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Partnership Working Fiona Couper and Debbie Spain Department of Mental Health Florence Nightingale School of Nursing & Midwifery

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Page 1: Partnership Working Fiona Couper and Debbie Spain Department of Mental Health Florence Nightingale School of Nursing & Midwifery

Partnership Working

Fiona Couper and Debbie Spain Department of Mental Health

Florence Nightingale School of Nursing & Midwifery

Page 2: Partnership Working Fiona Couper and Debbie Spain Department of Mental Health Florence Nightingale School of Nursing & Midwifery

Learning Outcomes

By the end of this session, you will be able to • Discuss the meaning of ‘partnership working’ in

mental health services• Critically examine factors that may prevent and

promote partnership working• Identify implications for clinical practice• Have opportunities for reflection

Page 3: Partnership Working Fiona Couper and Debbie Spain Department of Mental Health Florence Nightingale School of Nursing & Midwifery

Background

• Individuals in contact with mental health services typically benefit from involvement with more than one health professional and more than one agency

• Partnership working: “any situation in which people are working across organisational boundaries towards some positive end’ (Huxham and Vangen, 2005, p.4 in Tait and Shah, 2007)

Page 4: Partnership Working Fiona Couper and Debbie Spain Department of Mental Health Florence Nightingale School of Nursing & Midwifery

Shared Knowledge, Skills and Values

• Pulling Together (SCMH, 1997) promoted collaborative teamwork while retaining separate professions

• Ten Essential Shared Capabilities (DH, 2004): broad domains of competency for all workers

• Clinicians may not have full awareness of other disciplines in terms of scope of practice, values, codes of conduct and organisation

Page 5: Partnership Working Fiona Couper and Debbie Spain Department of Mental Health Florence Nightingale School of Nursing & Midwifery

Group work

In small groups identify the :-

1.Benefits of team working

2. Barriers to team working

Page 6: Partnership Working Fiona Couper and Debbie Spain Department of Mental Health Florence Nightingale School of Nursing & Midwifery

Ten Essential Shared Capabilities (DH, 2004)

1. Working in partnership2. Respecting diversity3. Practising ethically4. Challenging inequality5. Promoting recovery6. Identifying people’s needs and strengths7. Providing service-user centred care8. Making a difference9. Promoting safety and positive risk taking10. Personal development and learning

Page 7: Partnership Working Fiona Couper and Debbie Spain Department of Mental Health Florence Nightingale School of Nursing & Midwifery

Shared Knowledge, Skills and Values

How do members ofyour team conceptualisepresenting difficulties ?

Do all professionalsshare ideas about thetreatment plan ?

Page 8: Partnership Working Fiona Couper and Debbie Spain Department of Mental Health Florence Nightingale School of Nursing & Midwifery

Some benefits of team working

• holistic approach to care and support • reflects the need to offer Recovery-focused interventions • increases efficiency, reduces duplication • shared knowledge and expertise• better use of resources, value for money• improved communication and engagement• stimulates creativity • combined influence• distinct conceptualisations of symptoms / treatment• anything else ?

(e.g. DH, 2006; SCMH, 2000; Tait and Shah, 2007)

Page 9: Partnership Working Fiona Couper and Debbie Spain Department of Mental Health Florence Nightingale School of Nursing & Midwifery

Factors affecting partnership working with service-users

• attitudes / perceptions• nature / severity of mental health symptoms• MHA status• withholding information• relationship dynamic• unclear expectations• inconsistency • resistance • staffing levels / retention• resource constraints(e.g. McCloughen et al, 2011; Simpson and Brennan, 2009)

Page 10: Partnership Working Fiona Couper and Debbie Spain Department of Mental Health Florence Nightingale School of Nursing & Midwifery

Barriers to working with professionals

• perceptions and attitudes• no common shared

language• inequalities in relationship• accountability and

responsibility not clear• conflict of interests /

agenda • power struggles• resistance • ‘a blame culture’

• end points / outcomes not clearly identified

• different organisational policies, priorities, IT structures

• disagreements re cost• bureaucracy • reluctance to share• team dynamics• poor support mechanisms

Page 11: Partnership Working Fiona Couper and Debbie Spain Department of Mental Health Florence Nightingale School of Nursing & Midwifery

Triangle of care

Page 12: Partnership Working Fiona Couper and Debbie Spain Department of Mental Health Florence Nightingale School of Nursing & Midwifery

The Triangle of Care. National Mental Health Unit(2010)

This document provides a guide to the views of users, cares and professionals about best practice. Their view about what constitutes a mental health crisis can differ. Consider some one you have cared for recently and note how:- •The user described the crisis•The carer described the crisis•The Professional described the crisis

Page 13: Partnership Working Fiona Couper and Debbie Spain Department of Mental Health Florence Nightingale School of Nursing & Midwifery

Barriers to inter-agency working

Five significant obstacles to inter-agency working between health and social services:

1.Structural 2.Procedural 3.Financial 4.Professional 5.Status and legitimacy (Wistow and Hardy, 1991 in Holton, 2001, p.431)

Page 14: Partnership Working Fiona Couper and Debbie Spain Department of Mental Health Florence Nightingale School of Nursing & Midwifery

Group work

• Consider one of the five Barriers and find examples in practice.

Page 15: Partnership Working Fiona Couper and Debbie Spain Department of Mental Health Florence Nightingale School of Nursing & Midwifery

Improving partnership working with service-users and their families

• recognising need• being prepared to work together • listening • acknowledging service-user expertise • adopting a collaborative, goal-orientated approach• promoting open and reciprocal conversation• developing a shared understanding • facilitating self-management skills and self-efficacy • providing information in accessible formats

Page 16: Partnership Working Fiona Couper and Debbie Spain Department of Mental Health Florence Nightingale School of Nursing & Midwifery

Improving partnership working with service-users and families contd.

• encouraging service-user feedback• named / designated nurse / team• providing choice• evidence-based decision making• signposting to PALS and advocacy service as needed• emphasising relapse prevention techniques • using advance directives / crisis planning when appropriate

Page 17: Partnership Working Fiona Couper and Debbie Spain Department of Mental Health Florence Nightingale School of Nursing & Midwifery

Working in partnership in day-to-day clinical practice

Strategies include:

• clear communication: a shared language• effective leadership• making time• meetings ! (need to specify when, where, how often)• inter-agency training

Page 18: Partnership Working Fiona Couper and Debbie Spain Department of Mental Health Florence Nightingale School of Nursing & Midwifery

Working in partnership in day-to-day clinical practice contd.

Strategies also include:

• identification of individual strengths and resources• joint assessments• sharing of information / ideas / experience• mechanisms for providing feedback• willingness to manage change

Page 19: Partnership Working Fiona Couper and Debbie Spain Department of Mental Health Florence Nightingale School of Nursing & Midwifery

Enhancing partnership working

• leadership skills • negotiation skills• assertiveness• flexibility / creativity • feedback• responsiveness• trust

• motivation • skills-based intervention• familiarity with policies • shared resources• clarity in aims • clinical supervision

Page 20: Partnership Working Fiona Couper and Debbie Spain Department of Mental Health Florence Nightingale School of Nursing & Midwifery

Is there one thing that you could change in yourself to encourage more cohesive partnership working with others ?

Page 21: Partnership Working Fiona Couper and Debbie Spain Department of Mental Health Florence Nightingale School of Nursing & Midwifery

Summary and some considerations

• A need to consider a whole-systems approach to care

• Service-user involvement in design, delivery and evaluation of services

• Increasing emphasis on evidence-based practice – we need to develop broad systems for evaluating inter-agency interventions

Page 22: Partnership Working Fiona Couper and Debbie Spain Department of Mental Health Florence Nightingale School of Nursing & Midwifery

ReferencesAudit Commission (1998). A Fruitful Partnership: Effective Partnership Working. Audit Commission.Department of Health: NHS Modernisation Agency, NATPACT. Working separately together: A guidebook for successful partnering between organisations within the NHS. Leeds: HM Government. Department of Health (2006). From Values to Action: The Chief Nursing Officer’s Review of Mental Health Nursing. London: HM Government.Department of Health (2009). Putting People First. Working together with user-led organisations. London: HM Government.Department of Health (2011). No Health Without Mental Health. London: HM Government.National Mental Health Unit(NMHDU)(2010) The Triangle of Care. London. NMHDUHolton, M. (2001). The partnership imperative. Joint working between social services and health. Journal of Management in Medicine, 15(6), pp.430-445.Involve: www.invo.org.uk

Page 23: Partnership Working Fiona Couper and Debbie Spain Department of Mental Health Florence Nightingale School of Nursing & Midwifery

ReferencesMcCloughen, A., Gillies, D. and O’Brien, L. (2011). Collaboration between mental consumers and nurses: Shared understandings, dissimilar experiences. International Journal of Mental Health Nursing, 20, pp.47-55.Rethink. www.rethink.org Sainsbury Centre for Mental Health (2000). Using opportunities for inter-agency partnership in Mental Health. Taking Your Partners. London: SCMH.Sainsbury Centre for Mental Health. (2004). The Ten Essential Shared Capabilities. London: Sainsbury Centre for Mental Health.Simpson, A. and Brennan, G. (2009). Working in partnership. In P Callaghan, J Playle and L Cooper (eds). Mental Health Nursing Skills. Oxford : Oxford University Press.Tait, L. and Lester, H. (2005). Encouraging user involvement in mental health services. Advances in Psychiatric Treatment, 11, pp.168-175.Tait, L. and Shah, S. (2007). Partnership working: a policy with promise for mental healthcare. Advances in Psychiatric Treatment, 13, pp.261-271.