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Support Staff's experiences of relationship formation and development in secure mental health services

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Support Staff's experiences of relationship formation and development in secure mental health services. / Evans, Kathryn; Murray, Craig; Jellicoe-Jones, Lorna et al.
In: British Journal of Forensic Practice, Vol. 14, No. 2, 2012, p. 104-115.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Evans K, Murray C, Jellicoe-Jones L, Smith I. Support Staff's experiences of relationship formation and development in secure mental health services. British Journal of Forensic Practice. 2012;14(2):104-115. doi: 10.1108/14636641211223666

Author

Evans, Kathryn ; Murray, Craig ; Jellicoe-Jones, Lorna et al. / Support Staff's experiences of relationship formation and development in secure mental health services. In: British Journal of Forensic Practice. 2012 ; Vol. 14, No. 2. pp. 104-115.

Bibtex

@article{3cebc593f598407ca0eb0a6d7ab0085a,
title = "Support Staff's experiences of relationship formation and development in secure mental health services",
abstract = "Purpose – Therapeutic relationships have been identified to be a key feature of staff working with patients within mental health settings and are widely referred to within research literature. The aim of this study is to explore the experiences of support staff within secure mental health services with regards to the formation and development of therapeutic relationships with patients.Design/methodology/approach – Ten participants were interviewed, all of whom were unqualified support staff based within secure establishments and working directly with patients.Findings – Interpretative phenomenological analysis of the data resulted in the identification of three themes: “Building bridges”: developing relationships with patients; “You do forget what they've done”: seeing the person and managing risk, and “Playing your cards close to our chest”: maintaining boundaries.Originality/value – The themes are discussed and evaluated in terms of relationship formation and development, barriers that may prevent such relationships from being built and the implications for clinical practice.",
keywords = "Medical practice, Mental health services , Patients , Qualitative , Relationships , Secure, Social care, Support staff",
author = "Kathryn Evans and Craig Murray and Lorna Jellicoe-Jones and Ian Smith",
year = "2012",
doi = "10.1108/14636641211223666",
language = "English",
volume = "14",
pages = "104--115",
journal = "British Journal of Forensic Practice",
issn = "1463-6646",
publisher = "Emerald Group Publishing Ltd.",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Support Staff's experiences of relationship formation and development in secure mental health services

AU - Evans, Kathryn

AU - Murray, Craig

AU - Jellicoe-Jones, Lorna

AU - Smith, Ian

PY - 2012

Y1 - 2012

N2 - Purpose – Therapeutic relationships have been identified to be a key feature of staff working with patients within mental health settings and are widely referred to within research literature. The aim of this study is to explore the experiences of support staff within secure mental health services with regards to the formation and development of therapeutic relationships with patients.Design/methodology/approach – Ten participants were interviewed, all of whom were unqualified support staff based within secure establishments and working directly with patients.Findings – Interpretative phenomenological analysis of the data resulted in the identification of three themes: “Building bridges”: developing relationships with patients; “You do forget what they've done”: seeing the person and managing risk, and “Playing your cards close to our chest”: maintaining boundaries.Originality/value – The themes are discussed and evaluated in terms of relationship formation and development, barriers that may prevent such relationships from being built and the implications for clinical practice.

AB - Purpose – Therapeutic relationships have been identified to be a key feature of staff working with patients within mental health settings and are widely referred to within research literature. The aim of this study is to explore the experiences of support staff within secure mental health services with regards to the formation and development of therapeutic relationships with patients.Design/methodology/approach – Ten participants were interviewed, all of whom were unqualified support staff based within secure establishments and working directly with patients.Findings – Interpretative phenomenological analysis of the data resulted in the identification of three themes: “Building bridges”: developing relationships with patients; “You do forget what they've done”: seeing the person and managing risk, and “Playing your cards close to our chest”: maintaining boundaries.Originality/value – The themes are discussed and evaluated in terms of relationship formation and development, barriers that may prevent such relationships from being built and the implications for clinical practice.

KW - Medical practice

KW - Mental health services

KW - Patients

KW - Qualitative

KW - Relationships

KW - Secure

KW - Social care

KW - Support staff

U2 - 10.1108/14636641211223666

DO - 10.1108/14636641211223666

M3 - Journal article

VL - 14

SP - 104

EP - 115

JO - British Journal of Forensic Practice

JF - British Journal of Forensic Practice

SN - 1463-6646

IS - 2

ER -