and being all involved in it together - at a human level. And no amount of bureaucracy, regulation or legalistic nonsense could extinguish it - it will always find a way to find its way out. I think he also introduced the phrase 'shirt-sleeves informality' which says so much about the way we need to be with each other.

The modern 21st century version is all about thing like 'co-production', empowerment and agency, service user involvement, 'modified TCs', 'adapted TCs', 'Enabling Environments' - and I want to propose that the golden thread linking them all together is 'Relational Practice'. This lineage is all about carrying the TC 'heart and flame' into a modern context where the ideas are still recognisably progressive, radical and subversive. However, I feel many of our colleagues in the work are tired, and almost burnt-out, with a sense of learned helplessness - that we are up against something so powerful and all-embracing, that all we can do is hunker down and keep trying to do what we know best how to do.

But maybe it is the freedom of retirement that allows me to think that - actually - this is so fundamentally important for 'the way we are with each other' that some of us need to make a fuss. The industrialisation, corporatisation and manualisation of professional life has restricted our working relationships to an arid, barren and empty simulacrum of real and creative interpersonal endeavour. The way out of this is to make a fuss that something is wrong - and to do so without whingeing, ranting too much, being pompous, or prophesising doom (however much we feel it).

The 'Relational Practice Movement' is our vehicle for this at the moment. By 'our' I think I mean like-minded people that some of us have met in the last few years - public sector rebels, NHS visionaries, prison service progressives, numerous passionate third sector organisations - and many more. We are going to gather them all together for an event coordinated by the Royal College of Psychiatrists Centre for Quality Improvement's 'Enabling Environments' project early in 2023. We hope for it to be the launch of what we are calling the 'Relational Practice movement'.

Here is the outline plan of what we are intending to do - please be aware that this is only a draft, so please check the RCPsych website for up-to-date details if you want to be involved. And do get in touch if you want to stand up at the front and say something that will help the effort!

Relational practice is a way of working that recognises the primary importance of the quality of relationships. It is the foundation upon which effective interventions are made, and it forms the conditions for a healthy relational environment. It is relevant across all sectors, fields and specialties; formal research is now being undertaken and published to show evidence of its importance, and relevant training programmes have been commissioned by NHS England.

This one-day conference will bring together those who are familiar with working in this way with others who are interested, to launch a movement which will raise awareness of its relevance in provision of a wide range of services. As well as members of the college and other clinicians, we are inviting key individuals from social care, criminal justice, education and other settings – including those involved with policy, commissioning and management of relevant organisations.

The conference is being hosted by the College Centre for Quality Improvement’s Enabling Environments project.

Date:               Tuesday 30 May 2023 

Venue:              RCPsych, Prescot Street, London  E1 8BB

Convenors:          Rex Haigh, Nick Benefield, Mike Burns

Speakers:           TBC





Saturday 3 December 2022

TC principles for Covid recovery

Simone, Amelia and Francesca - the Annual Forum organisers

This is a talk given to the Sixth Annual Forum of the Visiting Programme for Democratic Peer Accreditation for Democratic Therapeutic Communities in Rome on 3 December 2022. 

It is held each year in conjunction with Lega Coop (the Italian League of Cooperatives, one of three such 'unions of coops') and holds promise for the wider understanding of the need for Enabling Environments, and indeed Democratic Therapeutic Communities. See https://www.ilmargine.it/progetto-visiting-dtc/    

It was a celebratory return after covid, but also had a darker side in reflecting about the trauma which we had all been through. Steve Pearce's death in March was also marked - and it was remembered how he was with us all at the previous Annual Forum, on the day Brexit finally happened and a few months before the pandemic started.

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The therapeutic value of Democratic TCs group processes to deal with massive trauma

Il valore terapeutico dei processi di gruppo nelle Comunità Terapeutiche Democratiche per affrontare anche i traumi massivi

Rex Haigh

Medical Psychotherapist, Group Analyst, Founder and Senior Advisor to the ‘Community of Communities’ and ‘Enabling Environments’, Royal College of Psychiatrists Centre for Quality Improvement, London.

Thank you so much for inviting me back to Italy. I love coming here, and this is the first time I've been back to your Annual Forum since Covid - and thankfully we are all now in a different world where most of those problems – that have so seriously stopped real contact and communication between us – are behind us. Although there are – of course – many other very significant problems in the word we are now in.

But that is all too much to think about right now, and I want to talk about how the principles of therapeutic communities, which I think are valid for all aspects of human relationships and rights, including social justice, as well as the emotional development of all as us as individuals, families, groups and individuals. I particularly want to make theoretical links to group analytic theory, with references to same academic papers, and the book which I wrote with Steve Pearce a few years ago1. Very sadly, Steve died in March of a very nasty cancer, or I am sure he would have been very keen to be here too.

In the last two years, of course, everything has been disturbed by Covid. But one of the things I believe is that the principles of therapeutic communities can help us all recover from the trauma and damage that the pandemic has caused. So, in this talk I will use the ‘quintessence’ framework2  to look at some of the values and experiences and methods we use in therapeutic communities – and think about how  they relate to the group analytic and TC theory3, as well as to the disruption we have all experienced with covid. This is all based on our need for human relationships with each other, and to rebuild those relationships that have been disrupted by the pandemic – and we need to build them back stronger than before, to make up for the damage that has been done in the last three years.

 I’m sure I have been here in the past and spoken about the ‘quintessence’ model of therapeutic communities, which is a developmental oneThis has been written up as ‘The Quintessence of a Therapeutic Environment’ in the TC Journal, and it describes emotional experiences that everybody, all of us, need to have a healthy emotional development and what can go wrong with it when we experience adverse childhood experiences. If it goes well for us – or at least ‘good enough’ – we emerge as adults, who have a solid sense of self and understanding of our place in the world, particularly in relation to others. If it does not go well, the foundations of our personality development are a bit incomplete or shaky – and we end up with those unmet emotional needs causing trouble for us throughout our lives.

In this model there are five overlapping experiences which are necessary for development: Attachment, Containment, Communication, Inclusion and Agency. They are roughly developmental – ‘attachment’ is the earliest, as a very young baby, and ‘containment’ is what needs to happen in the first one or two years of life. The whole world of ‘communication’ with other humans follows, through childhood into adolescence. Then we need to negotiate the more subtle matter of how we become involved or included - and find our place amongst other – which is a struggle we all go through in adolescence. Finally, there is the adult position of achieving personal agency – and it is impossible to say what age that is at, or even whether most people ever get to it.

Attachment is about replacing the placental and physiological bond of gestation with the emotional and nurturant bond of motherhood, or perhaps parenthood. It is well described by Bowlby as the ‘Secure Base’ and many people who have succeeded him and operationalised the concept and done a great deal of research about it. It is about the fundamental necessity of the intimate bond from the origin of life that all humans need. In therapeutic communities, we rarely have people with secure attachment – most of our members are anxious, avoidant or chaotic. 

But it soon develops and requires the negotiation of many more emotions, and survival of them. This is what I think of as ‘containment’. This is best written about by Winnicott (the transitional space and the capacity to be alone4) and Bion (intolerable emotions, and the surviving of them5 - that the mother (or primary caregiver) has to give. In group analytic terms, the group matrix includes unconscious aspects of both attachment and containment.  It is the group matrix within which the members feel a strong sense of belonging, and feel safe: as

'... the hypothetical web of communication and relationship in a given group.  It is the common ground which ultimately determines the meaning and significance of all events and upon which all communications, verbal and non-verbal, rest', and stated it is ‘...not merely interpersonal but could rightly be described as transpersonal and suprapersonal.’6

A little later in development, the developing human needs exchange of information, and the behaviour, thoughts, and feelings that go with it. This is the process of communication. And at first, it is nonverbal – which remains very important throughout all our lives - and it gradually develops into the whole of language and the many ways in which emotions are conveyed – as well as the facts and practical details of how to live in the world. If we limit our thinking to the facts, behaviour and thoughts of development, we are in the terrain of most psychotherapists who do not address the unconscious and preverbal aspects of experience – such as CBT-based therapies and psychoeducation.

 In group analysis, some of the key concepts relevant here are ‘The Basic Law of Group Analysis’, ‘location of disturbance’, mirroring, resonance, amplification, and condenser phenomenon. These are described in more detail later in the 2017 paper by Jan Lees, Sarah Tucker and myself.

 The Basic Law of Group Analysis is that ‘Collectively the members constitute the very norm, from which, individually, they deviate’, and that group members will work to weaken and remove support from each other’s ‘neurotic’ or abnormal modes of exchange, and will work to strengthen and support modes of exchange which are ‘normal’. This is so because group members together share group norms, which are ‘collective’ and ‘permeate’ an individual member ‘all through…to his core’. These group norms are shared at a deep level, and are often of the collective unconscious.

 Location of disturbance: Foulkes argued that ‘...the most important source of the disturbance is not in the patient at all but is rather between the figures of his past and present networks.’  Group members’ problems/symptoms/disturbances are not localized in the individual in isolation but located in a social network.  In order to change, group members need to understand that their disturbance exists between them and other people, not simply within them. 

 Mirroring is one of the primary functions of a group - to mirror the self.   ‘The group situation has been likened to a ‘hall of mirrors’ where an individual is confronted with various aspects of his social, psychological, or body image. Resonance means a sound which creates another sound.  In a group, each individual reacts in their own way to issues that arise, enriching and deepening the emotional experience.  Resonance refers to one’s own unique response to the feelings of another group member or group issue. Amplification describes the exaggeration of a set of responses within another group member and the group as a whole, and happens when emotions are often unexpectedly felt more strongly when in a group setting.  For those who find it hard to access emotions, amplification can be liberating, but it also needs to be managed actively, especially in a new group. 

Condenser phenomenon is more complex. It describes the sudden discharge of deep and primitive material following the pooling of associated ideas in the group.  The interaction of members loosens up group resistances, and there is a growning activation at the deepest levels.  It is as if the ‘collective unconscious’ acted as an electical condenser quietly storing up emotional charges generated by the group, and discharging them with the trigger of some shared group event. It is often in connection with dreams and symbolism, which are productions of a collective unconscious. These symbols act as condensers and appear as symptoms or dreams, or something the group holds in common – can be seen as completing the circuit which discharges the condenser.

Anti-group 
So far, t
his is all in the service of positive group dynamics, but we must not forget that there is a darker side, what Jungians would see as the shadow. Using Kleinian psychoanalytic concepts, this is about the powerful and destructive primitive defences, such as splitting and projective identification - as well as less complex ones such as denial, intellectualisation and acting out. Although I don’t have the time to describe those now, Nitsun described them in group analytic terms as the ‘Anti-Group’7. He went on to argue that processes and norms in a group are a miniature version of those in society, so just as there is war, conflict, corruption and violence in society, the same underlying forces and dynamics are present in groups. He also pointed out that unconscious processes occur in all types of groups, whether or not the group aims to explore and work with them.  But if these are not recognised and worked with, the group can potentially be anti-therapeutic and even damaging. This is what he calls the ‘anti-group’, and it is a potential presence in any group, and a threat to its effective working.

Destructive processes in groups can include, for example, drop-outs, lateness and absence, monopolizing, secrets, meetings outside the group, sub-groups, splitting, conductor’s isolation and paralysis, irresolvable conflict, enactment of aggression, bullying, scapegoating, enactment of erotic feelings, stuckness, and malignant mirroring of disliked and hated attributes. They are things we are familiar with in therapeutic communities.

Beyond the need for communication, there is a domain of inclusion or involvement at a wider social level in which the emerging adolescent discovers their place amongst others. This is about how we can relate to others - and how others relate to us; about understanding our own place in the social universe. Back in 1947 Lacan wrote of group functioning in terms that remind us of the Basic Law of Group Analysis some years before Foulkes wrote it:

‘Bion’s task is to organise the situation so as to force the group to become aware of the difficulties of its existence as a group, and then to render it more and more transparent to itself, to the point where each of its members may be able to judge adequately the progress of the whole.’8

In 1983, De Mare says of Foulkes’ group analytic principles:

‘it was this dialectic duality between relationship and context that constituted the basis for his success.9

Harrison has more recently noted that the Maxwell Jones approach soon overshadowed the

‘earlier and more complex model’10,

and as Bob Hinsehlwood said in 1999, almost regretfully:

‘it seems that the group activity has to be of a learning kind’11.

 

Very much more recently, Steve Pearce wrote a chapter on ‘belongingness’ in our book (chapter 4) which brings together many of the more social and conscious aspects of this, than the unconscious and primitive ones of the analysts who were there at the beginning. He incorporates theory from Maslow’s hierarchy in 194312 to Baumeister and Leary’s extensive research into ‘the need to belong’, published in 199513. He also gives some detail about the implications for practice in TCs, some of which I will mention later.  

In this developmental model, the final stage we see as the psychological work of a TC is for members to feel empowered – and able to experience a sense of personal agency. This means that we are able to act effectively - from a core sense of who we are (identity), and what we want to do with our lives (purpose).  In this way, we find a place in the world - so we can be effective and autonomous people, responsible for ourselves, but within networks of interdependence with other. That is in families, communities, organisations and wider systems. 

Again, Steve Pearce wrote a special chapter on this in the book, chapter 5, called ‘Responsible Agency’, about some theoretical research he did with a senior Oxford philosopher, Hanna Pickard14–17. In the chapter, he brings in various strands of argument, including choice, motivation and exercise of the will; adoption of the sick role; self-efficacy and self-esteem; empowerment and co-production in recovery, shame – and the key concept for TCs of ‘responsibility without blame’. In a way, this is putting a substantial amount of theory behind Rapoport’s original ‘permissiveness’ and ‘reality confrontation’ principles18, which could otherwise be seen as just descriptive and behavioural. Here is a quote from the chapter, which conveys some of the subtlety of this:

In DTC unhelpful and unpleasant behaviour is tolerated as long as it does not harm others (permissiveness), but it is also robustly and regularly challenged (reality confrontation). Members are asked to reflect on their choices, to think about the reasons for them, and to make efforts to change their behaviour with the support of the other members and staff. The emphasis is on developing the capacity to consider the impact of their behaviour on those around them, initially the other TC members, but expanding to those in their life outside the community; and to look forward to how they might behave differently in future, rather than looking back at past mistakes. This forward-looking approach has the tendency to shift the emphasis of the conversation away from blame (the emotional reaction to past behaviour and its consequences), towards responsibility (how will I act in future?). Staff ensure that the tenor of the challenge is compassionate and forward looking, rather than blaming or retribution focussed.

What has happened in covid is that all the social aspects of how we meet these basic emotional needs have been disrupted – to start an individual or group attachment, and to feel 01belongingness, has hardly been possible. Many people have felt unsafe or uncontained – especially with the triple threats of a deadly virus, a planet that is warming up too much, and a war in Europe. Communication in a direct face-to-face way has not been possible, although zoom has been a fantastic technological help. Being included and involved with others has been much more difficult, and many people have been left feeling disempowered with a profound lack of personal agency.

These are essential human emotional needs that we all have: human rights, I would say. In therapeutic communities we try to recreate them for people who have had them disrupted in their own individual developments, but now we have all had them disrupted, in our adulthood, in the last three years. Children may have been affected even more. In TCs we work to help people who have been very troubled in their early life. We hope to make it possible for people to feel a strong sense of belonging, to feel power within themselves, are able to trust others, and have a secure sense of their own identity. It is often very hard work in TCs. Rebuilding it for everybody who has been traumatised by covid is perhaps not as intense, but the principles are the same.

We recreate attachment by being careful and sensitive about how people join our communities. So that they feel welcome and so that they can immediately understand that the relationships around them are positive, supportive and compassionate. The foundations of trust.

The next is containment. In the infant it is about the way a baby will be in utter and boundless distress - but soon can be relieved by good breast that Melanie Klein describes. Later in life, it implies that the emotional turbulence of conflict, disagreement, and the rough and tumble of everyday life can be negotiated, and ‘held’, in a way that people can emerge from the distress as stronger after managing and coping with it. The most important tool for it in TCs is the shared understanding of boundaries. One of those is at the end of members’ time in a TC. It is very  important how people leave – and how we have to mark and recognise how important that leaving is – how leavers will miss the community and the people in it, and how all the people in the community are losing somebody who has been part of it. It is often done with various rituals including exchange of gifts, celebration meals and other activities.

For those of us working in therapeutic communities, this is day-to-day business. There are often disagreements, difficulties and conflicts that need to be navigated. The structures in place – particularly the structures and groups for how and when conflicts are discussed – establish a therapeutic space in which disagreements can be safely negotiated. The practical details are often arranged through things like community meeting agendas, or extra events like ‘crisis meetings’ or ‘learning spaces’. The culture that emerges from this is one of safety: ‘however difficult things get, and however hard it gets, we can get over it and be OK in the end’. Now covid has damaged so much of the matrix which holds us in our relationships, it is hard to see how we can establish analogous structures to meet the public needs of everybody who has been affected – but I think there are many public and charitable activities going on that try to do this.

Communication in a therapeutic community is facilitated through the established structures. It is impossible to NOT communicate issues of importance. ‘There is no place to hide’ as community members often say – and when this is implemented successfully, the experience is of openness (which also needs the principle of safe emotional containment to be possible). There is opportunity and expectation in all the different therapeutic spaces of honest and frank interchange between people. There is an implicit and shared understanding, ‘we are all here to help each other and we need to be honest and open’.

In TCs, involvement and participation and inclusion are deliberately encouraged by doing things (apart from therapy) together – preparing meals, gardening, playing games, waling in the countryside, looking after animals and many other things. With covid of course we have not been able to do these things together – either in TCs or in normal life. But again, I think there are many efforts going on to build social cohesion, and although this may always be the case, perhaps the seriousness of the situation – including ecological and economic – will force some real change.

Everyone has had to remain isolated in their own world and house. Their whole way of being has restricted the possibilities of people feeling empowered or people feeling that they are agents of their own destiny - because this powerful force of covid, and the necessary government restrictions that have gone with it. In some ways, everybody has been unable to act in the way they need to. Perhaps more in TCs than in normal life – for a small number of people with big problems - but nobody has escaped the disruption, and we have a very large number of people with quite big problems as well.

In the circumstances, we all need to have these emotional needs met, and we must work out together the best ways to do it. This is for the members and residents of our therapeutic communities, but it is for all of us as families and staff, and that very large number of people in the normal world as well. We need to feel that we belong, that we are safe together, that we can be open about what we need to be open about, to be involved with others, and to feel empowered to do things together.

That is a lot to ask in the world today, but I do believe we can make a difference if we can establish it in small settings around us – like through this meeting, and through many other meetings of like-minded people and organisations, who all want something to change.

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The large group - sharing their experience of covid times


From the following discussions at the Forum, there are three headlines that I take away:
  • The Italian public and third sector services, particularly health, have had many staff leave, 'the Great Escape'.  Educatori in TCs are paid about 1200 Euro per month.

  • In the covid lockdowns, the staff in TCs were often more disturbed by it than the residents. The residents often supported the staff, reversing the 'traditional' roles.

  • The whole methodology and procedure of the Visiting Project (now in its tenth year) is experienced as complicated, comples and often incomprehensible to newcomers. But many benefits, some of them quite unexpected, can follow.
As well as thanking the organisation for inviting me, and all the friends and colleagues there for their warm hospitality, I must give a special mention to my translator, Eduardo Mancuso. He translated the talk into concise Italian (which even I could almost understand) and we read it out alternately, one paragraph at a time. Never at an Italian conference before have I finished a talk exactly on time!

I will post a separate blog, after this one, with his translation.

Sunday 20 November 2022

The Golden Thread

Having gone to many places, before covid, to talk about 'The Golden Thread', but never writing it down or publishing it anywhere, I thought that it should at least go in this blog. 

I'm well aware that many hard-nosed scientific colleagues and even friends think it is rather fluffy, soft, and perhaps woo-woo - but I stand by it (relational practice) as an idea whose time has come - or is just round the corner.

This is an edited version of a fairly concise version that Nick Benefield and I included in a chapter of a book due to come out in 2023. It is the section called 'Contextual history: The English National Personality Disorder Development Programme 2002-2011'  (though I rather prefer 'The Golden Thread'.

 The phenomenon of ‘personality disorder’ first caught public and government attention following the 1996 murders of Lin and Megan Russell, and the attempted murder of Josie Russell, by Michael Stone in Kent. This caused a public disagreement between Jack Straw, the then home secretary, and Robert Kendall, the then President of the Royal College of Psychiatrists.

Robert Kendall said Stone “was suffering not from mental illness, but from a psychopathic personality disorder”. And under the law such people could only be admitted to hospital for treatment against their wishes "if treatment is likely to allievate or prevent a deterioration in their condition". He went on: "We are not very pleased with him (Jack Straw), but even more important we are appalled by his ignorance. There may well be a place for some form of preventative detention for men like this, but that is an issue for parliament. The Home Secretary cannot expect psychiatrists to do his dirty work for him when it is at present excluded by the law". Straw responded: "Quite extraordinarily for a medical profession, they've said they will only take on those patients they regard as treatable. If that philosophy applied anywhere else in medicine there would be no progress whatsoever." Conor Duggan, a senior forensic psychiatrist, later reflected: “The government provided specialised units with generous (some might say overgenerous) funding."

This is what became known as the DSPD (Dangerous People with Severe Personality Disorder) programme. It is the crumbs from the table of this program that funded ‘community personality disorder programme’.

At about the same time a self-help organisation called Borderline UK was set up with a Millennium lottery grant; it was headed and run by people with lived experience of personality disorder, with some support from sympathetic professionals. There were many anguished quotes gathered by its members and organisers, for example:

·         How can the experts really treat it seriously and with any degree of compassion, when they define it as attention, seeking or manipulative?

·         Had I been helped when I was younger, I would not have got this bad

·         We cannot call ourselves a civilized society when so many people are outcasts and are simply not understood?

·         Specific services for this are helpful – but general mental health services are not helpful and can be abusive.

Having some recognition of unmet needs, the Department of Health set up two working groups to prepare ‘policy implementation documents’ on strategic changes that might help. In 2003 Personality Disorder, No Longer a Diagnosis of Exclusion, with clear evidence on what service users were asking for, was published alongside the Breaking the Cycle of Rejection: Personality Disorder Capabilities Framework, which was a guide on workforce development and establishing a training escalator relevant to all disciplines and levels of seniority. The three stated aims of the national programme were to produce innovative service developments, to have a national evaluation of the new services, and to implement national regional training developments.

The new services were established in 2004. There were five medium secure services and 11 community (non-residential) ones; the programme was also allied to 12 multi-systemic therapy projects for children and the four existing DSPD units mentioned above (which received the lion’s share of the funding, but were only set up for 300 patients).

 A deliberate feature of the 11 commissioned community programmes is that they were all different. Bids were invited, emphasising the value of novel thinking and bringing together different elements, services and sectors - to bring fresh thinking to a largely unsolved problem. The four largest projects were Thames Valley, Leeds, Nottinghamshire, and Coventry. The Thames Valley Initiative, brought together democratic therapeutic community programs that were adapted into coherent region-wide care pathways. In Leeds, a major focus was to coordinate a range of services between health and other sectors, with particularly strong cross-agency working. Nottinghamshire provided three coordinated services for levels of severity, with a drop-in advice centre, a ‘stop and think’ psychoeducation programme, and a non-residential democratic therapeutic community.

Coventry’s project was tightly coordinated with local mental health services, through a community mental health type arrangement. The small ones included a preventative one seeing adolescents working from a shopfront in Plymouth, and an ‘itinerant therapeutic community’ which, for example, met in a rugby club in near Carlisle, using set-top box technology (cutting edge at the time) to provide 24/7 continuity by using the internet. In Cambridge and Peterborough, the pilot project was integrated with inpatient psychiatric services. There were three projects in different areas of London: one in the Camden and Islington project, with a focus on employment and primary care consultation; in North East London the service specialised in dual diagnosis using a dialectical behaviour therapy model; the one in southwest London was a particular way of managing risk using therapeutic community principles, ‘the service user network’. One, in Essex, was not directly connected to the NHS and was set up as a social enterprise (a Community Interest Company, or CIC) with strong service user co-production and provision of a community ‘Haven’ with a therapeutic environment.

In 2006, the national learning network was established as a forum at which all 11 community pilot projects, met in different venues (at each of their locations) and attended by service users, staff and managers from the other projects. The discussions were very fertile ground for sharing best practice, and new knowledge as well as the inevitable obstructions and difficulties.

The formal research project with the national program was called ‘Learning the Lessons’ which was conducted by Michael Crawford at Imperial College in London. It included (1) an organisational evaluation; (2) a user-led qualitative evaluation; (3) a cohort study; and (4) a Delphi study of the views of academics, service users and providers – about the integrity of the diagnosis. All the results are available online.

An extremely important part of the program was the extensive involvement and partnership with service users. This was initially through the Borderline UK organisation, which later merged with an arts organisation called Personality Plus to become Emergence. As part of the merger, Emergence and Personality Plus held a major arts inclusion event at Tate Modern, sponsored by the Tate and the National Programme, on 29 October 2007. Emergence became a community interest company run by those with lived experience of ‘personality disorder’, with some board-level support from established professionals. It ran various consultation, training and research projects, the largest of which was the National Personality Disorder Program.

The most influential product of the partnership was the ‘KUF’ training in 2008 (Knowledge and Understanding Framework) with Emergence plus three partners: the Open University, Tavistock and Portman NHS Trust and Nottingham’s Mental Health Institute. There were three levels of training on the ‘career escalator’: the awareness level training - which had been delivered to nearly 200,000 people by the end of the mid 2010s; a stand-alone BSc course which later became CPD modules; and an MSc with four centres delivering.

The principle of the KUF training is that it is co-produced at all levels - from the writing the material, to the recording and videos, the online content, to the delivery of it. For example, the three face-to-face days on the awareness training are always be delivered by a lived experience practitioner partnered with a sympathetic clinician, who had been through a train-the-trainers programme together.

2009 saw the publication of two important government publications: The ‘Recognising Complexity’ commissioning guidance for personality disorder services, and the NICE guidelines on Borderline Personality Disorder (CG78) and Antisocial Personality Disorder (CG77).

At its peak, the new community PD services were only covering 12% of the English population: questions were being asked about what exists for the other 88%. Even within the 12%, the work undertaken was done in very different ways, by services that were had different outcome targets, had different populations, and very different methods. Despite the clear need for expansion, the anticipated growth of the programme - to implement the government policy guides - never came to fruition. This is probably because the complexity of training needs and wide-open scope of the programme unearthed large areas of unmet need, and many more problems, than it was feasible to address at that time. Interestingly, the ‘Improving Access to Psychological Therapies’ programme, which could reassure ministers that relatively simple solutions to common mental health problems were possible, and measurable – in terms of ‘return to work’ and other politically attractive outcomes. The lion's share of any new government funding available for national programmes was therefore allocated to Talking Therapies (IAPT), and by 2011 the effects of the economic crisis led to the community programme being closed.

However, following the recommendations of the 2009 Bradley Report, much of the learning from the community programme was incorporated into the joint MoJ/NHS ‘Offender Personality Disorder Programme’.

The programme itself finished with two publications, and a number of other indirect developments. The first is a qualitative evaluation of all eleven community pilot projects, ‘Innovation in Action’ which recognised the importance of the quality of relationships, and described many common factors and whole-system features (‘general therapeutic factors’) of what was to become ‘relational practice’.

The second publication was ‘Meeting the Challenge, Making a Difference’, which is a handbook for be working in various settings where mental health is a factor (from homelessness hostels and social care settings to psychiatric hospitals, for example). It is a user-friendly, accessible and practical guide, based on all that had been learnt from the pilot projects.

Linked work at the Royal College of Psychiatrists Centre for Quality Improvement, from 2007 onwards, led to an accreditation process for ‘Enabling Environments’, which was based on ten relationship-based values. 

These were all amongst the processes that started to more rigorously define 'relational practice'.

 

Wednesday 16 November 2022

Extreme Greencare: it blew my mind, twice a day


 This was the return of the Compassionate Mental Health ‘gatherings’. I think this was the tenth one ever held, as they started in the twenty-teens - but it was certainly the first since Covid https://tinyurl.com/CMHatCoed. I first heard of them a couple of years ago, when some of us were putting feelers out in our networks for things that appeared to be based on ‘relational practice’. At that time, I got the impression they were a cross between arts-based festivals and professional conferences.

Well, now I have been to one – as a guest presenter – I can say that has some truth to it, but misses something out that is much more engaging, experiential and (for me) existentially challenging. Relational, they certainly are - with the dial set to at least eleven – for intensity, intimacy, challenge, and sheer counter-cultural alternative-ism! The closest thing I can compare it to is when I went to a week in Italy, in July 2014, to see how Disagio Diffuso is treated by the method (see previous blog https://greenshrink.blogspot.com/2014/07/a-strange-holiday.html and following entries).

But instead of Italian style (with Italian food in a nice hotel and quite a bit of chaos) this was quintessentially Welsh (set in a commune in a forest with yurts and a stone circle, and vegan food). However, because of the deeply personal and confidential nature of so much that was shared I am not going to describe what went on in our various groups in any more detail here. Suffice to say that although I was expecting something a little like our LLE weekends, this had boundaries (that were well held by the staff and structure) that are so much more complex than ours, that I don’t trust myself to try writing any details in this blog. Here’s one comment I heard over lunch on the last day ‘In that last session it was like we went as far in a couple of hours as usually takes years in therapy’. I have heard similar things said about psychedelics, Ketamine and MDMA – but I can assure you that none of that was going on here!

At a tangent – but less of one than most people think about for a conference-type event – was our set and setting. The set was that I think over half the people there had been to CMH gatherings before, and all the others (like Neil and myself) were at least trying to be as open as possible to whatever was happening. The two of us had our own anxieties, as we were presenting stories about our last 25 years’ training work and running ‘mini-versions’ of it as workshops, to an unknown audience - that was completely different from the mix of people that come to sort of conferences we usually go to. But more than that, there was an intangible quality in the air that I have no words for – it is something about numinosity, spirituality, transcendence and - dare I say it – cosmic consciousness. (Again, no psychedelics, I promise). There was a team of about ten running it, which included supporters for those in need, explainers, chairs of sessions, MCs and practical helpers. Those, plus the people who had been before were well ‘set’ to experience it again, and knew what to expect.

The link with the setting was powerful and extraordinary – and I think I can allow myself to be more descriptive here, as Coed Hills (the venue) is an entity with a set of values and activities which were explained eloquently to us, as one of the optional activities on the last day.


The setting, Coed Hills, and its people, do not seek to be hidden or confidential about its meaning and purpose. The way I explain it to people back home who are unlikely to be sympathetic is to say ‘it is a Welsh commune run by people who look like old hippies, but who have been doing it for many years and have become experts in many of the local-based things that are clearly needed for long-term sustainability’. Such as production of energy, food and craft products all done in-house, with as low a carbon footprint or ecological impact as possible, and by running a conference / wedding venue to raise funds with utterly unique and mostly beautiful architecture and design. If people I’m describing it to are likely to be at least a little sympathetic, I go further – which I will do here.

The afternoon session on the last day was called ‘Introducing the Bottega Project’ with John Whitehead and Rawley Clay. John is the resident ideas guru with outward-focussed intentions to expand the principles of sustainable living on a city scale – specifically Cardiff, where he describes collaboration with the architecture department at the university, for example, as well as many other networks of influence. Rawley, primarily an artist I think, is the main person looking inward to sustaining and developing the community at Coed – with many aspects familiar to us in the TC world, such as weekly community meetings, sharing of resources / emotions / food / life in general, and of course democratic operating - and a flat hierarchy.

We met outside the circular barn (in which most of the CMH gathering events took place) for a brief introduction. Rawley started by triggering my circular and Jungian resonances, all about the space with no corners, and their use of yurts and curves rather than rectilinear design with hard edges and all that goes with them. Coed Hills is blessed with a beautiful piece of land in a beautiful place. Here is a quote from the website:

Coed Hills (pronounced Coyd) is a unique, off grid sustainable community just outside Cardiff in South Wales.  The on-site residents still work the land using ancestral methods and manage the 180 acres of unspoilt ancient Woodland, man-made lakes and beautiful summer meadows. With elevated views reaching as far as the Jurassic coastline of Wales, yet just a stones throw from the Welsh Capital, Cardiff, Coed is a hidden Utopia from modern life.

Coed has been the leading centre for low impact living in Wales since it was established in 1997. It has hosted many international events including the UK Permaculture Convergence, and has been internationally identified as a place for those who want to embrace an off grid way of living in harmony with nature or to explore and evolve their connection with themselves in tranquil and peaceful surroundings.

John then gave a few minutes of spirited and often non-verbal communication of how Coed and its principles look well beyond the mundane necessities that most of us are immersed in. A sense, perhaps, that even though the world is in a complete and utter pit of despair at the moment, there can be different ways of looking at it. Then he introduced us to some simple exercises. The first was interpersonal, and after agreeing on pairs (six, as we were altogether a dozen) we would each spend three minutes communicating to the other, without any words, how we were feeling about being in nature and all the elements of it all around us (and it was a very rich natural environment, which included the built environment and numerous artistic pieces). We could use any physical means, such as posture, movement, facial expressions, breathing, vocalisations without words and anything else we wanted. At first, I think most of us felt– to say the least – like complete chumps. But once we got started, and could feel that we were in a trusted space, it was extraordinary how much we could communicate and mutually understand; it was in a very fluid and boundless way that is never usually possible in conversations with strangers who you only met ten minutes ago.

John then led us out of the immediate environs of the centre, up a slight grass-covered hill, to a circle of 28 standing stones. Again, he persuaded normally decent and rational people to do something they had never done before – to go up to one of the stones and commune with it for a few minutes (those weren’t his exact words, but it is the gist of it). As I write this, it sounds silly and woo-woo – but as we were there, experiencing it together, I think we all got something peaceful – and perhaps personally meaningful – out of it. There was no need to explain, or defend, or judge; we were simply doing what felt OK at the time. A few jokes and bits of warm playfulness mixed well with the sombre and serious tone of the moment.

Next we went deep into the woods – to hear from one of Coed’s oldest members, who had a fire burning strongly under an open shelter. This was a true woodsman, as in the novels of Thomas Hardy, but he also showed us some survival skills and tricks – with bangs and flashes – that I remember from school chemistry lessons.

The last port of call on our introduction to the Bottega Project was to an extraordinary structure which I thought should be the biggest yurt in the world (I asked, and apparently, it is not).


Not the biggest yurt in the world - but must be close!

There we had a rich discussion about how much, of deep psychological meaning, we have lost in modern social living, and how aspects of it could be restored – at least on a city scale. I stayed so long talking to John about it, that I was the last one there – and ended up lost in the woods as dusk was falling, and the Welsh rain was starting. But, needless to say, I soon found one of the locals who pointed me in the right direction – back to something a bit more like normal life, with tea and cakes, at the CMH gathering.

In the final session, we had a go-round to check out with our reflections about the whole experience. Mine, amongst much more emotional ones, was that I had found or come across something that I wasn’t expecting but know that I might need – and that it had blown my mind, at least twice every day.

I think that’s a good result…

 

Wednesday 12 October 2022

World Mental Health Day: INDTC moves from Italy to Portugal

Firenze Duomo at sunset
Still a bit wary about flying - from Gatwick this time, the day after a train strike - but the train round the Surrey Hills was fine. They only needed a passport at check-in, so my anxieties about not having the necessary post-covid papers was soon dispelled. But I did get given an old-fashioned boarding card - perhaps there was so much hassle and bureaucracy during the pandemic that they have now stripped it all down to the bare minimum. 
WMHD ribbon

Anyway, easy flight to Florence for two days there - a World Mental Health Day conference called 'Mental Health Marathon' on the Monday, followed by the final Italian-organised conference and workshop of INDTC (International Network of Democratic TCs) on Tuesday. 


INDTC was formed about ten years ago based by the London-based charity Community Housing and Therapy (www.cht.org.uk). After widespread networking across Europe and India, the British organisation held their final conference at the Cassel Hospital in 2019 and handed the reins over to a collective of our Italian colleagues. From then until now they have been in charge - of direction, strategy, logo, website (www.indtc.org), and (a small sum of) money.

In the midst of their time came covid - and they organised numerous events, perhaps made easier (though certainly less sociable) by the widespread and easy use of video conferencing we have all experienced. Indeed the direction and intentions of INDTC were set by a slightly chaotic and crazy day in May 2021 called the 'Zoom of Babel'. It took place in the middle of the afternoon (GMT) so people could join from the West Coast of North America (early in the morning), Europe (easy), India (evening) and Japan (very late). Although people from Australia and NZ were invited, I don't think any of them managed to come - but it would have been the very middle of the night. So, with some rather playful IT voting tricks, the long list of things that people were interested in was whittled down to three, which were held as the main areas of current interest for INDTC. Several other meetings and events followed, some Italian for their local groups, and some international. 

The first time we all got together for a real face-to-face reunion was yesterday - when the Italians' tenure ended. Interestingly, the Google Translate app has come on leaps and bounds since I last used it. If you set it to translate audio and transcribe it is amazing to watch - typing out in English what it hears in Italian. It doesn't catch everything, especially when there is background noise or more than one person talking (not uncommon in Italy!), and sometimes it comes out with weird and convoluted results - but at least you can get a sense of what is being talked about. And if you are close to the speaker and they use simple language, it gets it absolutely perfect! Never as good as dear Laura our interpreter, of course, but good when there is nobody to help us English linguistic illiterates.

 The morning topics for the conference came from the Babel event and subsequent discussions:

  • Greencare
  • Democratic working in non-democratic places
  • Conflict and dialogue
Interesting discussions were had by all - I particularly enjoyed being in the greencare group, and hearing about how seriously greencare is being taken in various places in Italy, and that a national research study is soon to be commissioned. Also the Greencare 'conceptual framework', written by the EU COST Action 866 about twelve years ago (https://www.cost.eu/actions/866/) has been translated into Italian and is being distributed as a book (the English version sadly being out of print for several years now). 

We heard from Terra Nostra (the Caltagirone Care Farm - called Social Farm in Italy) where we have held several LLEs in the past - and the wide range of activities they are now up to. If only different funders and commissioners could get together, I thought, what a good solution it could be for some of the intractible problems in health, mental health, social care, education, criminal justice, housing and employment. But that seems an unrealistic dream at the moment - it is clearly a struggle to even survive; just like back home I suppose.

The afternoon started with a manifesto workshop - to define the forthcoming areas of interest for INDTC; each of the morning groups took it in turns to present and debate three intentions - making a total of nine areas to focus on. This is the afternoon's draft list (translated by Google again) but it will be refined and edited by INDTC's international steering group before the final version is decided.

Green Care

  • communities and therapeutic services should have as a requirement to have the convention that of implementing green care practices
  • training, evaluation and continuous and residential research of operators on green care
  • green care as a socio-rehabilitative living environment and environmental care

Democracy in non-democratic environments

  • get involved in a group and democratic way in a dialogic paradigm accepting the challenge of research
  • promote formal structures and intra-institutional organizational practices that are dialogic, multidisciplinary and non-hierarchical
  • cultivate an inter-institutional network of connections and collaborations

Dialogue and conflict

  • recognition of differences and conflicts as constitutive parts of individuals, groups and organizations and institutions
  • promote dialogic and democratic approaches based on complexity and mediation to make transformative conflicts
  • accept and understand the complexity of therapeutic work in institutions through community democratic principles 

The final item for the day was for the Italian collective (Chaired by Angelita Volpe) to say 'goodbye', and the Portuguese team (chaired by João Pereira) to say 'hello, here we are'. They did this with a beautiful video of the Portuguese landscape, and a hint of what is to come. See https://www.fundacaords.org/en/videos/casa-de-alba-therapeutic-community-in-mental-health/. Intriguingly, it included human rights and mental health - something I have always claimed that TCs do rather well...
Italians hand over to the Portuguese - Angelita and Joao in the centre

Finally, a note about Parmigiano Reggiano Stravecchio. One of my rituals is always to take a big block of Parmesan cheese home, but I am starting to wonder if it is worth it. As you may know, the length of its ageing makes a great deal of difference to the way parmesan tastes, particularly the quality of umami, and what it costs. I went to a vast supermarket on the way to the airport and bought 24 month parmesan for €25/kg. Then at the airport, I looked at the prices and it was €38.50/kg for 15 months and €49.99/kg for 30 months - so at least I did right to not wait until the airport. But looking at the parmesan  prices back home - Sainsburys' ''Taste the Difference' 30 month, or organic 18 month, is £21/kg. 'Ordinary' parmesan, matured for 22 months, is £17.50/kg. At the local Costco, the 24 month matured parmesan is £15.69/kg. With the pound and euro being so close, it is looking better off waiting to get it at home, which feels a bit sad. But so does Brexit and our UK financial mess.