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Dive into the research topics where Dickon Bevington is active.

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Featured researches published by Dickon Bevington.


Attachment & Human Development | 2015

Applying attachment theory to effective practice with hard-to-reach youth: the AMBIT approach

Dickon Bevington; Peter Fuggle; Peter Fonagy

Adolescent Mentalization-Based Integrative Treatment (AMBIT) is a developing approach to working with “hard-to-reach” youth burdened with multiple co-occurring morbidities. This article reviews the core features of AMBIT, exploring applications of attachment theory to understand what makes young people “hard to reach,” and provide routes toward increased security in their attachment to a worker. Using the theory of the pedagogical stance and epistemic (“pertaining to knowledge”) trust, we show how it is the therapeutic worker’s accurate mentalizing of the adolescent that creates conditions for new learning, including the establishment of alternative (more secure) internal working models of helping relationships. This justifies an individual keyworker model focused on maintaining a mentalizing stance toward the adolescent, but simultaneously emphasizing the critical need for such keyworkers to remain well connected to their wider team, avoiding activation of their own attachment behaviors. We consider the role of AMBIT in developing a shared team culture (shared experiences, shared language, shared meanings), toward creating systemic contexts supportive of such relationships. We describe how team training may enhance the team’s ability to serve as a secure base for keyworkers, and describe an innovative approach to treatment manualization, using a wiki format as one way of supporting this process.


Clinical Child Psychology and Psychiatry | 2015

The Adolescent Mentalization-based Integrative Treatment (AMBIT) approach to outcome evaluation and manualization: adopting a learning organization approach

Peter Fuggle; Dickon Bevington; Liz Cracknell; James Hanley; Suzanne Hare; John Lincoln; Garry Richardson; Nina Stevens; Heather Tovey; Sally Zlotowitz

AMBIT (Adolescent Mentalization-Based Integrative Treatment) is a developing team approach to working with hard-to-reach adolescents. The approach applies the principle of mentalization to relationships with clients, team relationships and working across agencies. It places a high priority on the need for locally developed evidence-based practice, and proposes that outcome evaluation needs to be explicitly linked with processes of team learning using a learning organization framework. A number of innovative methods of team learning are incorporated into the AMBIT approach, particularly a system of web-based wiki-formatted AMBIT manuals individualized for each participating team. The paper describes early development work of the model and illustrates ways of establishing explicit links between outcome evaluation, team learning and manualization by describing these methods as applied to two AMBIT-trained teams; one team working with young people on the edge of care (AMASS — the Adolescent Multi-Agency Support Service) and another working with substance use (CASUS – Child and Adolescent Substance Use Service in Cambridgeshire). Measurement of the primary outcomes for each team (which were generally very positive) facilitated team learning and adaptations of methods of practice that were consolidated through manualization.


Mental Health Review Journal | 2016

The AMBIT approach: working with hard to reach youth

Peter Fuggle; Dickon Bevington; Fiona Duffy; Liz Cracknell

Purpose – MBIT is a manualised mentalization-based approach to working with hard to reach young people at risk of a wide range of life adversities including severe mental illness, substance misuse, family breakdown, school exclusion, offending and homelessness. The on-line manual (www.tiddlymanuals.com) describes how Adolescent Mentalization-Based Integrative Therapy (AMBIT) is a systemic intervention requiring attention to four different domains of intervention simultaneously; much emphasis is placed on the support systems for workers to maintain this balance in what are often chaotic working conditions. The purpose of this paper is to illustrate how these four main components of the AMBIT approach link together in actual clinical practice. Design/methodology/approach – The authors illustrate the core techniques of the AMBIT approach, namely, “working with your client”, “working with your team”, “ working with your network” and “learning as a team” with a series of case vignettes, demonstrating the inter-relationship of these components rather than seeing them as separate strands. Findings – A range of mentalization-based techniques such as “thinking together”, mentalized formulation, “disintegration grids” and web-based manualising are described and illustrated in relation to a series of case vignettes in order to address barriers to effective practice. The vignettes emphasise how these components must be linked together and held in balance, and how easily they become disconnected in working with young people’s ambivalent or even hostile relationships to help. Practical implications – First, developing a shared, mentalized formulation of a young person’s difficulties is an important aspect of working with highly troubled young people. Second, mentalizing is a relational process and is easily disrupted, for both workers and young people, by raised anxiety and affect, a common feature of working with this client group. AMBIT provides specific methods, for example, “thinking together” for supporting the mentalizing of individual workers in their team in an explicit way. Third, workers from different agencies may often find it difficult to make sense of each other’s behaviour and decision making. AMBIT proposes the use of a mentalizing approach to this difficulty using a technique called a disintegration grid. Finally, AMBIT proposes a new practitioner focused approach to manualising as a method by which a team can become more explicit about its methods of working in order to support systematic practice and evaluate outcomes. Originality/value – The innovative AMBIT approach proposes that clinicians need to attend to team and network relationships at least as much as their relationship with the client, in addition to adopting a stance of learning as a team from their casework. A high level of clinical skill is needed to support a team to achieve this balanced approach to casework. This work is of interest to all multi-disciplinary teams working with hard to reach young people.


Child and Adolescent Mental Health | 2013

Innovations in Practice: Adolescent Mentalization‐Based Integrative Therapy (AMBIT) – a new integrated approach to working with the most hard to reach adolescents with severe complex mental health needs

Dickon Bevington; Peter Fuggle; Peter Fonagy; M Target; Eia Asen


Archive | 2013

Supporting and enhancing mentalization in community outreach teams working with hard-to-reach youth: The AMBIT approach

Dickon Bevington; Peter Fuggle


Tijdschrift Vereniging voor Kinder- en Jeugdpsychiatrie (VKJP) | 2015

Outreachend mentaliserend werken met moeilijk te bereiken jongeren - AMBIT: Uitgangspunten en basishouding

Haiko Jessurun; Dickon Bevington; Peter Fuggle; Gabriël Gerard Anthonio


Archive | 2017

Lothian Child and Adolescent Mental Health: There is no such thing as a standard AMBIT team

Dickon Bevington; Peter Fuggle; Liz Cracknell; Peter Fonagy; Fiona Duffy


Tijdschrift Vereniging voor Kinder- en Jeugdpsychiatrie (VKJP) | 2015

Outreachend mentaliserend werken met moeilijk te bereiken jongeren - AMBIT

Haiko Jessurun; Dickon Bevington; Peter Fuggle; Gabriël Gerard Anthonio


Archive | 2011

Mentalization-Based Family Therapy (MBT-F)

Dickon Bevington; Pasco Fearon; Eia Asen; Peter Fonagy; Nick Midgley; M Target


: London, UK.. | 2011

Adolescent Mentalization-Based Integrative Treatment

Dickon Bevington; Peter Fuggle; Eia Asen; Peter Fonagy; M Target; N Dawson; R Malik

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Peter Fonagy

University College London

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M Target

University College London

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Eia Asen

University College London

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Fiona Duffy

Royal Edinburgh Hospital

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Gabriël Gerard Anthonio

Stenden University of Applied Sciences

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Nick Midgley

University College London

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Pasco Fearon

University College London

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