Development and Structures of Trialogue for Bipolar Disorders in Germany and Guidelines of the German Society for Bipolar Disorders
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Types of Trialogue
3. Trialogue Guidelines and their Significance for Therapeutic Trialogue
Guideline Recommendations on Trialogue in Germany
4. Therapeutic Trialogue in Psychiatric Treatment: Are There Limits?
5. Limitations
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Trialogue for Patients, Relatives, and Professionals (Statements) |
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Special attention should be given to the trialogue aspect in professional training and advanced education. The direct participation of engaged patients, relatives, and other caregivers should be a matter of course. |
In the context of treating bipolar disorder, trialogue cooperation is particularly important. It is an essential prerequisite for open, trusting, and successful cooperation between patients, relatives, and other caregivers as well as treatment providers, on the basis of which common interests and treatment goals can be pursued. Results of trialogue cooperation are not limited to the individual therapeutic relationship, but have an impact on the appropriate representation of the interests of patients and relatives in public and politics, on the promotion of quality and on the further development of care structures. Participation in trialogue forums can benefit disease management. |
Recommendations for Participatory Decision Making (CCP *) |
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Beyond the legally prescribed duty to inform the patient, patients should be involved in the decision-making process regarding treatment strategies and desired effect. Possible risks and side effects also need to be addressed. This participative decision-making process is to be made with the practitioner, patient, and, if agreed, also relatives. The fact that the patient is well informed is the basis for cooperative decision-making and a prerequisite for health-promoting behavior. People with insufficient knowledge of German should be able to receive this information in their native language. |
Written treatment agreements can help prevent critical phases and reduce the risk of coercion. Whether this is successful strongly depends on the quality of the agreement and the communication process. |
Knowledge Transfer in Trialogue Work, Self-Management, and Self-Help |
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Appropriate information transfer influences the willingness of patients to cooperate and adhere to treatment; it also impacts self-confidence and quality of life. A friendly way of interacting with one another is crucial. (Statement) |
Patients and relatives should be made aware of available support systems, be it counselors, self-help manuals, training programs (e.g., communication training, self-management training), specific literature references, and should be encouraged to participate in current activities. (CCP *) |
Counselors and self-help manuals should be independent of commercial interests, easy to understand, and of high quality. They do not replace psycho-education, but supplement it quite well. (Statement) |
Self-management should be continuously bolstered in the therapeutic process. In this process, peer support can effectively complement self-help. (CCP *) |
Patients and their relatives as well as other caregivers should be encouraged to attend self-help groups. The concrete naming of the (nearest) contact points (e.g., NAKOS **, DGBS, other associations of relatives) is helpful. Self-help groups should receive more attention as a therapeutic option. In addition to direct integration into in-patient therapeutic services, continuous cooperation with regional groups or a contact point for self-help groups is also conceivable. In this way, self-help groups can be used as an element of aftercare to stabilize the success of treatment. (CCP *) |
Self-help groups should be supported by professionals by: • tangible encouragement to patients and their relatives to attend self-help groups • providing rooms in social institutions, churches, psychiatric clinics/offices • promoting offers of local self-help in notices, flyers, posters, etc. in social institutions, churches, psychiatric practices, hospitals, and offices • consciously designed transitions from professional to self-help groups • offers of ongoing counseling and support in crises (CCP *) |
Peer Support and Family Support |
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Bipolar patients should be offered peer support to promote self-efficacy, self-management, adherence, or participation. (Recommendation grade B) |
Family members should also be encouraged to provide peer support to reduce their burden and improve their quality of life. (CCP *) |
Relatives should be involved from the beginning and throughout all phases of the treatment of the patient. (CCP *) |
If the patient or family member refuses to be involved, efforts should be made to strengthen the relationship of trust between the patient and family member in the interest of ensuring long-term treatment success. (CCP *) |
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Schaefer, M.; Selo, M.; Stehlin, N.; Wagenblast, B.; Bock, T. Development and Structures of Trialogue for Bipolar Disorders in Germany and Guidelines of the German Society for Bipolar Disorders. Medicina 2021, 57, 1213. https://doi.org/10.3390/medicina57111213
Schaefer M, Selo M, Stehlin N, Wagenblast B, Bock T. Development and Structures of Trialogue for Bipolar Disorders in Germany and Guidelines of the German Society for Bipolar Disorders. Medicina. 2021; 57(11):1213. https://doi.org/10.3390/medicina57111213
Chicago/Turabian StyleSchaefer, Martin, Marylou Selo, Nadja Stehlin, Barbara Wagenblast, and Thomas Bock. 2021. "Development and Structures of Trialogue for Bipolar Disorders in Germany and Guidelines of the German Society for Bipolar Disorders" Medicina 57, no. 11: 1213. https://doi.org/10.3390/medicina57111213
APA StyleSchaefer, M., Selo, M., Stehlin, N., Wagenblast, B., & Bock, T. (2021). Development and Structures of Trialogue for Bipolar Disorders in Germany and Guidelines of the German Society for Bipolar Disorders. Medicina, 57(11), 1213. https://doi.org/10.3390/medicina57111213