Integration of Nidotherapy Into the Management of Mental Illness and Antisocial Personality: a Qualitative Study
Sarah-Jane Spencer,
Deborah Rutter and
Peter Tyrer
Additional contact information
Sarah-Jane Spencer: West London Mental Health NHS Trust, London, UK, sarah-jane.spencer@nhs.net
Deborah Rutter: Department of Psychological Medicine, Imperial College (Charing Cross Campus), London, UK
Peter Tyrer: Department of Psychological Medicine, Imperial College (Charing Cross Campus), London, UK
International Journal of Social Psychiatry, 2010, vol. 56, issue 1, 50-59
Abstract:
Background: Nidotherapy is a new treatment aimed at the systematic alteration of the environment in order to make a better fit for a person with chronic mental health difficulties. Preliminary work has suggested that it might have particular value in those with antisocial personality disorder. Aims: To examine the views of patients with mental illness combined with antisocial personality features about the acceptability and value of nidotherapy when given over a six-month period as an adjunct to conventional care. Method: A two-phase study was used. First, a set of key informant interviews was carried out to determine how nidotherapy was perceived in order to identify potentially important themes. Specific topic guides derived from these themes were drawn up for use in the second stage of the study, involving semi-structured interviews with a sample of patients, members of their care teams and their nidotherapists. Nine patients were purposively selected to ensure that a range of demographic and clinical factors was covered. Results: Analysis of the results showed that the common threads of the perception of nidotherapy were that it was both feasible and acceptable to those with antisocial personality disturbance and that the nidotherapists were felt to be valuable allies in what was otherwise seen as a hostile world. It was also seen to improve adherence to other therapies. It was much less valuable when the staff on the clinical teams were not able to embrace the collaborative approach necessary with this therapy. Conclusion: Nidotherapy is an acceptable form of management and was perceived in this study to have largely positive results for both patients and clinical teams as it offered intervention beyond that provided by conventional teams. It was felt to require more than six months of treatment and was less successful when there was inadequate communication between the nidotherapist and clinical teams and when the philosophy of care was not congruent.
Date: 2010
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:sae:socpsy:v:56:y:2010:i:1:p:50-59
DOI: 10.1177/0020764008095934
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