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Early Intervention in Psychosis History, Model and Progress

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Early Intervention in Psychosis - History, Model and Progress. S.McGowan. Bradford & Airedale EIP Lead. Associate for EIP, NIMHE/CSIP. Part 1. The Early ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Early Intervention in Psychosis History, Model and Progress


1
Early Intervention in Psychosis - History, Model
and Progress
S.McGowan Bradford Airedale EIP Lead Associate
for EIP, NIMHE/CSIP
2
Part 1
  • The Early Intervention Years1986-2006

3
1986
  • Closure of the Asylums
  • Rehabilitation, behaviour modification and
    novel antipsychotics
  • Charitable e.g. NSF
  • Johnstone et al Treatment delay and outcome
  • EPPIC conceived in Australia

4
1987-1996
  • 1987 Birchwood et al Critical Period
    hypothesis
  • 1990 Care in the Community
  • 1991 Thorn/PSI
  • 1993 Romme Escher Accepting Voices
  • 1995 North Birmingham service launched
  • 1995 Fowler et al CBT for Psychosis

5
1997-99
  • PRIME, RAPP, TIPPS, OPUS, FETZ, Toronto, Calgary
    and Nova Scotia
  • Coleman Smith Victim to Victor (1997)
  • 1998 IEPA launched
  • 1998 Modernising MH services
  • 1999 MH National Service Framework
  • A small handful of EIP teams in the UK

6
2000
  • IRIS toolkit
  • A handful of EIP teams in the UK
  • NHS (national) plan 50 EIP teams by 2004

7
2001
  • A slack handful of EIP teams in the UK
  • Norman and Malla Delay and outcomes
  • Harrison et al Predictive value of early
    outcomes
  • PIG

8
2002
  • NICE schizophrenia guideline
  • CBT, ACT, low dose atypicals, family
    interventions
  • McGorry, Yung et al Reducing risk of progression
    to first episode psychosis
  • Rethink Reaching People Early
  • Newcastle Declaration

9
2003
  • Childrens NSF
  • Fidelity and Flexibility
  • Windows of Opportunity (SCMH)
  • EIP projects establishing across all parts of
    England
  • Pelosi (2003)

10
2004
  • EIP target reframed
  • NIMHE/Rethink mapping exercise
  • 8/81 well established teams
  • NIMHE/Rethink National EI Programme
  • Early Psychosis Declaration

11
2005
  • FERN, EPOS, National EDEN, AESOP, LEO and the
    London Network, PSYGRID
  • 40 teams (DH)
  • NSF 5 years on

12
2006
  • Recovery Plan
  • Cochrane Database
  • French Morrison ARMS
  • Cost Economic Analysis (DH/IOP)
  • 60/120 teams in UK
  • 3/14 in Yorkshire and Humber on target
  • Social movement?

13
Part 2
  • First Episode Psychosis

14
First Episode Psychosis
  • What is psychosis?
  • Incidence and occurrence
  • Clinical profile of first episode psychosis
  • 5 phases model
  • Theories on the cause of psychosis

15
What is Psychosis?
  • Psychosis or schizophrenia?
  • Thought disorder.
  • Traditionally associated with frequent relapse,
    chronic disability and poor social outcomes.
  • Very high risk of suicide.
  • Positive and negative symptoms

16
Positive and negative symptoms of psychosis
  • Hallucinatory voices.
  • Thought echo, insertion, withdrawal, broadcast.
  • Delusions
  • Paranoia
  • Delusions of passivity.
  • Loss of motivation
  • Flattened emotions
  • Lethargy
  • Anhedonia
  • Social withdrawal

17
Incidence and occurrence
  • Schizophrenia 1100
  • FEP 15 per 100,000
  • Age range
  • Gender differences
  • BME communities
  • Link with poverty

18
Profile of a typical first episode psychosis
client
  • Young
  • Black
  • Poor and/or disadvantaged
  • Treatment naïve
  • Incomplete social, emotional and educational
    development.
  • Substance misuser

19
The five phases model
20
DUP
21
Theories on the cause of psychosis
  • Biological
  • Psychological
  • Social
  • Spiritual
  • Individual

22
Stress-vulnerability Model(Zubin and Spring,
1977)

23
Part 3
  • Early Intervention

24
Early Intervention
  • The Concept of Early Intervention
  • The Critical Period
  • The Early Intervention paradigm
  • Core features of the EIP approach
  • Service configuration for EIP
  • Drivers for EIP
  • Where are we now

25
Classic view of psychosis
26
Progressive view of psychosis
  • The experience of psychosis is understandable
  • Psychosis is on a continuum with other human
    experiences
  • Problems resulting from stigma, social exclusion
    and poverty are of equal importance
  • Psychosis can be an enriching, as well as a
    frightening/confusing experience.
  • The person is an expert in their own care
  • A collaborative approach is required
  • The person will make a good recovery

27
The EIP concept
  • Early intervention in psychosis amounts to
    deciding if a psychotic disorder has commenced
    and then offering effective treatment at the
    earliest possible point and secondly ensuring
    that intervention constitutes best practice for
    this phase of illness, and is not just the
    translation of standard treatments developed for
    later stages and more persistently ill subgroups
    of the disorder.
  • (McGorry et al 1996).

28
Characteristics of EIP services
  • They accept that a persons diagnosis may be
    uncertain
  • They focus simultaneously on young people and
    their families
  • They offer treatment in the least restrictive and
    stigmatising setting
  • They emphasise the importance of access,
    flexibility and choice to increased service uptake

29
Characteristics of EIP services
  • They seek to make peoples lives as normal as
    possible while in contact with services
  • They aim to reduce the likelihood of trauma,
    depression and suicide
  • They place an emphasis on the wider social roles
    that service users play to maximise their social,
    educational and work opportunities
  • They aim to maximise an individuals potential for
    recovery during the critical period

30
Evidence
  • Research Findings
  • Delayed treatment has serious consequences
  • Early intervention can reduce long term morbidity

31
Evidence
  • International research
  • Patrick McGorry (Aus)
  • Tom McGlashan (USA)
  • Jan Johannessen (Norway)
  • Max Birchwood (UK)
  • Tony Morrison and Paul French (UK)

32
Status of existing evidence
  • Evidence for EIP PIG?
  • Evidence for TAU?
  • Evidence for EIP components?

33
The Critical Period Hypothesis.
  • Psychosis may be neurologically toxic.
  • Disability develops aggressively in the first 3
    years.
  • Early Intervention can reduce 3 yr relapse rates
    from 80 to lt20.
  • Social/personal functioning stabilises after 3-5
    years.
  • High suicide risk in critical period.

34
Early Intervention Paradigm.
Early Detection
Reduced Treatment Delays
Sustained Intervention Through The Critical
Period
Improved Outcomes
35
Key features of an Early Intervention Approach
  • Early detection, assessment and acceptance of
    diagnostic uncertainty
  • A full range of psychosocial interventions
    including CBT for psychosis
  • Relapse prevention
  • Best practice prescribing
  • A focus on young people and their cultural and
    developmental needs

36
Key features of an Early Intervention Approach
  • Assertive engagement
  • Support for families
  • Attention to co-morbidities such as substance
    misuse, anxiety, depression, and PTSD
  • Housing, income and practical support
  • Proper attention to education, employment,
    occupational and developmental needs
  • Age (etc.) appropriate acute care

37
Service fidelity
  • MDT and leadership
  • Accessibility
  • ACT
  • Age range
  • Caseloads, duration and capacity
  • Needs audit
  • DUP and Outcomes

38
Service configuration for EIP
  • PIG model
  • Hub and spoke
  • Dispersed/CMHT model
  • TIPS model
  • Issues concerning rural localities and small
    services

39
Drivers for Early Intervention
  • Research evidence
  • Innovators
  • Recovery movement
  • User/carer perspective
  • New treatments
  • Challenges to dominance of biological model
  • IEPA, IRIS, WHO, SCMH, NIMHE
  • DH

40
Where are we now?
  • Partial implementation of EIP
  • Reorganised NHS Procurement, provision and
    contestability
  • NSF 5, Louis Appleby, December 2004
  • Shift focus from specialist teams to the MH needs
    of the whole community.
  • Access and Choice.
  • The care of long-term conditions.

41
The NSF 5, Key Areas for further Action
  • In-patient care and environment
  • Services for people with dual diagnosis
  • Social Inclusion
  • Opposing stigma and discrimination
  • Better services for BME communities
  • Better care of long-term MH disorders in primary
    care
  • Increased availability of psychological therapies

42
Where next for EIP?
  • Service models and effectiveness
  • Comprehensive services
  • - Primary prevention
  • - Early detection
  • - Acute care
  • - Social recovery
  • EPD standards
  • Meaningful outcomes
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