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Positive Behavioural Support for People with Learning Disabilities who present Challenging Behaviour

Sussex Partnership . NHS. Positive Behavioural Support for People with Learning Disabilities who present Challenging Behaviour. NHS Trust. Dr Peter Baker Consultant Clinical Psychologist/Honorary Senior Lecturer Sussex Partnership NHS Trust / Tizard Centre University of Kent.

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Positive Behavioural Support for People with Learning Disabilities who present Challenging Behaviour

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  1. Sussex Partnership NHS Positive Behavioural Support for People with Learning Disabilities who present Challenging Behaviour NHS Trust Dr Peter Baker Consultant Clinical Psychologist/Honorary Senior Lecturer Sussex Partnership NHS Trust / Tizard Centre University of Kent

  2. Why focus on challenging behaviour? • financial cost

  3. Need and capability in services for people with Intellectual Disabilities CAPABILITY OF SERVICE TO RESPOND INDIVIDUAL DEMAND ON SERVICE RANGE OF SERVICE PROVISION

  4. CAPABILITY OF SERVICE TO RESPOND INDIVIDUAL DEMAND ON SERVICE RANGE OF SERVICE PROVISION Creating capable environments

  5. Why focus on challenging behaviour? • financial cost • 31% of all people with learning disabilities placed out of area (DOH 2004)

  6. Why focus on challenging behaviour? • financial cost • human cost • abuse • inappropriate treatment • psychotropic medication • restraints/protective devices • degrading abusive psychological treatments • exclusion, deprivation & neglect • challenges the comprehensiveness of community care

  7. Positive Behavioural Support for People with Learning Disabilities who present Challenging Behaviour • Traditional Behavioural Approaches • Positive Behavioural Support • Influences • Definition • Characteristics • Evidence Base • Barriers to implementation

  8. Early Behavioural Model Behaviour

  9. Early treatment strategies • Differential reinforcement schedules: reinforcement of other behaviours or low rate of behaviour. • Extinction: non-presentation of a reinforcer. • Punishment: • type I application of an aversive stimulus • type II removal of a positive stimulus

  10. Punishment based strategies • Time out (Mace et al., 1986) • Visual screening (Lutzker, 1978) • Verbal reprimand (Schutz et al., 1978) • Response satiation (Realon &Konarski, 1993) • Overcorrection (Foxx & Azrin, 1973) • Response interruption & manual restraint (Azrin et al., 1988) • Required relaxation (Foxx & Bechtel, 1983) • Mechanical restraint & protective clothing (Dorsey et al, 1982) • Water mist (Dorsey et al., 1980) • Aromatic ammonia (Tanner & Zeiler, 1975) • Electric shock (Linscheid et al. 1990) • Aversive tastes (Hogg, 1982).

  11. Positive Behavioural Support • Human Rights Agenda • Deinstitutionalisation • Functional Assessment

  12. Antecedents Behaviour Consequences Functional Assessment

  13. Functional Assessment Challenging Behaviour

  14. Functional Assessment Environmental Factors Lack of choice Inadequate teaching strategies Minimal access to engaging materials Poorly selected daily routines etc Challenging Behaviour

  15. Functional Assessment Environmental Factors Lack of choice Inadequate teaching strategies Minimal access to engaging materials Poorly selected daily routines etc • Individual Factors • Behaviour repertoire deficits • Communication skills • Self-management skills • Social skills • Self-help skills • Physical health • Mental heath Challenging Behaviour

  16. Positive Behavioural Support • ‘…characterised by educational, proactive, and respectful interventions that involve teaching alternative skills to problem behaviours and changing problematic environments. It blends best practices in behavioural technology, educational methods, and ecological systems change with person-centered values in order to achieve outcomes that are meaningful to the individual and to his or her family’ Bambara et al (2004)

  17. Positive Behavioural Support • Is values led (in that the goal of behavioural strategies is to achieve community presence, enhanced choice, improved personal competence, greater respect and community participation, rather than simply behavioural change in isolation)

  18. Positive Behavioural Support • Is based on understanding of why, when and how behaviours happen and what purposes they serve (via the use of functional assessment)

  19. Positive Behavioural Support • Focuses on altering triggers for behaviour (in order to reduce the likelihood of the behaviour occurring) • Stimulus based interventions • Interspersal training • Expansion of choice • Curricular modification • Manipulation of setting events

  20. Positive Behavioural Support • Uses skill teaching as a central intervention (as deficiencies in adaptive skills are often key contributing factors in behavioural challenges) • Reinforcement based interventions • Functional Communication Training • Self Management

  21. Positive Behavioural Support • Uses changes in quality of life as both an intervention and outcome measure

  22. Positive Behavioural Support • Has a long-term focus (in that challenging behaviours are often of a long-term nature and successful interventions need to be maintained over prolonged periods)

  23. Positive Behavioural Support • Has a multi-component focus (reflecting that the fact that challenging behaviours are often multiply determined and also that users typically display multiple forms)

  24. Positive Behavioural Support • Reduces or eliminates the use of punishment approaches)

  25. Positive Behavioural Support • Includes both proactive strategies for changing behaviour and reactive strategies for managing behaviour when it occurs (because even the most effective change strategies may not completely eliminate risk behaviours from behavioural repertoires) Allen et al. (2005)

  26. The Time-Intensity Model of Aggressive IncidentsThe physiological, emotional & physical path Reactive Management Early Intervention Post-crisis Intervention Prevention Baseline Trigger Escalation Crisis Remorse & Baseline Recovery Kaplan & Wheeler (1983)

  27. Positive Behavioural Support • At the present time, PBS approaches would therefore appear to offer the most ethically stringent, evidence-based intervention option for people with learning disabilities and challenging needs. As such, PBS may be said to represent a socially valid intervention approach. Allen et al. (2005)

  28. Positive Behavioural Support • UK research shows that only 2-20% of people in need of such interventions actually receive any kind of behavioural support Oliver et al, 1987; Harris & Russell, 1987; Qureshi, 1994

  29. 50-60% of people with learning disabilities who challenge will be in receipt of psychotropic (typically anti-psychotic) medication Kiernan et al, 1995; Fleming et al, 1996

  30. Cochrane Review • ‘It is debatable whether use of antipsychotic medication for certain people with a learning disability and challenging behaviour is ethical outside of a randomised control trial Brylewski & Duggan, 1999

  31. 50% or more will be regularly restrained Emerson (2002)

  32. The Rhetoric Gap • What works best is used least and what works least is used most

  33. Possible Explanations • Lack of PBS trained staff • Cost • Prejudice

  34. Useful Reading • Allen et al (2005) Positive Behavioural Support: Definitions, Current Status and Future Directions. Learning Disability Review, 10,2,4-11. • Baker & Shepard (2005) The Rebranding of behavioural Approaches for People with Learning Disabilities & Challenging Behaviour. Learning Disability Review, 10,2,12-15.

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