MOT IVAT IONAL INT E RVIE WING: the art of advice giving, and - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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MOT IVAT IONAL INT E RVIE WING: the art of advice giving, and - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

MOT IVAT IONAL INT E RVIE WING: the art of advice giving, and asking questions to support behaviour change Kylie M cKenzie Clinical Psychologist Clinical M anager, Psychology Department, BHS Clinic a l Psyc holog ist & Clinic a l Ma


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the art of advice giving, and asking questions to support behaviour change

Kylie M cKenzie Clinical Psychologist Clinical M anager, Psychology Department, BHS

MOT IVAT IONAL INT E RVIE WING:

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Clinic a l Psyc holog ist & Clinic a l Ma na g e r (Psyc holog y), Ba lla r a t He a lth Se r vic e s PhD Ca ndida te Motiva tiona l Inte r vie wing a nd Multimor bidity MI T r a ine r T r a ining – Ohio, 2008 MI T r a ine r T r a ining

  • F
  • r

t Wa yne (2012)- suppor t tr a ine r

  • Kr

a kow (2013)- le a d tr a ine r

  • Atla nta (2014) – le a d tr

a ine r

  • Me lbour

ne (2015) – le a d tr a ine r T r a ining pr

  • vide d to:
  • - APS, RACGP, Hospita ls, he a lth pr
  • fe ssiona ls

Pa r e nt, c r ic ke t sc or e r , tr ia thlon/ fun r un pa r tic ipa nt, GP’s nig htma r e

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Overview

  • What is MI?
  • Why is it helpful in health care?
  • SKILL: Open questions
  • SKILL: Advice giving
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Motivational Interviewing

“ … way of helping people find their own motivation for change…”

(Bill Miller, 2010)

Motivational Interviewing is a form of collaborative conversation for strengthening a person's own motivation and commitment to change.

(Miller & Rollnick, 2013)

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Spirit of Motivational Interviewing Partnership

Wo rk to ge the r as e quals.

Acceptance

Ho no ur the pe rso n’s wo rth and auto no my with accurate e mpathy and affirmatio n.

Compassion

Wo rk in the pe rso n’s inte re st.

Evocation

Draw o ut what alre ady lie s within the pe rso n.

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On a sc a le fro m 0-10, whe re 0 is no t a t a ll impo rta nt, a nd 10 is ve ry impo rta nt, ho w impo rta nt is it to yo u to … ? Wha t ma ke s yo u a … . a nd no t a (lo we r # )? Wha t wo uld it ta ke to inc re a se the impo rta nc e to a (hig he r # )? On a sc a le fro m 0-10, whe re 0 is no t a t a ll c o nfide nt, a nd 10 is ve ry c o nfide nt, ho w c o nfide nt a re yo u tha t yo u c a n… ? Wha t ma ke s yo u a … . a nd no t a (lo we r # )? Wha t wo uld it ta ke to lift yo ur c o nfide nc e to a (hig he r # )?

IMPORT ANCE CONF IDE NCE

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M I in healthcare… the research

  • Emerging evidence-base in health care settings, health

promotion and chronic disease prevention

(Britt, et al., 2004; Resnicow et al, 2005; Rollnick, M iller & Butler, 2007).

  • Recent systematic review and metaanalysis of 48 studies in

medical care settings showed a statistically significant, modest advantage for M I for a wide range of behavioral issues in health care, including body weight, sedentary behaviour, self- monitoring, alcohol and tobacco use (Lundahl et al., 2013)

  • Outperforms traditional advice giving (Rubak, et al, 2005).
  • Core skill for the health workforce (Battersby & Lawn, 2009).
  • Workshop training alone is not sufficient to integrate skills into

routine clinical practice (Battersby & Lawn, 2009; M iller & M ount, 2001;

M iller et al., 2004; M itcheson et al., 2009)

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MUL TIMORBIDITY:

More than one long-term condition

(Violan et al 2014)

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Prevalence of multimorbidity

USA: 45.2%

Ornstein et al 2013 Primary Care

Scotland: 23.2%

Barnett et al 2012 Primary Care

Australia: 37.1%

Britt et al 2008 Primary Care

China: >10%

Wang et al 2014 General Population

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MUL TIMORBIDITY is associated with:

Referral to specialist care Health costs Use of services

Treatment burden

Poorer physical

  • utcomes

(van Oostrom et al. 2014, Teljeur et al 2013, and France et al 2012)

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Multimorbidity is common and increases the cost and complexity

  • f health care.
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Clinicians working with multimorbid patients have little guidance…

  • Proliferation of single disease guidelines
  • Contraindicated recommendations

(Barnett et al, 2012, Bayliss, et al. 2007)

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  • Patient-centred
  • Focused on health behaviour change
  • Address lifestyle factors
  • Integrated into routine care
  • Focused on communication skills

Recommendations for multimorbidity intervention…

(WHO 2005, Smith et al 2013, Fortin et al 2014, Lewis et al 2016)

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Can motivational interviewing

  • ffer a foundation

for multimorbidity intervention?

(Fortin et al, 2014, Lewis et al,2016)

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McKenzie, Pierce and Gunn (2015)

  • by lifestyle factors
  • by clinician type

SYSTEMATIC REVIEW

Potential of motivational interviewing to address the lifestyle factors relevant to multimorbidity

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SYSTEMATIC REVIEW

12

MOTIVATIONAL INTERVIEW*

meta-analysis

SYSTEMATIC REVIEW

STUDIES & PARTICIPANTS PER REVIEW

2003

11-119 STUDIES

2,76 7–17,173 PARTICIPANTS

to

2013

ARTICLES

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1 6 2 2 1

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1 1 3 1 6

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Disease

U n i q u e r e f e r e n c e s b y d i se a se t y p e

ASTH MA 1

CANCER 3

COPD 1

epilepsy 1

HIV 1 5

HYPERLIPIDAEMIA 2

Hypertension 4

Multiple S cleros is 1

PAIN 2

psychiatric illness 16

STROKE 2

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d=0.47 – 0.51, low power d=0.18* -0.26* d=0.11 OR=1.45* d=0.18* -0.77* , OR=1.55*

/

d=0.07- d=0.78* g=0.14-d=0.72*

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MI may be helpful across a range of single disease and lifestyle factors, but …

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… who can deliver it? 

What type of clinician?

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CLINICIAN EFFECT

No effect Greater effect: mental health, medical, higher quals No report as to clinician effect

5 / 1 2 4 / 1 2 3 / 1 2

11

REPORTED MIXED PROVIDER TYPES

REVIEWS

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What do we conclude about MI?

mostly small to medium effect sizes better than no intervention as good as other interventions broad applicability, may be additive to standard care has been used by a variety of clinicians

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Where do we start?

  • What outcomes do you want for your

patients?

  • What are some of the frustrations of

working with patients, especially those with complex presentations or multimorbidity?

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The Righting Reflex: what triggers yours?

http://vimeo.com/18469694

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Change Talk

“ … the good lines… ” Any speech that favours movement towards change.

“ So you’re telling me I should get the patients to make the arguments for change.”

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Preparatory Change Talk

I want/wish/prefer to, like I can, could, able, possible If…then…, specific arguments for change Important, have to, must, got to

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Implementing Change Talk (CAT)

intention, decision, readiness “I will, intend to, am going to…”

reporting recent specific action toward change “I have done… ” ready, prepared, willing “I am ready to, willing to… ”

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Clinician Communication

Client’s Change Talk:

Desire Ability Reasons Need Commitment CHANGE

References: Amrhein, P. C., Miller, W. R., Yahne, C., Knupsky, A., & Hochstein, D. (2004). Strength of client commitment language improves with therapist training in motivational interviewing. Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research, 28(5), 74A. Amrhein, P. C., Miller, W. R., Yahne, C. E., Palmer, M., & Fulcher, L. (2003). Client commitment language during motivational interviewing predicts drug use outcomes. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 71, 862–878.

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How do I guide a conversation in the direction of change?

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Ask more ope n tha n c lose d que stions

How… ? What… ? Why… ? T e ll me about…

VS

Whic h… ? Whe n… ? Can you… ? Do you… ?

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What wor r ie s you about ope n que stions?

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OPEN QUESTION STEM CHANGE TALK BEHAVIOUR OPEN QUESTION TO ELICIT PATIENT’S PRIORITIES AND M OTIVATION TO CHANGE

What do you want to be able to do? Tell me about what you’ve done in the past that ’s helped when you’ve been down? How can you build on the walking that you do now? Why is it important to you to be healthier? What can you do to get to the gym? What ideas do you have to increase your family’s veggie intake?

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E xe rc ise : Que stions with Purpose

What am I he ar ing?

Sustain Talk

Statements that support the status quo:

  • I don’t want to…
  • I don’t see how I could

change

  • I don’t need to..
  • I’m not ready

Change Talk:

Statements that support change:

  • I want to…
  • I could change
  • I need to..
  • I’m ready to.

Discord

Interpersonal difficulties between helper and client:

  • defensiveness
  • arguing
  • interrupting
  • disengaging
  • challenging

RESISTANCE DECONSTRUCTED Facts and Info

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What do I do with change talk when I hear it?

  • Elaborate
  • Affirm
  • Reflect
  • Summarise
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When, in MI, do you give information and advice?

With permission

  • 1. The person asks for advice.
  • 2. You ask permission to give advice.
  • 3. You qualify your advice to emphasise

autonomy.

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licit: what patient knows rovide: information Confirm, adjust, provide options licit: what patient thinks, feels, might do

Give n all we ’ ve disc usse d, what are yo ur tho ug hts no w? What mig ht yo u do ... ? ”

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What might be he lpful?

Something new that I am going to focus

  • n in my clinical work is…

I am interested in learning more about…

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References and Resources

  • Motivational Interviewing (Miller & Rollnick, 2013)
  • Motivational Interviewing in Health Care (Rollnick,

Miller, & Butler, 2008)

  • Motivational Interviewing in the Treatment of

Psychological Problems (Arkowitz, Westra, Miller, & Rollnick, 2007) (see Guilford Press for introductory chapters)

  • http://www.motivationalinterviewing.org
  • http://www.stephenrollnick.com