ABSTRACT

Cognitive Behaviour Therapy for Acute Inpatient Mental Health Units presents innovative ways of delivering CBT within the inpatient setting and applying CBT principles to inform and enhance inpatient care.

Maintaining staff morale and creating a culture of therapy in the acute inpatient unit is essential for a well-functioning institution. This book shows how this challenge can be addressed, along with introducing and evaluating an important advance in the practice of individual CBT for working with crisis, suited to inpatient work and crisis teams.

The book covers a brief cross-diagnosis adaptation of CBT, employing arousal management and mindfulness, developed and evaluated by the editors. It features ways of supporting and developing the therapeutic role of inpatient staff through consultation and reflective practice. Chapters focus on topics such as:

  • providing staff training
  • working within psychiatric intensive care
  • innovative psychological group work.

Cognitive Behaviour Therapy for Acute Inpatient Mental Health Units will be essential reading for those trained, or those undergoing training in CBT as well as being of interest to a wider public of nurses, health care support workers, occupational therapists, medical staff and managers.

part |2 pages

PART I Setting the scene

chapter 2|11 pages

CBT on the wards: Standards and aspirations

ByJOHN HANNA

chapter 4|9 pages

The service user perspective

ByMARIE

chapter 5|24 pages

The use of formulation in inpatient settings

ByFIONA KENNEDY

part |2 pages

PART II Individual CBT in the inpatient setting

chapter 7|7 pages

Working with overwhelming emotion: Depression, anxiety and anger

ByISABEL CLARKE, HANNAH WILSON

chapter 8|8 pages

Making sense of psychosis in crisis

ByBERNADETTE FREEMANTLE, ISABEL CLARKE

chapter 9|21 pages

Working with personality disorders in an acute psychiatric ward

ByJOHN McGOWAN

part |2 pages

PART III Working with the staff group to create a therapeutic culture

part |2 pages

PART IV CBT group work

chapter 13|12 pages

The `Making Friends with Yourself' and the `What Is Real and What Is Not' groups

ByGRAHAM HILL, ISABEL CLARKE, HANNAH WILSON

chapter 14|10 pages

Running an emotional coping skills group based on dialectical behaviour therapy

ByAMANDA RENDLE, HANNAH WILSON

part |2 pages

PART V The challenge of evaluating this service

chapter 15|12 pages

Evaluating short-term CBT in an acute adult inpatient unit

ByCAROLINE DURRANT, ABIGAIL TOLLAND

chapter 16|2 pages

Conclusion

ByISABEL CLARKE, HANNAH WILSON