
Doing remote systemic psychotherapy during a pandemic
Author(s) -
Sarah Helps
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
murmurations
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2516-0052
DOI - 10.28963/3.1.16
Subject(s) - context (archaeology) , dialogical self , psychotherapist , systemic therapy , psychology , thematic analysis , medicine , sociology , social psychology , qualitative research , history , social science , archaeology , cancer , breast cancer
This paper describes some findings from a rapid quality improvement project exploring clinician views about the delivery of remote systemic psychotherapy since the Covid-19 induced UK lockdown. Remote systemic psychotherapy is a practice response based on the need to remain physically distant from people and involves "meeting" via video link rather than in person. Written responses were gathered from early-adopter clinicians in one UK NHS trust, reflecting on their experiences of convening remote systemic psychotherapy sessions during March and April 2020. Overall, findings suggest that that remote systemic psychotherapy has been acceptable, effective and indeed welcomed by clinicians, within the pandemic context. Using a diffractive thematic analysis, four themes were constructed from clinician responses: practical and boundary issues need careful attention; the conversational flow of remote systemic psychotherapy sessions is different to that during in-person sessions; it is necessary to do things differently with words and bodies; the practice of creating meaningful dialogical communication when separated by screens is hard. Tentative practice recommendations are provided.