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Gogledd Cymru-Peer Supervision in Psychotherapy (GC-PSP): What Are Lessons Learned After Two Years?

AIMS: Core trainees in psychiatry (CT) must attain competencies in at least two psychotherapy modalities before they are allowed to sit for the final Royal College of Psychiatrists’ membership exam. The common training approaches in the United Kingdom include regional training workshops, weekly Bali...

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Autores principales: Loo, Jiann Lin, Simiyon, Manjula, Sambhi, Rajvinder Singh
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cambridge University Press 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10345637/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/bjo.2023.144
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author Loo, Jiann Lin
Simiyon, Manjula
Sambhi, Rajvinder Singh
author_facet Loo, Jiann Lin
Simiyon, Manjula
Sambhi, Rajvinder Singh
author_sort Loo, Jiann Lin
collection PubMed
description AIMS: Core trainees in psychiatry (CT) must attain competencies in at least two psychotherapy modalities before they are allowed to sit for the final Royal College of Psychiatrists’ membership exam. The common training approaches in the United Kingdom include regional training workshops, weekly Balint groups, and access to individual supervision. Some CTs express their wish to have extra opportunities to practice psychotherapeutic skills and discuss cases in order to enrich their experience in learning psychotherapy. Therefore, the peer-led GC-PSP, i.e. Gogledd-Cymru (North Wales) Peer Supervision in Psychotherapy is conceptualised as a quality improvement project (QIP) for North Wales CTs. This article aims to illustrate the lessons learned after two years of GC-PSP. METHODS: A baseline survey was done to identify trainees’ ideas, concerns, and expectations in psychotherapy training and weekly one-hour supervision sessions were set up in May 2021. Sessions were facilitated by a speciality trainee (ST) in psychiatry with experience in psychotherapy. The agenda was determined on the day based on the specific issue or expectation brought up by trainees which could include: clarification of psychotherapeutic concepts and knowledge learned elsewhere, skill training through role-playing, case formulation of clinical encounters, discussions on suitable intervention, and any topics that were relevant to psychotherapy or combination. Subsequent written and verbal feedback was gathered. RESULTS: A total of 48 sessions had been conducted in two years, with 37.5% covering knowledge teaching, 45.83% skills training, and 39.58% case-based discussions. The top five modalities requested by CTs included: cognitive behavioural therapy (32.35%), psychodynamic therapy (20.59%) acceptance and commitment therapy (17.65%), motivational interview (11.76%), and behavioural activation (8.82%). The overall attendance had been inconsistent, ranging from no attendees and the highest of eight attendees comprising medical students, foundation year trainees, core psychiatry trainees, general practitioner specialist trainees, and specialist registrars. CONCLUSION: Although inconsistent attendance results in the repetition of discussions and topics, all trainees feel the extra sessions support their learning in psychotherapy in a safe space as they feel the small group discussion allows more active participation and they are able to learn from others on top of their individual supervision (positive Kirkpatrick level 1 reaction). All trainees wish to have this initiative continued and prefer a semi-structured rather than totally flexible agenda so that they can plan for their attendance, which can be a consideration for future implementation.
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spelling pubmed-103456372023-07-15 Gogledd Cymru-Peer Supervision in Psychotherapy (GC-PSP): What Are Lessons Learned After Two Years? Loo, Jiann Lin Simiyon, Manjula Sambhi, Rajvinder Singh BJPsych Open Education and Training AIMS: Core trainees in psychiatry (CT) must attain competencies in at least two psychotherapy modalities before they are allowed to sit for the final Royal College of Psychiatrists’ membership exam. The common training approaches in the United Kingdom include regional training workshops, weekly Balint groups, and access to individual supervision. Some CTs express their wish to have extra opportunities to practice psychotherapeutic skills and discuss cases in order to enrich their experience in learning psychotherapy. Therefore, the peer-led GC-PSP, i.e. Gogledd-Cymru (North Wales) Peer Supervision in Psychotherapy is conceptualised as a quality improvement project (QIP) for North Wales CTs. This article aims to illustrate the lessons learned after two years of GC-PSP. METHODS: A baseline survey was done to identify trainees’ ideas, concerns, and expectations in psychotherapy training and weekly one-hour supervision sessions were set up in May 2021. Sessions were facilitated by a speciality trainee (ST) in psychiatry with experience in psychotherapy. The agenda was determined on the day based on the specific issue or expectation brought up by trainees which could include: clarification of psychotherapeutic concepts and knowledge learned elsewhere, skill training through role-playing, case formulation of clinical encounters, discussions on suitable intervention, and any topics that were relevant to psychotherapy or combination. Subsequent written and verbal feedback was gathered. RESULTS: A total of 48 sessions had been conducted in two years, with 37.5% covering knowledge teaching, 45.83% skills training, and 39.58% case-based discussions. The top five modalities requested by CTs included: cognitive behavioural therapy (32.35%), psychodynamic therapy (20.59%) acceptance and commitment therapy (17.65%), motivational interview (11.76%), and behavioural activation (8.82%). The overall attendance had been inconsistent, ranging from no attendees and the highest of eight attendees comprising medical students, foundation year trainees, core psychiatry trainees, general practitioner specialist trainees, and specialist registrars. CONCLUSION: Although inconsistent attendance results in the repetition of discussions and topics, all trainees feel the extra sessions support their learning in psychotherapy in a safe space as they feel the small group discussion allows more active participation and they are able to learn from others on top of their individual supervision (positive Kirkpatrick level 1 reaction). All trainees wish to have this initiative continued and prefer a semi-structured rather than totally flexible agenda so that they can plan for their attendance, which can be a consideration for future implementation. Cambridge University Press 2023-07-07 /pmc/articles/PMC10345637/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/bjo.2023.144 Text en © The Author(s) 2023 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. This does not need to be placed under each abstract, just each page is fine.
spellingShingle Education and Training
Loo, Jiann Lin
Simiyon, Manjula
Sambhi, Rajvinder Singh
Gogledd Cymru-Peer Supervision in Psychotherapy (GC-PSP): What Are Lessons Learned After Two Years?
title Gogledd Cymru-Peer Supervision in Psychotherapy (GC-PSP): What Are Lessons Learned After Two Years?
title_full Gogledd Cymru-Peer Supervision in Psychotherapy (GC-PSP): What Are Lessons Learned After Two Years?
title_fullStr Gogledd Cymru-Peer Supervision in Psychotherapy (GC-PSP): What Are Lessons Learned After Two Years?
title_full_unstemmed Gogledd Cymru-Peer Supervision in Psychotherapy (GC-PSP): What Are Lessons Learned After Two Years?
title_short Gogledd Cymru-Peer Supervision in Psychotherapy (GC-PSP): What Are Lessons Learned After Two Years?
title_sort gogledd cymru-peer supervision in psychotherapy (gc-psp): what are lessons learned after two years?
topic Education and Training
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10345637/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/bjo.2023.144
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