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First week

Your initial discussion with your allocated mentor should take place within the first week of the placement. Within this meeting you will agree on an action plan, resources and support required to assist you to achieve outcomes during your placement. The date for your mid-point interview will be agreed at this meeting.




Mid-point

Learning opportunities will be negotiated and supervision of activities will be carried out on an ongoing basis. Specific skills observed, taught or performed should be recorded in your clinical skills log. Further learning needs should be identified and a final assessment meeting should be arranged. This interview should be used as a forum to discuss any concerns either party may have regarding the progress of the placement and draw up SMART action plans detailing how to address them.



Final point
At this interview the student and mentor will meet to pull everything together and sign off the assessment documentation and supporting evidence. Progress and development will be discussed and identification of future learning needs and specialist areas of interest. This is also a time to reflect on and evaluate the placement highlighting positive aspects and possible areas for future development.


SKILLS FRAMEWORK

The level of nursing skills you have achieved will depend on what point you are in your course. However it is likely CAMHS will be new to you and you will have the opportunity to learn some unique skills here as well as developing some of your core nursing skills. You could think about incorporating skills development into an individual action plan that you could work on during your placement. Galaxy House will also provide you with the opportunity to enhance your core skills so as to become a more holistic and competent practitioner. The following are skills we would hope you develop here at Galaxy House;





CORE SKILLS

INTERPERSONAL SKILLS AND COMMUNICATION SKILLS

SHIFT CO-ORDINATION, ORGANISATIONAL AND DELEGATION SKILLS

PROBLEM SOLVING SKILLS


ADMINISTRATION OF MEDICATION SKILLS


This is a practical skill you will have learnt about on other patients; however the medications used at Galaxy House are sometimes called “psycho-tropic medications” and have complex clinical indications and side effect profiles. Select 2 of these medications (e.g. and anti-depressant and a benzodiazepine) and list their indications, contra-indications side-effects, dosage range, adverse reactions and what the NICE guidelines are in relation to these medications used in CAMHS,



Medication





PHYSICAL OBSERVATIONS

LIAISON WITH OTHER DISCIPLINES/MDT WORKING/TEAM WORKING


  • What other disciplines does the nursing staff at Galaxy House liaise with?

  • Why is this so important?

  • Outline any problems you anticipated related to MDT working/team working. What might happen to a patient if team working breaks down?

REFLECTIVE SKILLS/DEVELOPING SELF-AWARENESS




  • Why is self-awareness important in an environment like Galaxy House?

  • If self-awareness is absent how may this affect your nursing care?

  • Describe the process of reflection you would follow after spending time at

Galaxy House,

  • How could this improve your practice?

  • What systems are in place at Galaxy House to support the reflective process?

HOW TO CONDUCT AN EFFECTIVE HANDOVER




  • Why is this important at Galaxy House?

  • What is the aim of handover meetings?

  • Identify barriers to an effective handover?

  • Identify essential information to be included

  • What can be left out?

INCIDENT REPORTING


ADVOCACY SKILLS


  • Why do we need to advocate for patients?

  • In what circumstances would you need to advocate for a child?

  • What does advocacy involve?

  • What external advocacy services exist for the young people and families?

HEALTH PROMOTION SKILLS




  • How would you promote health at Galaxy House?



SPECIALIST CLINICAL SKILLS

These are skills that you will be introduced to during your time at Galaxy House. You may not observe all of them but through time spent with the young people you will have the opportunity to see some of these techniques being implemented.


Below are a list and a brief explanation of some of these specialist skills. Think about how you can include development of these skills into your action plans and how you may be able to take them forward for use in the future in other practice areas.
Special Observations
Also called “specialling”, “1;1s” and “close observations”, or Level 1 observations. This is only used in exceptional circumstances when a patient is posing extreme risk to themselves, or other people, or is very vulnerable due to their mental health status/learning disability. It should only be used after thorough discussion and review by the team and after all other interventions have failed. It should not be used as a “knee jerk” reaction to risky situations or as a simplistic way of managing a “problem” patient. There are several levels of special observations; before implementing special observations the team must consider all the risk factors, ethical and moral issues involved. Progress plans should also be formulated as soon as an individual is placed on special observations, i.e. in what circumstances should the level of observation be reduced and the intervention and necessity for it must be reviewed daily.


  1. Arms length, this is rarely used and only if there is risk of near fatal self harm or serious assault/extreme agitation. This type of special observation is very intrusive and invasive of the patient’s personal space and has huge impact on their privacy and dignity particularly as it involves entering toilets and bathrooms. Students should not be involved in this type of special observation, only those staff who have received training in positive handling techniques.




  1. In sight and hearing distance This is more commonly used as it maintains the patient’s safety but is not as intrusive as arms length observations. When patients are using the bathroom/toilet they can be monitored by the member of staff putting a foot in the door or letting it close without locking and maintaining verbal contact throughout. However there are still big implications for the patients privacy, dignity and autonomy and this type of observation should also only used for as short a time as possible.




  1. Intermittent Observations this is when the patient is observed at discrete intervals and is usually part of the process when someone is being weaned off 1:1 observations. The intervals will typically be 1 in 10, 1 in 15 then I in 30 minute intervals in graduated steps over a distinct period of time decided by the MDT. The steps should be graduated over a time period that is in context to the severity of the problem. Each reducing regime from 1:1 back to general observations should be unique to the individual concerned and be carefully care planned with criteria for when the Obs should be reduced and also when they may need to be put back up again.

There is a wealth of literature about special observations, representing different legal and moral standpoints. From a young persons point of view the most recent research suggests that although at first being on special observations can be a comforting and reassuring experience it soon becomes intrusive, ineffectual and burdensome and actually exacerbates the symptoms/behaviour the staff and young person wants alleviation from. The decision the implement special Obs should be multi-disciplinary, in collaboration with the young person and continually reviewed and evaluated.

Therapeutic Groups
Group work is an essential part of the treatment programme at Galaxy House. Groups provide a vital forum for expression of feeling and emotion and also a space in which a young person can define their strengths and difficulties. Although groups are also about having fun they need clearly defined rules and boundaries with a shared focus. They aim to promote self-expression, social interaction, collaboration, teamwork and enhance self-esteem and confidence through positive reinforcement and building on achievements. Groups currently being run at Galaxy House include the Gardening Group, the Creative Group, the Social skills group and 3x weekly community meetings. They are also a useful way of assessing the young people and how they “gel” with each other, who plays what role within the group i.e. leader, passive participant, negotiator etc.

Observational skills related to monitoring mental state


These skills can be picked up through observation of positive role models. They can be learnt both experientially and also by spending time with more experienced persons. Some of the cues that a young person may be experiencing deterioration in mental state are commonly mistaken for bad behaviour. Psychopathology, particularly in younger children presents as very “behavioural”. Through monitoring a young persons sleep, appetite, interactions, gait, non-verbal communication, tone of voice, role in the group, mood and behaviour you will learn a lot about psychopathology and how it relates to different conditions. You will also learn what indicates a young person may be hearing voices or having intrusive thoughts, such as them being easily distracted, vague and irritable.

Preparing reports for multi-disciplinary reviews


These reports encompass all the assessment and care activities that have taken place with a young person and often are focussed around the 5 different dimensions of the self. They cover issues such as social functioning, development, mental state, risk, family life, education and discharge planning. They also include a set of recommendations for future care planning with people assigned to each one within an agreed time frame. They need to be detailed, concise and relevant making sure all the main points are explored in enough depth without digressing or rambling and they need to be fairly tightly structured, a lot like an assignment! It is also important they are written in sufficiently enough of a scholarly style with good spelling and grammar. Parents, referrers and commissioners read these reports, amongst others.
Organising social, recreational and therapeutic activities
In addition to the groups, nursing staff are responsible for the overall milieu making sure the environment is a therapeutic tool in its own right. To achieve this there must be the correct balance of structured and unstructured time so the young people are neither bored nor over stimulated. Each young person will have an individual time table that will include a mixture of relaxation, education, free time, therapy and recreation time. Activities are achievement orientated and fun. They include cooking, games, pool, table tennis, art, music, going out for walks and more organised trips to places like Heaton Park or Knowlsley Safari Park. Young people have free time to read, listen to music or just chill. Tidying their bed spaces and doing their laundry and personal care is also incorporated into their daily routine.
Organising de-brief following an incident
De-brief happens following a particularly distressing, difficult or dangerous incident. It often occurs following acts of aggression, violence or self-harm. It also occurs following the discharge or a particularly challenging or difficult patient. Good practice indicates that time for de-brief should be protected time. Due to the emotionally and draining nature of working in CAMHS there is de-brief time at the end of each shift. This is facilitated by the shift co-ordinator and is a time and space for staff to ventilate their feelings, reflect on how the shift has gone and share their experiences and frustrations with their colleagues. Students can participate in de-brief but are not expected to lead on it as it is something that should be done by a more experienced facilitator. This opportunity to share and talk through things has been shown to ease some of the pressure staff may feel and go some way to ensuring staff don’t feel isolated or burdened, it also reduces the risk of burn out. It should not be confused with clinical supervision or the staff consultation group, which are other more formal forms of staff support.

Research based outcome measures and assessment tools



As part of the holistic assessment at Galaxy House and in line with clinical guidelines and evidence based practice the team use a number of standardised outcome measures and assessment tools. These are empirical measures that are used to evaluate the efficacy of care (outcome measures) and assist in gaining a deeper understanding of each Childs clinical picture and the severity of their symptoms. They are a very useful aid when “picking apart” the complex threads of a young person’s presentation. They are used alongside, not in place of the teams more ongoing qualitative observational assessment of symptoms. They are often presented in a questionnaire/multiple choice format. Some the young people can complete themselves unsupervised, some are observation only and some are for the young person and staff member to go through together. Afterwards they are scored to give an indication of the severity of the problem. Staff can train students to use these tools whilst on placement. They shouldn’t administer them without some form of training first and must be supervised when interpreting the results. Below is a table with some of the more frequently used tools.


Tool/Measure

What is assessed?

C.D.I
Childhood Depression Inventory

Adapted from the adult version the Beck’s Depression Inventory, measures presence and severity of depressive symptoms

Cheat / SABS

Tools utilised to measure behaviours surrounding food / mealtimes

Conners

Measures extent of ADHD symptoms, administered by clinicians, in schools and by parents to gain an overall accurate picture

HoNOSCA
Health of the Nation Outcome Scales for Children and Adolescents”

Outcome measure used in CAMHS to assess efficacy of intervention and progress/deterioration over time, a good indicator of whether a particular approach is effective or not with an individual

Spence

Assesses presence and severity of anxiety symptoms

Impact of Events Scale

Assesses how severely a young person may have been affected following a stressful event and whether this has triggered post traumatic stress disorder

Benny-Anthony

Family relationships assessment tool, assesses how the child perceives the different members of their family and their relationship to themselves

P I P S
Psychotic in-patient schedule

Assesses whether an individual is experiencing psychotic symptoms, their frequency, intensity and duration

P A N S S
Positive and Negative Symptom Scale

As above but looks more closely at negative symptoms such as withdrawal and social isolation

Family work


Working with family is an essential part of the treatment process as without this all the care planning and implementation would be futile. Family work is provided regularly by the child’s consultant and a consultant family therapist. Tom O’Neil.
Individual Sessions
One of the key tasks of the nurse’s role is to build a therapeutic relationship with the young people they are key nurse for and from this address specific therapeutic tasks such as social skills, expression of thoughts and feelings, confidence building, self-esteem work, anger/anxiety management, development of insight, self-monitoring of thoughts and symptoms and relapse prevention. The nurse will do this through individual sessions. A timetable for these sessions will be planned in advance in collaboration with the young person. At first the sessions are fairly unstructured and are focussed on development of trust and honesty, as they move on however and key issues and themes begin to emerge the sessions will become more structured and focussed and each one will have a goal and expected outcome. It is important the nurse demonstrates their commitment to the therapeutic relationship by adhering to the time table and being on time for sessions and protecting the time allocated for them. Failure to do so will lead to disengagement on behalf of the young person and a lack of trust in the nurse.

Behaviour programmes


The fundamental underlying principle behind these types of programmes is positive re-enforcement to reward good behaviour, therefore re-enforcing the appropriateness of this behaviour and hoping some social learning takes place. At Galaxy House we try to avoid negative approaches such as sanctions or punishments although at times we have to be fairly assertive in our limit setting due to the challenging and damaging nature of some of the behaviours. As far as possible we ignore the negative and reward the positive. Behaviour programmes identify target behaviours they want to increase or reduce. An activity is chosen that the young person really enjoys and the programme is geared towards them having access to more of that activity. For younger children it is usually sticker charts and is fairly visual and the activity may be something such as time on the play station or in the ball pool. Each sticker gained contributes to more time spent doing that activity. E.G. child x swears a lot, each half hour without swearing equates to 5 minutes on the play station, to be taken at 6.00pm. For older children (young adolescents) the reward may be a bit more substantial, not using stickers but verbal re-enforcement and may be something like a trip out or unescorted time off the unit.


HUB AND SPOKE MODEL

This is essentially exactly what it says. Galaxy House is the main “hub” placement as the central or main placement and where all the action planning takes place. From Galaxy House there are a number of contextually related “spokes”. They are linked to Galaxy House by referral pathways, clinical similarity or interagency networking. By going on meaningful spokes the student will gain a deeper and more holistic understanding of the patient’s journey, where they have come from and where they may be going. It is also a very interesting experience for the student to find out more about the specialised nature of CAMHS.



Please find a list of possible spokes around the Greater Manchester and wider North West region enclosed below. The list is not exhaustive however and you can do your own research to find relevant spoke placements that you may be able to access. It isn’t solely down to your mentor to sort this out for you, it’s a collaborative effort and you need to be proactive and take charge of your own learning. Initiative in doing so will be reflected in your final assessment documentation when your achievements are signed off.


NORTH WEST CAMHS UNITS FOR POSSIBLE SPOKE PLACEMENTS
Bolton CAMHS Eating Disorders Clinic

01204 390659


Gardener Unit, Forensic Adolescent Service

Contact: 0161 772 3425


McGuiness Unit

Contact: Tel; 0161 772 3678


Orchard Adolescent Unit, Cheadle Royal

Contact: Ward Manager Mark Gilligan, Tel; 0161 4289511


Pine Lodge Young Peoples Centre, Chester

Contact: Ward Manager Tracy Kempster 01244 364776


The Priory Hospital Altrincham Adolescent Unit

Contact: Ward Manager Shepherd Nhariwa Tel; 0161 904 0050


Red Oak Child and Family Services, Lancaster, Lancashire

Contact: Unit manager Terry Drake 01524 842266

LOCAL DISTRICT CAMHS TEAMS (TIER 3)
Central Manchester, The Winnicott Centre Contact Alison Knowles Tel: 0161 248 9494

South Manchester - The Carol Kendrick Unit Contact Deborah Kay. Tel: 0161 291 3733

Hope Unit – Fairfield Hospital 0161 918 8505

Chronic fatigue service – Alex Woore 14517

Rochdale CAMHS - Contact Mark Wood Tel 01706 754349

Bury CAMHS contact John Henstock Tel: 0161 705 3526

In addition placements could be arranged with


  • clinical psychology

  • the child and adolescent psychodynamic psychotherapist (Simon Cregeen)

  • the family therapist (Tom O’ Neill)

  • Galaxy House School (Jim Riley)

  • the Webster Stratton Nurse Practitioner (Paula Grimes)

  • the social development clinic (Dr. Jonathon Green)

These all count as spokes; you can find their numbers on the ward or by going through switchboard.




TIME TABLE FOR FIRST WEEK

Your first 3 days will be 9-5s to allow for orientation and induction. Following this you will have worked out your shifts with your mentor. The activities you undertake will be dependent on your shifts, however below is a range of some of the activities you can do in your first week. Some of you may also need to incorporate a study day into your time-table (Manchester University BSc students).






Monday

Tuesday

Wednesday

Thursday

Friday

Am

Introductions
Orientation to ward, commence induction

Community meeting

Team meeting


6 weekly review of a young person

CPA review



New Case Clinic

Spend time with young people in school

Or Social Development Clinic



Community meeting

Prepare young people for the weekend



Lunch

Attendance at handover

Lunch with young people, handover

Handover, lunch with young people

Handover, lunch with young people

Some young people home for the weekend

Pm

Case presentation
Admission meeting
Creative group

Familiarise yourself with procedures.

Read through clinical notes

Social skills group


Familiarise yourself with documentation, assessment tools

Staff meeting
Young peoples activity evening

Practice Development Education group

Or

OUR Group


This time table isn’t prescriptive but may help give some structure to the first week and an overview of Galaxy house. There may be other activities/ experiences going on that you can become involved with. So feel free to plan these with your mentor.





THERAPEUTIC APPROACHES

Galaxy House has an eclectic approach to treatment and care delivery. A variety of therapeutic approaches are used depending on the need and clinical presentation of each young person. There is no one all encompassing therapy that fits everyone so each programme of care is tailored to meet the individual’s needs. All treatment approaches have a strong evidence base and are empirically supported by clinical trials, case studies, audit, published guidelines and other forms of clinical evidence. The list below summarises the main therapeutic modalities that are used with young people with mental health problems.

Cognitive Behavioural Therapy
One of the most effective and widely used therapies for both young people and adults this approach is based on the underlying principle that thoughts feelings and behaviour are inextricably linked. Through a guided process the therapist will explore the person’s automatic negative beliefs, unhelpful or negative thoughts and subsequent maladaptive coping behaviours. The client is then encouraged to replace or modify their negative thoughts through skilled questioning and appraisal techniques and carefully planned behavioural experiments. Relaxation and social skills work is also undertaken. Originally CBT was used for anxiety and depressive disorders but it is now widely being used with a huge range of mental health conditions including eating disorders, psychosis, and even some personality disorders. In CAMHS, pictures, charts and other visual aids are used to aid the process and young people need to self monitor using a thought and mood diary. It requires a certain level of commitment from the young person due to the “homework” tasks that are involved.

Psychodynamic psychotherapy


Less commonly used than CBT and also over a much longer timescale. There are various types of psycho-therapy including Gestalt therapy, person centred and transactional analysis. It originates from the theoretical schools of Freud, Rogers, Jung and Adler and became popular in the first half on the 20th Century. It is based on the premise that many of our desires, dreams, conflicts and motivations are governed by the unconscious mind which remains largely hidden to our conscious state. Where early issues and conflicts have not been resolved maybe as a result of trauma or neglect this manifests itself in problematic feelings and behaviour which interfere with our everyday functioning. Psychotherapy involves sessions with the client where the therapist encourages the client to talk freely about past experiences, thoughts and feelings. With skilled reflective techniques and questioning the therapist and client come to a greater understanding of the client’s internal world and hidden conflicts and can then look at ways to address them. This approach is often used with somatic disorders, phobias, pervasive refusal syndrome, dissasociative states and other complex states such as multiple personality disorder. It requires a long term commitment from the therapist and client often several months or even years.

Creative Therapies


This is an umbrella term for a range of therapies that involve creative activity, art, music, drama and play. All these mediums allow the young person to express themselves more freely and naturally. With the exception of the most articulate young person many struggle to ventilate their feelings verbally and may “act out” difficult feelings and conflicts through acts of aggression, self-harm or self-enforced isolation and withdrawal. Creative mediums give young people an acceptable outlet for these feelings and a therapeutic process is started from which the young person can explore coping strategies and work around building self-esteem and self-confidence. Young people do not have to be particularly talented at a particular artistic medium to benefit from it although through engaging in the process they often discover “hidden talents”! Art often gives the therapist a clue as to what the young person is experiencing in their internal world and how chaotic, intense and frightening that must be. Through drama a young person can role play a character safely i.e. a drunken angry man without fear of reprisals and this allows them to experience and create an outlet for these emotions. For many young people the use of creative therapies can be a cathartic and fun experience.

Psychosocial Interventions


Psychosocial interventions are a range of strategies that are used for people who are suffering from long-term severe mental illnesses such as schizophrenia and bi-polar disorder. They are mainly used in treating psychotic disorders. Symptoms are carefully assessed using a range of evidence based assessment tools and the nurse/therapist then works with the client and family around ways to alleviate and prevent symptoms from reoccurring. The work focuses on looking at triggers and working out someone’s individual relapse signature. The interventions are based on the stress vulnerability model of mental illness and attempts to make psychological environmental and social changes to increase a person’s resilience rather than just using medication. Once a relapse signature is identified the therapist and client will work together to on relapse prevention and a relapse “drill” of things to do when someone starts to deteriorate. They also look at coping strategies for hallucinations and fluctuating mood and how the client can adopt these independently. They are often simple things like listening to a certain type of music or spending time alone in a quiet low stimulus area. Family work is also essential with a lot of Psychoeducation around expressed emotion in the family environment, as high levels of this have been found to adversely affect those suffering from severe mental illnesses. Activity planning and social skills training is also part of the work. The approach has very successful treatment outcomes and due to it’s practical nature can be learnt and implemented by any practitioner working in mental health.

Family Therapy


Information about this approach is included earlier in the booklet. When young people are admitted family work is seen as integral to the treatment process and all other treatment will be ineffective if the family is not completely involved right from the beginning. Some families may just need support and education but others may need more formal psychodynamic input from a qualified family therapist.

Multi-sensory Therapy


This type of therapy is often implemented using a multi-sensory room or “snoezelen” room. This is a special space that has been equipped with a variety of sensory materials to stimulate and soothe all the senses. Usually they contain bubble tubes, projectors; glitter balls an array of cushions and fabrics of different textures, vibrating cushions/mats, hand held massage devices and fibre optic strands. The room may also have more interactive materials such as switches that activate lights and music. In addition to this many have aromatherapy burners to complete the sensory experience. Rooms vary in size and provision; some services even have sensory pool areas and large soft play rooms. As well as the multi-sensory room, other activities and environments are used to enhance the senses such as sensory gardens and ball pools. There are also numerous sensory learning materials available. Sensory therapy is often used with young people who have autistic spectrum disorder or learning disability with measurable success. These children are often sensory impaired and use of certain materials can enhance their sensory experience and encourage development of these senses. For other children the use of the multi-sensory room in particular can be a profoundly relaxing and soothing experience and can provide a safe haven where they can have therapeutic time away from the other young people. Staff always accompany young people into the room and use various guided relaxation techniques and exercises to encourage complete relaxation. The benefit of these environments cannot be emphasised strongly enough, in many cases proactive use of them can divert the need for more restrictive measures such as time out or PRN medication. The multi-sensory room should not be used indiscriminately, it should be individually care planned in every case. Care should be taken with some clients such as those who are hallucinating as if not used correctly it can actually worsen symptoms. The therapist should also be guided by the young person with regards to accessing the different types of sensory stimuli in the room, they may only want a couple of things or it could be over-stimulating it is important to check this out with them as you go through the different sensory experiences.

The therapeutic milieu


Milieu is a French word, the literal translation being “middle space” which we can interpret as middle ground, safe ground or safe space.

The objective of using the therapeutic milieu is to provide patients with a stable and coherent social environment that facilitates the development and implementation of the treatment plan.

As professionals we accept the responsibility for the management of the environment to create a safe space.
Why do we use the therapeutic milieu?


  • Containment

To provide physical and emotional safety.

  • Support

Staff help the patients feel better and enhance self-esteem

  • Structure

Predictable organisation of time place and person

  • Involvement

Patients actively attend to their environment and interact with it, having a sense of ownership

  • Validation

Individuality of staff and patients is recognised and accepted.



Clinical Syndromes

PSYCHOSIS
Psychosis describes a persons lose of contact with reality or their perception of reality being distorted. When an individual cannot tell the difference between what is real and what is not they are said to be experiencing a psychotic episode (Stuart & Sundeen, 2002). The symptoms of psychosis can be divided into 5 main categories
COGNITION

This relates to the problems in information processing, these are often known as cognitive deficits. These can include aspects of memory, decreased attention & concentration, form & content of speech, decision making & thought content. This can materialise as memory problems, for example, pressured speech, incoherence, word salad, poor decision making, lack of insight, illogical thinking, lack of planning & problem solving, difficulty initiating tasks. Delusions can take many forms paranoid, grandiose, religious, somatic, nihilistic, thought broadcasting, thought insertion & thought control.


PERCEPTION

Refers to identification & interpretation of a stimulus based on the information received through the 5 senses. These include hallucinations auditory, visual, olfactory, gustatory, tactile, kinaesthetic (feeling bodily functions), and kinesthetic (sensation of movement whilst still).


EMOTION

Can be hypero/hyperexpressed in an incongruous manner. Mood may vary from hour to hour, from euphoria to suicidal ideation.


MOVEMENT & BEHAVIOUR

Responses can cause behaviours that are odd, confusing, difficult to manage and that can be distressing to others. Examples of odd movements are catatonia, abnormal eye movement, grimacing, apraxia, echopraxia, abnormal gait. Behaviours associated with psychosis are poor personal hygiene, aggression/agitation, repetitive behaviour & volition.


SOCIALISATION

Is the ability to form relationships. Effects seen in patients who are experiencing a psychotic episode are social withdrawal, isolation, low self-esteem, inappropriate behaviour, disinterest, gender identity confusion, ultimately, a decreased quality of life.


It is vital important when communicating with an individual that is experiencing psychotic symptoms that all communication is simple & clear, & where required repeated, or even in written form for the individual to keep. It is common that the individual will need help to fulfil their daily activities of living whilst experiencing the episode. They will also need reassurance and support.


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