Occupational Therapy News OTnews January 2019 | Page 19
MENTAL HEALTH FEATURE
© GettyImages/gustavofrazao
Challenges
Main challenges seen during this period related to obtaining
appropriate referrals, as the volume of referrals received
fluctuated, for example depending on the time of year, or number
of groups already running in that area.
Other challenges included the logistics of the group, for
example staffing, venue, child care for service users and transport
within a large geographical area, group dynamics, facilitator
relationship and understanding of behavioural activiation material,
and the literacy skills of service users.
However, delivering behavioural activation over the past few
years has reinforced our belief that occupational therapists are
excellently placed to deliver psychological based therapies.
Occupational therapists’ core skills interlink very well with the
skills required to facilitate behavioural activation. The core theory
behind behavioural activation of graded behavioural change,
through engaging in meaningful activity, is the core foundation of
our occupational therapy practice in mental health.
Transferring our occupational therapy knowledge, core skills
and belief to deliver behavioural activation felt like a seamless
transition and was certainly not a difficult task. Evidencing the
outcomes with quantitative data, as well as seeing and hearing the
qualitative feedback from group participants, was a very positive
experience.
Participants attending the group reported that the peer
support and encouragement element to the group motivated
them to achieve their weekly goals and not let others down. As a
therapist and facilitator of the group, it was rewarding to see other
participants support and encourage one another, through the ups
and downs.
We also feel that the peer support element was pivotal
in keeping attendance rates high during the group and also
motivated participants to see the group through to the end.
Plans for the future
Occupational therapists will continue to deliver behavioural
activation groups throughout Lanarkshire, with a view to integrating
it into everyday occupational therapy practice.
Training will continue to be delivered to all new occupational
therapy staff, and occupational therapists will complete NES
generic supervision training to enable them to carry out peer
supervision, as opposed to being supervised by clinical associates
in applied psychology.
Occupational therapists will also continue to collate data through
outcome measures and perform statistical analysis.
References
Dimidjian S, Hollon S, Dobson K, Schmanling KB, Kochlenberg RJ, Addis
M, Gallop R, McGlinchey J, Markley D, Gollan JK, Atkins DC, Dunner
DL and Jacobson NS (2006) Randomised trial of behavioural activation,
cognitive therapy and antidepressant medication in the acute treatment
of adults with major depression. Journal of Consulting and Clinical
Psychology, 74(4), 658-670
Doody A (2011) A scholarly practitioner approach to the treatment of
depression: Use of behavioural activation in a group setting. Leadership
in Mental Health Compendium. Available online at: https://tspace.library.
utoronto.ca/bitstream/1807/67383/1/A.%20Doody%20-%20Group%20
Behavioural%20Activation.pdf [accessed 2 January 2019]
Lynsey Drysdale, specialist occupational therapist, and Claire
Boyle, occupational therapist, NHS Lanarkshire. Email: Lynsey.
[email protected]
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