1st Edition

Open Dialogue for Psychosis Organising Mental Health Services to Prioritise Dialogue, Relationship and Meaning

Edited By Nick Putman, Brian Martindale Copyright 2021
    314 Pages 2 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    314 Pages 2 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    This highly readable book provides a comprehensive examination of the use of Open Dialogue as a treatment for psychosis. It presents the basic principles and practice of Open Dialogue, explains the training needed to practice and explores how it is being developed internationally.

    Open Dialogue for Psychosis includes first-hand accounts of the process by people receiving services due to having psychotic experiences, their family members and professionals who work with them. It explains how aspects of Open Dialogue have been introduced in services around the world, its overlap with and differentiation from other psychological approaches and its potential integration with biological and pharmacological considerations. The book concludes with a substantive section on the research available and its limitations.

    Open Dialogue for Psychosis will be a key text for clinicians and administrators interested in this unique approach, particularly those who recognise that services need to change for the better and are seeking guidance on how this can be achieved. It will also be suitable for people who have experienced psychosis and members of their families and networks.

    See the below link to the dedicated book webpage:

    https://opendialogueforpsychosis.com/

    Prologue

    NICK PUTMAN (UK)

    SECTION 1: Introducing Open Dialogue

    1. What is Open Dialogue?

    NICK PUTMAN (UK)

    2. The historical development of Open Dialogue in Western Lapland

    BIRGITTA ALAKARE AND JAAKKO SEIKKULA (FINLAND)

    3. Psychosis is not an illness but a response to extreme stress – dialogue is a cure for it

    JAAKKO SEIKKULA (FINLAND)

    SECTION 2: Personal, family and professional experiences of Open Dialogue

    Editors’ introduction

    4. Our son is ‘coming back’: a dialogical-network approach to a young adult diagnosed with schizoaffective disorder

    MARY OLSON (USA)

    5. The experience of a family Open Dialogue approach – a sister and practitioner refl ect one year after discharge from services

    KIRSTY LEE AND YASMIN ISHAQ (UK)

    6. Psychotic behaviour: symptom of a (brain) disease or an attempt at adjustment?

    ROLF MICHELS, KERSTIN RICKERT, BIRGIT MOLITOR, JOACHIM SCHEELE AND PETRA WAGNER (GERMANY)

    7. The stress of tolerating uncertainty: emails can help!

    GIUSEPPE TIBALDI AND VERONICA (ITALY)

    8. Rooted in love – a journey through a dark time with a teenager and his family

    ZELDA ALPERN, SULLY SWEARINGEN, CATHY SWEARINGEN AND MARC WERNER-GAVRIN (USA)

    9. Open Dialogue as a point of entry to reconnect to the real world of relationships

    ANNIE HODGKINS, JOSH AND DEBRA (UK)

    10. Permission to speak!

    REIULF Ø . RUUD AND PIA BIRGITTE JESSEN (NORWAY)

    SECTION 3: Open Dialogue training, including refl ections from trainers and participants and adaptations in different settings

    Editors’ introduction

    11. Introducing Open Dialogue training

    NICK PUTMAN (UK)

    12. Reflections on the dialogical design of the three/ four-year Open Dialogue training

    JORMA AHONEN (FINLAND)

    13. Reflections on participating in the three-year Open Dialogue training

    OLGA RUNCIMAN (DENMARK)

    14. Thirteen years of running Open Dialogue foundation training programmes

    VOLKMAR ADERHOLD AND PETRA HOHN (GERMANY, SWEDEN)

    15. Reflections from participants on an Open Dialogue foundation training

    ALAN HENDRY, ANA MARÍA CORREDOR AND MIKE ROTH (UK)

    16. Being ‘in rhythm’ with participants during dialogical training

    WERNER SCHÜTZE (GERMANY)

    17. Personal refl ections on the Italian Open Dialogue training

    RAFFAELLA POCOBELLO (ITALY)

    18. UK NHS Peer- supported Open Dialogue training

    RUSSELL RAZZAQUE, MARK HOPFENBECK AND VAL JACKSON (UK, NORWAY)

    SECTION 4: Introducing Open Dialogue in different contexts in various countries

    Editors’ introduction

    19. Open Dialogue in Germany – opportunities and challenges

    SEBASTIAN VON PETER, ANJA LEHMANN, NILS GREVE, KATRIN HERDER AND THOMAS FLOETH (GERMANY)

    20. Open Dialogue in the Italian national health service: a view from the borderland

    MARCELLO MACARIO, ANNA GASTALDI AND LUIGI ROBERTO PEZZANO (ITALY)

    21. The challenges of introducing Open Dialogue into a UK Early Intervention in Psychosis Service

    DARREN BAKER AND SIMONA CALZAVARA (UK)

    22. Two Open Dialogue programmes at Advocates, Framingham, Massachusetts, USA

    CHRISTOPHER GORDON, BRENDA MIELE SOARES AND AMY MORGAN (USA)

    23. Implementing Open Dialogue- informed practices at the counselling service of Addison County in Vermont, USA

    ALEXANDER SMITH (USA)

    24. Migrant families: experiences using the Open Dialogue approach

    MARIA SUNDVALL AND MARGIT WALLSTEN (SWEDEN)

    25. Peer workers in Open Dialogue

    LESLIE NELSON, HELENE BRÄNDLI AND EDWARD ALTWIES (USA, SWITZERLAND)

    26. The challenge of developing Open Dialogue in hospital settings

    WERNER SCHÜTZE (GERMANY)

    27. Open Dialogue behind ‘closed doors’ (a locked ward)

    BENGT KARLSSON, RITVA JACOBSEN AND JORUNN SØRGÅRD (NORWAY)

    SECTION 5: Opening the dialogue with other approaches

    Editors’ introduction

    28. Working with Open Dialogue within the neurobiological model – challenges and opportunities

    SANDRA STEINGARD (USA)

    29. Systemic therapy and Open Dialogue

    FRANK BURBACH (UK)

    30. Open Dialogue and cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT)

    FRANK BURBACH (UK)

    31. Extending need- adapted interventions in a contemporary Open Dialogue service in Helsinki

    NIKLAS GRANÖ , OLLI NIEMI, LAURA SALMIJÄRVI, MARJA PIRINEN, JUKKA ANTO, JORMA OKSANEN, TUULA KIESEPPÄ , PÄIVI SOININEN AND JUKKA AALTONEN (FINLAND)

    32. Interfamily therapy: application of dialogical practices in the multifamily group

    JAVIER SEMPERE AND CLAUDIO FUENZALIDA (SPAIN)

    33. Psychoanalysis and Open Dialogue

    BRIAN MARTINDALE (UK)

    34. The affinities between therapeutic communities and Open Dialogue

    NICK PUTMAN (UK)

    35. Open Dialogue and music therapy

    MARIO EUGSTER (UK)

    SECTION 6: Research into Open Dialogue

    Editors’ introduction

    36. Research into the need- adapted treatment approach to psychosis

    BRIAN MARTINDALE (UK)

    37. Research from Western Lapland of Open Dialogue for psychosis

    BRIAN MARTINDALE (UK)

    38. Open Dialogue adherence and fidelity tools

    MARY OLSON (USA)

    39. The UK ODDESSI trial

    RUSSELL RAZZAQUE (UK)

    40. Research into a Peer-supported Open Dialogue service in the UK

    JAMES OSBORNE (UK)

    41. Open Dialogue for psychosis in five Danish municipalities – results and experiences

    METT MARRI LÆGSGAARD (DENMARK)

    42. Researching whether Finnish Open Dialogue transfers to the Italian mental health system

    RAFFAELLA POCOBELLO (ITALY)

    43. A feasibility study of adapting Open Dialogue to the US health context: the Collaborative Pathway at Advocates, Massachusetts, USA

    CHRISTOPHER GORDON (USA)

    44. The Parachute Project NYC – the project and outcomes of the Brooklyn mobile team

    BRIAN MARTINDALE AND EDWARD ALTWIES (UK, USA)

    45. Open Dialogue research in Ireland

    ISEULT TWAMLEY (IRELAND)

    46. Anthropological research into Open Dialogue in Berlin

    LAUREN CUBELLIS (GERMANY)

    47. Openness and authenticity in the Open Dialogue approach

    LAURA GALBUSERA AND MIRIAM KYSELO (GERMANY)

    Epilogue

    BRIAN MARTINDALE (UK)

    Biography

    Nick Putman is a psychotherapist and practitioner, supervisor and trainer in Open Dialogue. He is the founder of Open Dialogue UK.

    Brian Martindale is a psychiatrist and psychoanalyst based in the UK. He is past Chair of the International Society for Psychological and Social Approaches to Psychosis (ISPS) and co-founder of the European Federation of Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy (EFPP).

    "This is a much needed, timely book that provides the first account of the international implementation and adaptation of the Open Dialogue approach to promoting recovery among persons experiencing psychosis. Spanning theoretical, training, and research perspectives - with the welcome addition of first person accounts from providers, persons in recovery, and their loved ones - this comprehensive introduction is sure to hasten the spread of the first radically new approach to psychosis the field has seen in decades." – Professor Larry Davidson, Yale University, USA

    "Open Dialogue is one of the most optimistic developments in the care of people with mental illness in the last three decades… This book is vital in explaining what it is, what training is necessary, the experience of service users and the key research related to this approach. I recommend it to all mental health practitioners and those with lived experience." – Adrian James, President, Royal College of Psychiatrists, UK

    "This book is the most complete description available of Open Dialogue… The authors convincingly illustrate that Open Dialogue should play an essential role in any treatment for psychosis and the organisation of services. I heartily recommend this book." - Ludi Van Bouwel, Chair, ISPS

    "With this book Putman and Martindale aimed to create a comprehensive and thoughtful exploration of the Open Dialogue approach to psychosis and its wider application within mental health services - and they have delivered spectacularly... For the Family Therapy field, this book will make its mark as an excellent resource for practitioners, researchers, clinical training programmes and service commissioners." – Monica Whyte, President, EFTA