Causes of and Alternatives to Medication for Behaviours That Challenge in People with Intellectual Disabilities: Direct Care Providers’ Perspectives
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Participants
2.2. Conduct of the Focus Groups
2.3. Thematic Analysis
3. Results
4. Causes of BtC and How Understanding Them Can Help the Person with ID
“… when she was aggressive, and all she wanted was the curtains tied back. So, what someone else would think of that, you know it’s just, it’s just knowing.”(TR)
“I think it was literally a checklist of going through the whole thing with her. What could it be?”(SM)
“To be considered, the environment, how they feel in the environment, do they feel comfortable there?”(SS)
“… placement staff comes into it a lot on whether someone who is in the right placement.”(SM)
“Looking at the support plan. I mean had to rewrite her support plan with in the space of two weeks because she came labelled as being a very difficult person, very challenging. And naturally she was scared so her way of reacting was to fight. And the treatment assessment unit, she was in where I visited her, I was scared, so she must have been absolutely petrified.”(SM)
“I know for a fact people have been given anti-psychotic medication and actually it’s something physical that’s wrong. They’ve got toothache or they’ve got tummy ache or they don’t like the colour of their room. Something as simple as that, you know.”(SM)
“Um, but recently I had someone who was exhibiting behaviour but it was because he had chest infection and he was in pain but he couldn’t vocalise or tell someone I’m in pain. So, then staff log it as challenging behaviour, we need to talk to a psychiatrist.”(SM)
“I think often people are perceived as showing behaviours because of the condition, but actually its external factors and things in the environment or how they’re being supported. Um, the communication strategies that they’ve got.”(SM)
“Sometimes when you have challenging behaviours it’s not, it’s because someone wants something. It’s like you said. Yeah, they can’t communicate. They’re telling you they want something done or to do something. Communication. It’s always communication.”(TR)
Causes of BtC: Psychiatric Disorder
“… we’ve not really, we’ve never really given any sort of any specific training on psychosis or um, mine was just basically what I’ve read from you know carer plans and things like that. Um, but nothing, we’ve never ever attended any training on it.”(SS)
“When is it challenging behaviour and when is it psychosis, like you say? When is it that he’s hearing voices that’s telling him to do something and when is it when he’s doing it because of his own accord that he’s trying to communicate something or maybe an expression?”(SS)
“… how much of what they’re displaying is because of their mental illness or how much is that just because they’re trying to tell you something and you’re not able to understand it? As support staff, something I struggle with personally is knowing the difference.”(SS)
“… when he attacked staff but he didn’t hear voices, was that because of the psychosis or what that because he was having a, he was going through, he was going through that crisis.”(SS)
“… there was too much stimulation going on and that frustrated him so that he just lashed out. Because he’s also diagnosed with autism, there’s also that to consider as well. So that was due to the environment why he acted that way rather than it being psychosis because something told him to lash out.”(SS)
“He believes that he hears people, and he will say that they made me do it and things. ….is that because he’s saying that but actually is that just a past traumatic event that’s happened that then he’s remembering it?”(SS)
“… one of the GP I discussed it. But what do you expect? He’s got mental health problems. I’m talking about uh, educating people.”(SS)
5. Alternatives to Medication
5.1. Positive Behaviour Support (PBS)
“She got into crisis, was in crisis for months and regardless of whatever we were doing as a carer, as a care staff, and you know we brought in um, um positive behaviour support team. We were working really closely with them. We’ve got really, really robust PBS plans.”(SS)
“Part of our PBS was to give him space, so we gave him space.”(SS)
“So now that he’s come…..to our company, we said we were going to support him for positive behaviour support plan. …..we’ve seen a different person. He’s living a better life and that’s because of the service that he’s in that’s allowing him to live a better life.”(SS)
“You know, staff have PBS training, um, we work with behavioural support analysts that come in and collect data.”(SM)
“So that’s got big budget implications as well, because certainly similar examples where somebody has come out of long stay and they were on, you know, X amount of medication and all the support plans are saying three to one support in our community. ….but two years down the line that three to one support becomes one to one support because somebody’s taken a holistic approach to look at what do we need to do to support this person?”(TR)
5.2. Person-Centred Care Approach
“So our staff are very aware of the, um, other ways to help behaviours rather than prescribing medication.”(SM)
“Right now, there has been a lot of awareness that’s been created that people are using all those alternatives rather than medication.”(SM)
“… He’s more engaged. He’s more willing to communicate, willing to do things. Willing to participate because we are allowing him to do.”(SS)
5.3. Understanding the Person
“Um she’s not written up for anything, PRN at all so her behaviour are managed through um, staff really knowing her well.”(SS)
“So, if you don’t get to know what they are on about, then they will start to display challenging behaviour.”(SS)
“And you find out what they like. Nobody asked them. And show positive interest in what they like and you know to talk to them like they’re a real human being.”(SS)
“Instead of taking the baggage of their history with them. And it’s about stripping all of that out, and almost starting again and saying let’s look at this person as a whole now and get the right people involved.”(TR)
“And I believe that does have a lot to do with staff attitudes and behaviours. There are still some places where they blame the person and they are behaving because that’s the way they are, rather than then behaving in this way because someone has taken something from that person and they don’t know how to control it.”(SM)
5.4. Developing Relationships
“So, I stayed longer and now we’ve got a bond that when I’m on annual leave it’s a problem because we build that relationship and it got to a point that everything, she wants to do has to be with me.”(SS)
“… where he became heightened and within that he was able to scratch me which left a scar. From that incident, I didn’t change my approach towards him but obviously I was cautious because I’m not trying to get injured. But through that, because I hadn’t changed the way I was, and no more the next day and even after that, after that incident he saw me at breakfast, I’ll still engage with him, still carried on as normal. The relationship that we have now is that you know he, he trusts.”(SS)
“But now we got to a point where I can take her to any appointment, we can sit down. So, I, we build a bond.”(SS)
5.5. Collaborative Work
“With the prescribing, it’s also working with families and psychiatrists, because sometimes there’s a parent who is going to tell you I know my child and I think they need this, they have been using this.”(SM)
“If the families are involved or any other person involved in their circle of support, they will also attend the meeting. And it’s a best interest meeting as well.”(SM)
“… um, how you work as a team with those different professionals. We have a pharmacy check.”(SM)
“… before we go to that meeting, let’s have a discussion first so there’s no surprises. What are we going to say, what are we presenting to the clinical psychiatrist that doesn’t know this person as well as what we do. What does the family members got to say about it? So, we go into that meeting with that individual, if they’re open to input and they have the capacity to do that, to feed into that meeting so that it’s productive for that person.”(SM)
6. Discussion
6.1. Causes of BtC Including Physical and Psychiatric Disorders
6.2. Alternatives to Medicine through the Use of Person-Centred PBS Care Planning
6.3. Shared Decision Making
6.4. Strengths of the Study
6.5. Limitations of the Study
7. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Deb, S.; Limbu, B.; Unwin, G.L.; Weaver, T. Causes of and Alternatives to Medication for Behaviours That Challenge in People with Intellectual Disabilities: Direct Care Providers’ Perspectives. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2022, 19, 9988. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19169988
Deb S, Limbu B, Unwin GL, Weaver T. Causes of and Alternatives to Medication for Behaviours That Challenge in People with Intellectual Disabilities: Direct Care Providers’ Perspectives. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2022; 19(16):9988. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19169988
Chicago/Turabian StyleDeb, Shoumitro (Shoumi), Bharati Limbu, Gemma L. Unwin, and Tim Weaver. 2022. "Causes of and Alternatives to Medication for Behaviours That Challenge in People with Intellectual Disabilities: Direct Care Providers’ Perspectives" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 19, no. 16: 9988. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19169988
APA StyleDeb, S., Limbu, B., Unwin, G. L., & Weaver, T. (2022). Causes of and Alternatives to Medication for Behaviours That Challenge in People with Intellectual Disabilities: Direct Care Providers’ Perspectives. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 19(16), 9988. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19169988