This is the story of how a government mental health programme which was shut down in 2011 (following the financial crash) gave rise to a movement and manifesto, with aims to press for wide-reaching national policy changes.
The ‘personality disorder problem’
The work was born out of a public argument between the then
home Secretary (Jack Straw) and the then President of the Royal College of
Psychiatrists (Robert Kendal): Kendal claimed that ‘Personality Disorder’ was
untreatable - and Straw refused to accept that. The result was an expensive
programme to treat the 300 most ‘Dangerous people with Severe Personality
Disorder’ (DSPD), and a community-based ‘National Personality Disorder
Development Programme’ (NPDP).
The DSPD programme was marred by adverse public opinion and
professional disagreement – perhaps most strongly about detention without
conviction and the indeterminate sentences given by courts for ‘dangerousness’
rather than criminal offences. The sentences continue to be an unresolved
problem.
The community NPDP
work was allocated a recurring sum of £9.8m
– perhaps ‘crumbs from the table’ of DSPD. For it, the government produced and
published the ‘No Longer a Diagnosis of Exclusion’ (NLDE) policy guide. This
was used to set up eleven community pilot projects, a national training
programme, and a formal research evaluation. The pilot projects varied
considerably, and the successful applicants were chosen by a large group
process led by the opinion of service users – who had themselves experienced
either good services, or the lack of them. The workforce development programme
became the Knowledge and Understanding Framework’s (KUF’s) ‘training
escalator’.
The different projects within programme were tightly
reviewed, and frequent ‘learning network’ events were held. What started to
emerge was a common theme across the widely different services: best summed up
as the importance of the ‘quality of relationships’ between those who delivered
the services and those who received them. This was hinted at in the formal
research project, ‘Learning the Lessons’, and confirmed in the commissioning
team’s end-of-project evaluation
‘Innovation in Action’.
After the funding was withdrawn, and throughout the 2010s,
those involved in the programme continued to meet – usually, but not only, at
the annual conference of the British and Irish Group for the Study of
Personality Disorder (BIGSPD). The organisation grew from a dozen or two delegates
in 1999 (taken to Jersey by Peter Tyrer) to over 600 in 2023. But there was an
even more significant qualitative change: from a scientific conference only
discussing pure research, to one which first included presentations on novel
service designs, to one where delegates with lived experience were almost as
numerous as clinician and researchers. Again, ‘a different quality of
relationship’.
The ’golden thread’
But much of the undercurrent during these years was not
about the ‘beauty contest’ or ‘horse race’ between competing ‘alphabetti spaghetti’
therapies, but what the common principles were.
This thinking has a long history – similar to the ‘Dodo Bird Verdict’
from 1975, and traceable right back to 1936. Most importantly, the people with
lived experience had little truck with the finer points of distinction between
different therapies – and very often mentioned that it was the relationships
that mattered. These were not only the relationships between them and
therapists, but included relationships between different people who were in
therapy groups as well as more abstract relationships – such as those between
the individuals and themselves, the system and culture they were being treated
in, and wider experiences such as the natural world.
Those of us most involved (Nick Benefield, who had been DH’s
commissioner for the NPDP, and myself, Rex Haigh, as his clinical advisor) produced
increasingly complex diagrams for BIGSPD workshops over the years. It
eventually resulted in publication of what we now call the ‘complexity model’,
but which we rather presumptuously called ‘a Unified Model of Human
Development’ at the time.
This was included by the Ministry of Justice as a
theoretical foundation for their work in the ‘Offender PD Programme’ – which
led on from the end of the NHS-funded NPDP, without the inclusion of an NHS
community focus (it only concerned the NHS for those in prison or on probation).
Sadly, since then, the NHS involvement in the work has been minimal – although
significant progress (through research, quality standards and workforce
development) has happened in the criminal justice sector.
Nonetheless, the idea that ‘relationships are key’ persisted
in the growing number of clinicians, academics, commissioners and policy-makers
who were aware of the continuing interest in these ideas.
Throughout the covid lockdowns, we all learned to use Zoom –
and a few of us continued building a network of virtual relationships to
include individuals and organisations who understood the relevance of relationships,
and could see that this could be a rallying call with a wider scope than just
‘personality disorder’. Rather romanticised portrayals of the ‘Golden Thread of
Relational Practice’ were promoted (often by myself, to the scepticism of my
erstwhile and much-missed colleague Steve Pearce - and others who were more
formal in their scientific approach).
Towards a manifesto and movement
But, since retirement from the NHS and escape from the dogmatism of ‘high quality evidence’, I have been energised by the idea of starting a movement pushing away from biomedical determinism towards something much more fluid, chaotic - and with unknown emergent potential. Hence, a few of us drafted a rather angry first draft of the manifesto, including demands for services that ‘are more helpful than harmful’, and asserting that that relational practice ‘is the antidote to dehumanisation, commodification and the loss of human dignity and agency’.
Rationale
At the launch, Nick Benefield, who commissioned the
2002-2011 No Longer a Diagnosis of Exclusion programme for DH, described the
rationale in vivid terms: change happens when the sum of dissatisfaction
plus vision of what is needed plus accessible first steps becomes
greater than the resistance.
In his formulation, dissatisfaction is at three
levels: the commodification, industrialisation and dehumanisation of public
service culture; professionals’ loss of belonging, connection, communality,
agency, worth and efficacy; and the emotional consequences of sadness, anger,
depression, helplessness, despair and rage that results from this degredation.
The vision is for formally sanctioned but
psychodynamically informed coordination of efforts across all public services -
to put relational priorities above bureaucratic, legalistic and managerial ones
(like risk aversion, performativity and metrication). It includes further
development of services and training programmes that are manifestly relational
already – such as psychologically informed planned environments (PIPEs) in
prison and probation settings; psychologically planned environments (PIEs) for
the housing and homelessness sector; democratic therapeutic communities for
severe personality disorders, open dialogue and dialogic practice for systemic
intervention in psychosis, intentional
and therapeutic living communities for long-term mental disability, therapeutic
group childcare for looked-after children, and enabling environments in various
settings where ‘relational practice’ is valued.
The first steps are what the Relational Practice
Movement and Manifesto has started to do: bring together the many individuals
and organisations who are doing it already, with a structure of networking
based on geographies, sectors and professions – through meetings and
consciousness-raising events for anything between three and three hundred
people – either as stand-alone events, or as part of existing conferences, workshops,
courses and various other gatherings. The founding group of the relational
practice movement incudes senior policy-makers and commissioners as well as
clinicians, academics and people with lived experience – and next steps will draw
on these networks and relationships.
The resistance that needs to be overcome, for the changes to
happen, comes from a widespread lack of public awareness of the nature of the
problem, with little professional or political commitment to recognise it. Personal
and professional responsibility for demanding change is lacking. Commissioning
mechanisms are mostly unhelpful, often obstructive and almost always without
any real understanding of the whole range of unmet needs. There is no funded
strategic vision or positive regulatory intent; in short, no work towards
developing a robust 21st century public service ethos is
possible.
After the manifesto launch
One of our first tasks after the launch was to agree a
formal ‘strategy plan’, defining the movement, its intention, and its methods.
This was sent out for widespread consultation last autumn; encouraging
responses and offers for assistance followed – and a final version has been
published on the website. Since then, many individuals and organisations have
given their time and energy to help, and five areas of activity have developed.
These are networking, training, quality, research and commissioning.
The networking has been by geography, by sector and by
profession. The events have included the emergence of local and regional action
groups, presentations at various organisation’s conferences (online and live).
Some areas and regions have been more energetic than others, and we are hoping
that some national events later this year will help to recruit other areas. The
voluntary sector, and groups of people with lived experience of
‘non-relational’ services have been particularly interested. The website was
set up before the launch, and is kept up-to-date by volunteers. The first print
run of 1,000 manifestos soon went far and wide – so 10,000 copies of a second
edition is now with the printers.
In addition to the vital consciousness-raising, network, and
campaigning effort, four embryonic areas of activity have been defined:
training, research, development and regulation. The provisional titles of each
of these areas are ‘Relational Learning Academy’, ‘Relational Research
Collaborative’, ‘Relational Development Initiative and ‘Relational Assurance
Collaborative’, respectively. Each will be led, largely voluntarily, by experts
in the various fields who are committed to the principles of relational
practice.
The ‘Relational Learning Academy’ will include the KUF
programme, with its extra modules for leadership in the prison and probation
services, and revive the idea of a ‘training escalator’ by gathering
information on all good quality training activities, events and courses. The
principle is that they are not for specific therapy or management training, and
will be accessible for all professions, sectors, backgrounds and seniorities.
In the future, a more formal recognition of individuals’ portfolios might be developed.
The ‘Relational
Development Initiative’ will be similar to a great deal of organisational
consultancy work that already happens, but will particularly focus on improving
and promoting the fundamental aspects of relational practice and therapeutic environments.
It will build on many ideas familiar to analytically-based psychotherapists,
such as the importance pf unconscious dynamics in work settings, and over
twenty years of experience in delivering programmes at the RCPsych Centre for
Quality Improvement, such as ‘Enabling Environments’.
The last of the
four areas of activity , the ‘Relational Assurance Collaborative’, is a
longer-term aspiration to influence statutory standards and commissioning of
public services in a relational direction - by educating and influencing those
involved in regulation policy. Many senior managers, clinicians and academics –
as well as the general public – see the downside of excessively authoritarian
inspection regimes, for example in school OFSTED reporting. Alternatives exist,
particularly ones which develop networks of critical (and supportive) relationships
to bring about quality improvement - and need to be considered in developing
policy for a robust 21st century public service ethos, as mentioned
above.
No comments:
Post a Comment