The University of Southampton
University of Southampton Institutional Repository

Telephone-based CBT and the therapeutic relationship: The views and experiences of IAPT practitioners in a low-intensity service

Telephone-based CBT and the therapeutic relationship: The views and experiences of IAPT practitioners in a low-intensity service
Telephone-based CBT and the therapeutic relationship: The views and experiences of IAPT practitioners in a low-intensity service

Accessible summary: What is known on the subject: There is a move towards the use of new ways of delivering mental health care, particularly via an increased use of telephone therapies. Although some studies have noted the advantages of telephone-delivered therapies (e.g., removing access barriers) and reported on equivalent therapeutic effects when compared to face-to-face, there are concerns about how telephone-based therapy adversely affects the therapeutic relationship. What the paper adds to existing knowledge: It contributes new knowledge regarding psychological practitioners' experience and views about using telephone-based therapies and how this affects the therapeutic relationship. What are the implications for practice: This paper provides data about the new practitioner workforce (IAPT Psychological Wellbeing Practitioners) and adds to a growing area of research regarding their clinical role. It has relevance for mental health nursing, because health services internationally and across the professions are exploring how telehealth can improve health care. This paper suggests that mental health services need to focus on what type of therapeutic relationship their practice facilitates and on offering transparency to service users. It concludes that telephone work in IAPT can accommodate a working alliance, but not other types of therapeutic relationship, which practitioners and service users hoped for. Services need to focus on what facilitates and inhibits deeper therapeutic closeness and connection. Introduction: Over-the-telephone (OTT)-delivered psychological therapies as an alternative method to face-to-face (F2F) are becoming more prevalent in mental health care. Research suggests a range of benefits of OTT use in therapy, but there are growing concerns about its consequences for the therapeutic relationship. This paper presents new knowledge regarding psychological practitioners' experience and views of OTT work and its potential effects on the therapeutic relationship in the context of the UK's Increasing Access to Psychological Therapy (IAPT) programme. Aim: This paper presents IAPT practitioners' experiences and views of OTT work and its potential effects on the therapeutic relationship. Methods: Completed questionnaires (exploring OTT versus F2F work) which were distributed to IAPT practitioners revealed a concern about the therapeutic relationship in OTT. To explore this further, nine in-depth semi-structured interviews with PWPs were conducted and the findings from this qualitative study are reported here. Results: Practitioners noted OTT use facilitated access and flexibility for service users; however, they expressed some concern over the adverse effect of OTT on the therapeutic relationship. Discussion: Although a working alliance was possible OTT, this research suggests the type of therapeutic relationship formed OTT in a "low contact-high volume" service such as IAPT needs to be better defined. By addressing this, dissonance which might arise between practitioner aims and the aims of IAPT can be reduced. This research also contributes to wider debates regarding mental health care and its provision in the UK. Implications for practice: This paper concludes that mental health services need to focus on what type of therapeutic relationship their practice facilitates and to offer transparency to service users. The findings suggest that telephone work in IAPT can accommodate a working alliance, but not other types of therapeutic relationship, which practitioners and service users hoped for. Services need to offer a more nuanced understanding of the concept of a therapeutic relationship and focus on what facilitates and inhibits deeper therapeutic closeness and connection.

1351-0126
Turner, J.
1a72c485-3800-4d8e-ad6b-129d714b64d7
Brown, J.C.
a4e89a80-d3b2-417e-8969-c103ddba409a
Carpenter, D.T.
936c407f-ce4b-40db-9a7c-6a932e639237
Turner, J.
1a72c485-3800-4d8e-ad6b-129d714b64d7
Brown, J.C.
a4e89a80-d3b2-417e-8969-c103ddba409a
Carpenter, D.T.
936c407f-ce4b-40db-9a7c-6a932e639237

Turner, J., Brown, J.C. and Carpenter, D.T. (2018) Telephone-based CBT and the therapeutic relationship: The views and experiences of IAPT practitioners in a low-intensity service. Journal of Psychiatric and Mental Health Nursing. (doi:10.1111/jpm.12440).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Accessible summary: What is known on the subject: There is a move towards the use of new ways of delivering mental health care, particularly via an increased use of telephone therapies. Although some studies have noted the advantages of telephone-delivered therapies (e.g., removing access barriers) and reported on equivalent therapeutic effects when compared to face-to-face, there are concerns about how telephone-based therapy adversely affects the therapeutic relationship. What the paper adds to existing knowledge: It contributes new knowledge regarding psychological practitioners' experience and views about using telephone-based therapies and how this affects the therapeutic relationship. What are the implications for practice: This paper provides data about the new practitioner workforce (IAPT Psychological Wellbeing Practitioners) and adds to a growing area of research regarding their clinical role. It has relevance for mental health nursing, because health services internationally and across the professions are exploring how telehealth can improve health care. This paper suggests that mental health services need to focus on what type of therapeutic relationship their practice facilitates and on offering transparency to service users. It concludes that telephone work in IAPT can accommodate a working alliance, but not other types of therapeutic relationship, which practitioners and service users hoped for. Services need to focus on what facilitates and inhibits deeper therapeutic closeness and connection. Introduction: Over-the-telephone (OTT)-delivered psychological therapies as an alternative method to face-to-face (F2F) are becoming more prevalent in mental health care. Research suggests a range of benefits of OTT use in therapy, but there are growing concerns about its consequences for the therapeutic relationship. This paper presents new knowledge regarding psychological practitioners' experience and views of OTT work and its potential effects on the therapeutic relationship in the context of the UK's Increasing Access to Psychological Therapy (IAPT) programme. Aim: This paper presents IAPT practitioners' experiences and views of OTT work and its potential effects on the therapeutic relationship. Methods: Completed questionnaires (exploring OTT versus F2F work) which were distributed to IAPT practitioners revealed a concern about the therapeutic relationship in OTT. To explore this further, nine in-depth semi-structured interviews with PWPs were conducted and the findings from this qualitative study are reported here. Results: Practitioners noted OTT use facilitated access and flexibility for service users; however, they expressed some concern over the adverse effect of OTT on the therapeutic relationship. Discussion: Although a working alliance was possible OTT, this research suggests the type of therapeutic relationship formed OTT in a "low contact-high volume" service such as IAPT needs to be better defined. By addressing this, dissonance which might arise between practitioner aims and the aims of IAPT can be reduced. This research also contributes to wider debates regarding mental health care and its provision in the UK. Implications for practice: This paper concludes that mental health services need to focus on what type of therapeutic relationship their practice facilitates and to offer transparency to service users. The findings suggest that telephone work in IAPT can accommodate a working alliance, but not other types of therapeutic relationship, which practitioners and service users hoped for. Services need to offer a more nuanced understanding of the concept of a therapeutic relationship and focus on what facilitates and inhibits deeper therapeutic closeness and connection.

Text
Title page - Telephone-based CBT and the therapeutic relationship - Accepted Manuscript
Download (14kB)
Text
Telephone-based CBT and the therapeutic relationship - no title page - Accepted Manuscript
Download (87kB)

More information

Accepted/In Press date: 2 November 2017
e-pub ahead of print date: 30 January 2018

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 413607
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/413607
ISSN: 1351-0126
PURE UUID: df42bad3-a1da-481e-8607-ce724273adfd
ORCID for J. Turner: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-7918-2294
ORCID for J.C. Brown: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-3383-8809

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 30 Aug 2017 16:31
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 05:41

Export record

Altmetrics

Contributors

Author: J. Turner ORCID iD
Author: J.C. Brown ORCID iD
Author: D.T. Carpenter

Download statistics

Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.

View more statistics

Atom RSS 1.0 RSS 2.0

Contact ePrints Soton: eprints@soton.ac.uk

ePrints Soton supports OAI 2.0 with a base URL of http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/cgi/oai2

This repository has been built using EPrints software, developed at the University of Southampton, but available to everyone to use.

We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue without changing your settings, we will assume that you are happy to receive cookies on the University of Southampton website.

×