Crisis Resolution and Home Treatment Teams: 'Challenges and Pitfalls'
Sunday, November 14, 2010 at 11:42PM
Steve in Crisis Resolution & Home Treatment, crisis resolution, home treatment

Note: The following is a checklist not a list to be read as an order of priorities

  1. Practice Development:
    • Reviewing policies, protocols and team procedures
    • Supporting practitioners in developing their practice
    • Team-based supervision
    • Role of team development facilitation of away-days
    • Examining links with other parts of the service making service integration real
    • On going training needs identified with team
    • Clarifying the meaning of 'fidelity to the model' implementing the 'essential ingredients' for ensuring good practice (not that there is only one way of doing it!)
  2. Staff retention & recruitment:
    • Ensuring staff maintain good practice
    • Motivation
    • Supporting staff morale
    • Providing appropriate leadership
    • Good induction & supportive supervision
  3. Clarifying the main sources of stress:
    • Volume of workload
    • Interpersonal issues
    • Inter-team issues
    • Conflicting management directives
    • Sustaining the formal & informal support structures to manage the above
  4. Time management:
    • A crucial asset that needs to be utilised wisely within the Team/Service
    • On-call activity aware of the potential for 'burn out' (N.B. You cannot become 'burned out' if you were not on fire in the first place)
  5. Effective team-working:
    • Good effective communication (room to listen room to talk)
    • Identifying good team players
    • 'Everyone's contribution is valuable'
  6. Workload:
    • Volume of referrals and re-referrals
    • Adjusting and adapting to the pace and unpredictability of the volume of work
  7. Maintaining flexibility & creativity:
    • The ability to make a rapid response
    • Being consistent through a team approach particularly in response to handling referrals
  8. Therapeutic risk-taking:
    • Risk assessment & evaluation
    • Risk management planning
    • Reasoned risk-taking decisions for positive gains
  9. Keeping accurate team records & statistics on what you do:
    • A good reminder of all the positive work the team has delivered
    • Keeping accurate local Trust statistics
    • Aware of the statistical requirements of the Department of Health
  10. Sustainability:
    • Keeping the momentum making the work interesting and challenging for staff
    • Sustaining the impact
  11. Conflict management:
    • Creating a consensus within the team
    • Managing the inter-team difficulties & stereotypes
  12. Promoting reflective practice:
    • Making better use of existing team meetings
    • Creating the priority reflecting on practice can enable more effective use of contact time
    • Supervision could support, encourage and enhance such reflection
  13. Managing change:
    • Extending the remit when the time is appropriate (e.g. opening up to services for older people, learning difficulties)
    • Embracing positive changes for the service and team
    • Creating the time and space to consolidate or reflect on good practices
  14. Forging good relationships with service user groups in the locality
  15. Strategies for service development:
    • Overlap with other services (e.g. assertive outreach teams, early intervention service, in-patient services, drug & alcohol services, specialist personality disorder services)
    • Systemic approaches to thinking Trust-wide, looking at forging key linkages with other parts of the service

Kirt Hunte ~ Team Manager
[South Camden Crisis Response & Resolution Team]
July 2006

Article originally appeared on Practice Based Evidence | A Mental Health Blog (http://practicebasedevidence.squarespace.com/).
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