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Tavistock and Portman NHS Foundation Trust

The Tavistock and Portman NHS Foundation Trust is a specialist mental health trust based in north London. The Trust specialises in talking therapies. The education and training department caters for 2,000 students a year from the United Kingdom and abroad. The Trust is based at the Tavistock Centre in Swiss Cottage. The founding organisation was the Tavistock Institute of Medical Psychology founded in 1920 by Hugh Crichton-Miller.[1]

The Tavistock Clinic – Tavistock and Portman NHS Foundation Trust
Nemon's statue of Sigmund Freud, in front of the Tavistock Centre, London
Formation1920
HeadquartersLondon, United Kingdom
Coordinates51°32′48″N 0°10′29″W / 51.5466°N 0.1748°W / 51.5466; -0.1748
Chair
Paul Burstow
Websitetavistockandportman.nhs.uk

The Tavistock and Portman NHS Trust was formed in 1994, when the Tavistock Clinic merged with the neighbouring Portman Clinic in Fitzjohn's Avenue.[2][3] The Portman specialises in areas of forensic psychiatry, including the treatment of addictive, sociopathic and criminal behaviours and tendencies.[4]

It has developed as a centre for psychoanalysis within the NHS since being included at its founding in 1948.[5]

The Trust and predecessor organisations have been influential beyond medicine, including in the British Army, management consultancy, prison and probation services.[6][7]

Early history edit

 
Tavistock Square in Bloomsbury, London, birthplace in 1920 of the Tavistock Clinic

It owes its name to the fact that its original location was in Tavistock Square in central London. When it moved later to larger premises, it took its name with it. Although Hugh Crichton-Miller was a psychiatrist who developed psychological treatments for shell-shocked soldiers during and after the First World War, clinical services were always destined for both children and adults.[8][9] The clinic's first patient was a child. From its foundation it was also clear that to offer free treatment to all who need it meant that the Tavistock Clinic needed to generate income by providing training to clinical professionals who could eventually help people across the UK and beyond. The clinical staff were also researchers. These principles remain influential to this day.[10]

 
Carl Gustav Jung

Following its foundation the Tavistock Clinic developed a focus on preventive psychiatry, expertise in group relations – including army officer selection – social psychiatry, and action research. There was an openness to different streams of research and thought as, for instance, the famous series of lectures given by the Swiss psychiatrist and one time collaborator of Sigmund Freud, Carl Jung, which were attended by doctors, churchmen and members of the public, including H. G. Wells and Samuel Beckett.[11]

Its staff, who were still mainly unpaid honorary psychiatrists, psychologists and social workers, were interested in researching and consulting to leadership within the armed forces. The staff also offered treatment to members of the civilian population who might be traumatised by the prospect of a further world war, which could bring bombing of cities, evacuation of children and the shocks of loss and bereavement.

Post-war history edit

After the Second World War, the Tavistock Clinic benefited from the Northfield Hospital experience and from the arrival of talented professionals from Europe, many fleeing Nazi persecution.[12] In 1948 it became a leading clinic within the newly created National Health Service. At this point its education and training services were managed separately by the Tavistock Institute for Medical Psychology, which was also the umbrella for the Tavistock Institute, involved in social action research and thinking about group relations and organisational dynamics, and for work with marital couples. The clinic was managed on a democratic model by a professional committee and developed further its distinct focus on multi-disciplinary and community-centred work. At the Clinic's centenary in 2020 many post-war Tavistock staff contributed personal chapters in "The Tavistock Century" (edited by Margot Waddell and Sebastian Kraemer, Phoenix Publishing House https://firingthemind.com/product/9781912691715/)

Children and young people edit

New developments in child and adolescent mental health were particularly fruitful in the immediate post-war period. In 1948 the creation of the children's department supported the development of training in child and adolescent psychotherapy. Dr John Bowlby supported this new training and naturalistic infant observation. He also developed Attachment Theory. Husband and wife clinicians James Robertson and Joyce Robertson showed in their film work the impact of separation in temporary substitute care on young children for example, when their parent was admitted to hospital. The Australian Hazel Harrison was teacher-in-charge from 1954 to 1956 where she worked with Bowlby. They looked in detail at English pre-school education.[13]

The Tavistock Clinic opened its Adolescent Department in 1959, recognising the distinctive developmental needs and difficulties of younger and older adolescents. In 1967 it absorbed the London Child Guidance Clinic, founded in 1929.[14]

In 1989 the Tavistock established the Gender Identity Development Service (GIDS), a highly specialised clinic for young people presenting with difficulties with their gender identity.[15] In July 2022, following a critical independent review from Hilary Cass, it was announced that this service would be discontinued and replaced with regional clinics providing a more "holistic" approach.[16]

Training in education edit

By the 1960s The Tavistock Clinic was also providing both 1-year and 4-year professional training courses in educational psychology, the latter embracing a teacher training element through Leicester University School of Education. For a number of years the senior tutor and principal psychologist for these courses was Irene Caspari who did much to promote the concept and practice of Educational therapy. In the 1970s systemic psychotherapy became the Tavistock Clinic's newest professional training. Applications of the clinical ideas and skills of its multidisciplinary clinicians are at the heart of its education and training, with academically validated programmes developing from the early 1990s with the University of East London, and later with the University of Essex and Middlesex University.

Reflecting on the workplace edit

Work discussion, supervised clinical practice and experiential group relations work are central to many trainings all of which aim to equip mental health workers with the emotional, organisational, and relational capacities to operate confidently in front line settings. A BBC TV series 'Talking Cure: Jan' brought the work of the Clinic to a wider audience in 1999 and remains relevant today.[17] Organisational consultancy by former CEO Anton Obholzer, featured in the TV series, and their edited collection, with Vega Roberts, 'The Unconscious at Work: Individual and Organizational Stress in the Human Services', remains one of the classic texts to emerge from the Tavistock Clinic.[18]

Public sphere edit

The Tavistock's tradition of social and political engagement has been renewed in recent years through its programme of Policy Seminars which model a dialogic, exploratory approach to policy analysis and debate with the social epidemiologist, Richard G. Wilkinson, the psychologist, Oliver James and the columnist, Polly Toynbee, among recent contributors. The series of Thinking Space events follows a similar model of participatory engagement around themes of diversity, racism, and sexual orientation.

The Tavistock Institute, which had been part of the Tavistock family, moved to its own premises in 1994. The Tavistock Centre for Couples Relationships, TCCR, formerly the Tavistock Institute of Marital Studies, was always a separate, charitably-funded organisation which left the Tavistock Centre for new premises in 2009.

NHS Trust edit

In 1994, the Tavistock Clinic joined with the Portman Clinic to become the Tavistock and Portman NHS Trust.[4] In 2006 the Trust acquired NHS Foundation Trust status and become the Tavistock and Portman NHS Foundation Trust.[19] It is an active member of UCL Partners, the Academic Health Service Centre located in North London.

Paul Burstow, a former Minister of State for Care and Support in the Cameron-Clegg coalition government, became Chair of the Trust in November 2015.[20]

Services edit

The Trust provides clinical services for children and families, young people and adults. It also provides multi-disciplinary training and education. These programmes include core professional training, for example in psychiatry, psychology, social work and advanced psychotherapy training, as well as applied programmes for anyone working in the mental health or social care workforce.

Since 2010, the clinical work of the Trust has diversified with new services such as the Family Drug and Alcohol Court in Milton Keynes[21] and the City and Hackney community psychotherapy service.

It is the largest provider of transgender services in England, but funding for the service has not kept pace with demand. In August 2019, 5,717 people were on the waiting list for a first appointment, and average waiting time was about two years.[22] The Gender Identity Development Service (GIDS) at the Tavistock Centre has come under scrutiny due to reports that concerns over children's welfare were "shut down".[23] The Tavistock and Portman NHS Trust defended their practices.[23] In July 2022, following criticism in the interim report by Hilary Cass, it was announced that this service would be discontinued and replaced with regional clinics providing a more "holistic" approach.[16] It is set to close at the end of March 2024.[24][25][26]

In February 2023 BBC journalist Hannah Barnes released a book called Time to Think: The Inside Story of the Collapse of the Tavistock's Gender Service for Children.[27] Barnes describes the premise saying, "I wanted to write a definitive record of what happened [at GIDS] because there needs to be one."[28]

Performance edit

It was named by the Health Service Journal as one of the top hundred NHS trusts to work for in 2015. At that time it had 449 full-time equivalent staff and a sickness absence rate of 0.92%. 84% of staff recommend it as a place for treatment and 73% recommended it as a place to work.[29]

The Trust borrowed £58 million in 2016 which it intends to repay by selling its current sites.[30]

Discrimination claim edit

The Tavistock has been accused of forcing racist ideology on students with lectures such as 'Whiteness - A Problem of Our Time' and is currently being sued for discrimination on the basis of race and religion.[31]

Notable contributors to the clinic edit

Over the years many hundreds of staff members, at all levels, have contributed to the work of this institution. This list is merely representative of some of the lasting contributors to the different fields encompassed by the Clinic.

Medical directors, chief executives and Chair of Trust edit

The Scottish Institute of Human Relations edit

In line with Hugh Crichton-Miller's original vision for clinics to be set up in communities across the country, his dream was not realised in his 'native' Scotland for another 50 years.[68] However, with Jock Sutherland's return to Edinburgh in 1968, he became the catalyst for the formation of an organisation modelled on the London centre, albeit on a smaller scale. The Scottish Institute of Human Relations (SIHR), now defunct, was constituted as a charitable educational institution in Edinburgh in the early 1970s. Eventually a branch was opened in Glasgow. The 'MacTavi', as it was sometimes fondly called, worked closely with the National Health Service in Scotland and provided psychoanalytic training and courses for professionals in the health and educational systems and beyond.[69] It also guided adults and children into treatment for the forty years of its operation.[70] SIHR was finally dissolved in 2013 and its centres closed down. Some of its functions were taken over by a number of other organisations, specifically psychoanalytic training has become the remit of the Scottish Association for Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy (SAPP).

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Crichton-Miller, Hugh (1922). The New Psychology and the Parent. Jarrolds. Retrieved 16 November 2016.
  2. ^ "Tavistock Centre". Lost Hospitals of London. Retrieved 2 May 2022.
  3. ^ Huffington, Clare; Halton, William; Armstrong, David; Pooley, Jane (2019). Working Below the Surface: The Emotional Life of Contemporary Organizations. Abingdon: Routledge. p. 19. ISBN 978-0-429-92423-1.
  4. ^ a b "Portman Clinic". Cindex, Council for London Borough of Camden.
  5. ^ Elliott, Anthony; Prager, Jeffrey (2016). The Routledge Handbook of Psychoanalysis in the Social Sciences and Humanities. Abingdon: Routledge. p. 237. ISBN 978-1-317-30820-1.
  6. ^ Gossling, Glenn (March 2021). "Celebrating 100 Years of the Tavistock and Portman" (PDF). New Associations. British Psychoanalytic Council. p. 7. ISSN 2042-9096.
  7. ^ Dicks, H. V. (1970). Fifty Years of the Tavistock Clinic (Psychology Revivals). London: Routledge. doi:10.4324/9781315743028. ISBN 978-1-315-74302-8.
  8. ^ Bourke, Joanna. (1996). Dismembering the Male: Men's Bodies, Britain and the Great War, Reaktion Press and University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978 1861 89035 1
  9. ^ Dicks, H. V., (1970). 50 Years of the Tavistock Clinic. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul. Reissued by Routledge, 2014, ISBN 978 1 138 82194 1
  10. ^ "History". Tavistock and Portman nhs trust. Retrieved 11 September 2016.
  11. ^ a b Jung, C.G. (1935). Tavistock Lectures, in The Symbolic Life. Collected Works, vol.18. London: Routledge. pp. 1–182. ISBN 0-7100-8291-6.
  12. ^ Pincus, Lily. Personal Postscript (1984). "Personal Postscript". Bereavement Care. 3 (2): 15–18. doi:10.1080/02682628408657111.
  13. ^ Gill, K. E., "Hazel Joyce Harrison (1905–1970)", Australian Dictionary of Biography, Canberra: National Centre of Biography, Australian National University, retrieved 30 October 2023
  14. ^ "The London Child Guidance Clinic in Islington". Lost Hospitals of London. Retrieved 10 January 2020.
  15. ^ "About us | GIDS". gids.nhs.uk. Retrieved 5 December 2017.
  16. ^ a b Hayward, Eleanor (28 July 2022). "Tavistock gender clinic forced to shut over safety fears". The Times. Retrieved 29 July 2022.
  17. ^ "Talking Cure: Jan". bbc 2. November 1999. Retrieved 11 September 2016.
  18. ^ Obholzer, Anton and Roberts, Vega Zagier. Eds. 1995. 'The Unconscious at Work: Individual and Organizational Stress in the Human Services'. London: Routledge, pp 224. ISBN 0 415 10206 5
  19. ^ "Our History" (PDF). Tavistock and Portman NHS Foundation Trust. Retrieved 11 November 2016.
  20. ^ "The many sides of the Tavistock & Portman: educator, innovator, incubator, disruptor". tavistockandportman.nhs.uk. November 2017. Retrieved 5 December 2017.
  21. ^ "Court is supporting families to stay together in Milton Keynes and Buckinghamshire". MK Web. 25 February 2015. Retrieved 20 March 2015.
  22. ^ "'Unprecedented' demand leaves thousands waiting two years for specialist service". Health Service Journal. 23 August 2019. Retrieved 1 October 2019.
  23. ^ a b Barnes, Hannah; Cohen, Deborah (19 June 2020). "NHS child gender clinic: Staff concerns 'shut down'". BBC Newsnight. BBC News. Retrieved 19 June 2020.
  24. ^ Stavrou, Athena (12 March 2024). "NHS says children to no longer receive puberty blockers at gender identity clinics". The Independent. Retrieved 15 March 2024.
  25. ^ "Children to no longer be prescribed puberty blockers, NHS England confirms". Sky News. 12 March 2024. Retrieved 15 March 2024.
  26. ^ Boal, Daniel (12 March 2024). "Children will not be prescribed puberty blockers at gender identity clinics, NHS says". ITV News. Retrieved 15 March 2024.
  27. ^ Rayner, Gordon (14 February 2023). . The Daily Telegraph. Archived from the original on 14 February 2023.
  28. ^ Freeman, Hadley (11 February 2023). "How the Tavistock gender clinic ran out of control". The Times. Archived from the original on 11 February 2023.
  29. ^ "HSJ reveals the best places to work in 2015". Health Service Journal. 7 July 2015. Retrieved 23 September 2015.
  30. ^ "Trusts borrow millions to pay for redundancies and beds". Health Service Journal. 7 June 2016. Retrieved 31 July 2016.
  31. ^ "Amy Gallagher and critical race theory". theweek.co.uk. The Week. 5 October 2022. Retrieved 5 September 2023.
  32. ^ Bretherton, I., & Ainsworth, M. D. S. (1974). "One-year-olds in the Strange Situation." In Lewis, M. & Rosenblum, L. Eds., The Origins of Fear pp. 134- 164, New York: Wiley
  33. ^ Enid Balint, Women Psychoanalysts in Great Britain, Pschoanalytikerinnen.org. Retrieved 5 December 2015
  34. ^ Hopkins, Philip. 'Balint, Michael Maurice (1896–1970)', Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 accessed 6 Dec 2015
  35. ^ Rustin, Margaret. (2009) 'Esther Bick's legacy of infant observation at the Tavistock – some reflections 60 years on', Infant Observation, 12(1), p. 32;
  36. ^ Pines, Malcolm.[1] 'Bion, Wilfred Ruprecht (1897–1979)', Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, September 2004; online edition, May 2007. Retrieved 10 September 2008.
  37. ^ Holmes, J. (1993). John Bowlby and Attachment Theory. Makers of modern psychotherapy. London; New York: Routledge. ISBN 0-415-07730-3. OCLC 27266442.
  38. ^ Stein, Mark (2005). "Obituary: Harold Bridger". The Guardian. Retrieved 18 November 2016.
  39. ^ . Caspari Foundation. Archived from the original on 4 February 2017. Retrieved 3 February 2017.
  40. ^ Sutherland, J. D. (October 1977). "Henry Dicks". The Psychiatrist. 1 (4): 6–7. doi:10.1192/pb.1.4.6.
  41. ^ Draper, Ros; Gower, Myrna; Huffington, Clare (1991). Teaching family therapy. London: Karnac Books. ISBN 978-1-85575-021-0.
  42. ^ Gosling, Robert. Another Source of Conservatism in Groups, in W. Gordon Lawrence, ed., Exploring Individual and Organizational Boundaries: A Tavistock Open Systems Approach, Karnac Books, 1979 ISBN 1 85575 232 8
  43. ^ Hadfield, J.A. (1962) Childhood and Adolescence, Harmondsworth: Penguin Books. ISBN 0 1402 0531 4
  44. ^ Hoxter, S. review of Collected Papers of Martha Harris and Esther Bick, Journal of Child Psychotherapy, 14a: 101–106 (1988); D. Dawes and M. Boston (eds.), The Child Psychotherapist (London: Wildwood House, 1977). Harris's description of the model, ‘The Tavistock training and philosophy’ (1977), is reprinted in The Tavistock Model: Papers on Child Development and Psychoanalytic Training by Martha Harris and Esther Bick, ed. M. H. Williams (London: Harris Meltzer Trust/ Karnac, 2011), pp. 1–24.
  45. ^ Cohen, Alan. "The Cohen Interviews Elizabeth Irvine" (PDF). Retrieved 17 November 2016.
  46. ^ Hahn, Alberto (2004). . International Journal of Psycho-Analysis. 86 (1): 175–78. Archived from the original on 15 April 2007.
  47. ^ Goldman, C. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography 2005-8 (2013) p. 710
  48. ^ Thom, Deborah. "Emanuel Miller". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/61403. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  49. ^ Miller, Eric (1993). From dependency to autonomy: studies in organization and change. London: Free Association Books. ISBN 1-85343-335-7.
  50. ^ Obholzer, Anton. 2009 On Compassion audio, London: King's Fund: https://www.kingsfund.org.uk/audio-video/anton-obholzer-compassion. Retrieved 12 November 2016
  51. ^ "Profile for Renos Papadopoulos at the University of Essex". www.essex.ac.uk. Retrieved 12 November 2016.
  52. ^ Ogilvie, Marilyn Bailey; Harvey, Joy Dorothy (2000). The Biographical Dictionary of Women in Science: L-Z. ISBN 9780415920407. Retrieved 18 June 2014.
  53. ^ "Tavistock Relationships – Our History". Retrieved 18 November 2016.
  54. ^ Dicks, Henry V. "John Rawlings Rees". Retrieved 23 March 2014.
  55. ^ "Albert Kenneth (Ken) Rice". ofek-groups.org. Retrieved 11 September 2016.
  56. ^ Rickman, John (1891–1951) Quaker physician and psychoanalyst. Retrieved 31 August 2016
  57. ^ Rustin, Margaret (2007) 'John Bowlby at the Tavistock. Attachment and Human Development', 9 (4). pp. 355–359. ISSN 1461-6734, [2]
  58. ^ Steiner, John. Psychic Retreats, London/New York: Tavistock/Routledge, 1993. 176 pp. ISBN 0-415-09924-2, 176pp.
  59. ^ Corrigan, E. 'J.D.Sutherland in Memoriam', http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/10481889209538932?journalCode=hpsd20&
  60. ^ Stavros, G. S. ed., The Skilful Soul of the Psychotherapist (2014) p. 34-5
  61. ^ Symington, Neville (2007). Becoming a Person through Psychoanalysis. London: Karnac Books. ISBN 9781855755406.
  62. ^ Miller Eric (14 June 1993). "Obituary: Eric Trist – People". The Independent. Archived from the original on 26 May 2022. Retrieved 3 September 2012.
  63. ^ Trotter, Wilfred. Instincts of the herd in peace and war 1916–1919, London, Keynes Press, 1985." Medical History 31(1): 113–4.Jordan, E. (1909). "Herd Instinct and its Bearing on the Psychology of Civilized Man". Psychological Bulletin. 6 (12): 420–421. doi:10.1037/h0066945.
  64. ^ 'Preface: Pierre Maurice Turquet, MA, MRCS, LRCP, FRCPsych.', in W. Gordon Lawrence, ed., Exploring Individual and Organizational Boundaries: A Tavistock Open Systems Approach, Karnac Books, 1979 ISBN 1 85575 232 8
  65. ^ Spensley, Sheila (17 December 1994). "Obituary: Frances Tustin". The Independent. Archived from the original on 26 May 2022.
  66. ^ Waddell, Margot. Inside Lives: Psychoanalysis and the Growth of the Personality, London: Karnac Books. 2002. ISBN 9781849403665
  67. ^ Williams Paul (2009). "Obituary:Arthur Hyatt Williams". The Independent. Archived from the original on 26 May 2022. Retrieved 11 September 2016.
  68. ^ Crichton-Miller was actually born in Italy of Scottish parents and educated mainly in Edinburgh.
  69. ^ Hugh Moreton's witness statement at the Witness Seminar (2009) about the History of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry 1960–1990 at Yorkhill Glasgow: [3] 4 July 2013 at the Wayback Machine p. 7. Retrieved 26 December 2016
  70. ^ Mental Health Strategy for Scotland 2011– 2015 (PDF), The Scottish Institute of Human Relations, 2012 Retrieved 14 November 2016

External links edit

  • Official website  
  • Tavistock Anthology by Eric Trist and Hugh Murray
  • Tavistock Clinic – History

tavistock, portman, foundation, trust, independent, charity, focusing, group, relations, tavistock, institute, charitable, tavistock, institute, medical, psychology, tavistock, relationships, tavistock, centre, redirects, here, gender, identity, clinic, childr. For the independent charity focusing on group relations see Tavistock Institute For the arm of the charitable Tavistock Institute of Medical Psychology see Tavistock Relationships Tavistock Centre redirects here For the gender identity clinic for children see NHS Gender Identity Development Service The examples and perspective in this article may not include all significant viewpoints Please improve the article or discuss the issue June 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Tavistock and Portman NHS Foundation Trust is a specialist mental health trust based in north London The Trust specialises in talking therapies The education and training department caters for 2 000 students a year from the United Kingdom and abroad The Trust is based at the Tavistock Centre in Swiss Cottage The founding organisation was the Tavistock Institute of Medical Psychology founded in 1920 by Hugh Crichton Miller 1 The Tavistock Clinic Tavistock and Portman NHS Foundation TrustNemon s statue of Sigmund Freud in front of the Tavistock Centre LondonFormation1920HeadquartersLondon United KingdomCoordinates51 32 48 N 0 10 29 W 51 5466 N 0 1748 W 51 5466 0 1748ChairPaul BurstowWebsitetavistockandportman wbr nhs wbr ukThe Tavistock and Portman NHS Trust was formed in 1994 when the Tavistock Clinic merged with the neighbouring Portman Clinic in Fitzjohn s Avenue 2 3 The Portman specialises in areas of forensic psychiatry including the treatment of addictive sociopathic and criminal behaviours and tendencies 4 It has developed as a centre for psychoanalysis within the NHS since being included at its founding in 1948 5 The Trust and predecessor organisations have been influential beyond medicine including in the British Army management consultancy prison and probation services 6 7 Contents 1 Early history 2 Post war history 2 1 Children and young people 2 2 Training in education 2 3 Reflecting on the workplace 2 4 Public sphere 3 NHS Trust 3 1 Services 3 2 Performance 3 3 Discrimination claim 4 Notable contributors to the clinic 4 1 Medical directors chief executives and Chair of Trust 5 The Scottish Institute of Human Relations 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksEarly history edit nbsp Tavistock Square in Bloomsbury London birthplace in 1920 of the Tavistock ClinicIt owes its name to the fact that its original location was in Tavistock Square in central London When it moved later to larger premises it took its name with it Although Hugh Crichton Miller was a psychiatrist who developed psychological treatments for shell shocked soldiers during and after the First World War clinical services were always destined for both children and adults 8 9 The clinic s first patient was a child From its foundation it was also clear that to offer free treatment to all who need it meant that the Tavistock Clinic needed to generate income by providing training to clinical professionals who could eventually help people across the UK and beyond The clinical staff were also researchers These principles remain influential to this day 10 nbsp Carl Gustav JungFollowing its foundation the Tavistock Clinic developed a focus on preventive psychiatry expertise in group relations including army officer selection social psychiatry and action research There was an openness to different streams of research and thought as for instance the famous series of lectures given by the Swiss psychiatrist and one time collaborator of Sigmund Freud Carl Jung which were attended by doctors churchmen and members of the public including H G Wells and Samuel Beckett 11 Its staff who were still mainly unpaid honorary psychiatrists psychologists and social workers were interested in researching and consulting to leadership within the armed forces The staff also offered treatment to members of the civilian population who might be traumatised by the prospect of a further world war which could bring bombing of cities evacuation of children and the shocks of loss and bereavement Post war history editAfter the Second World War the Tavistock Clinic benefited from the Northfield Hospital experience and from the arrival of talented professionals from Europe many fleeing Nazi persecution 12 In 1948 it became a leading clinic within the newly created National Health Service At this point its education and training services were managed separately by the Tavistock Institute for Medical Psychology which was also the umbrella for the Tavistock Institute involved in social action research and thinking about group relations and organisational dynamics and for work with marital couples The clinic was managed on a democratic model by a professional committee and developed further its distinct focus on multi disciplinary and community centred work At the Clinic s centenary in 2020 many post war Tavistock staff contributed personal chapters in The Tavistock Century edited by Margot Waddell and Sebastian Kraemer Phoenix Publishing House https firingthemind com product 9781912691715 Children and young people edit New developments in child and adolescent mental health were particularly fruitful in the immediate post war period In 1948 the creation of the children s department supported the development of training in child and adolescent psychotherapy Dr John Bowlby supported this new training and naturalistic infant observation He also developed Attachment Theory Husband and wife clinicians James Robertson and Joyce Robertson showed in their film work the impact of separation in temporary substitute care on young children for example when their parent was admitted to hospital The Australian Hazel Harrison was teacher in charge from 1954 to 1956 where she worked with Bowlby They looked in detail at English pre school education 13 The Tavistock Clinic opened its Adolescent Department in 1959 recognising the distinctive developmental needs and difficulties of younger and older adolescents In 1967 it absorbed the London Child Guidance Clinic founded in 1929 14 In 1989 the Tavistock established the Gender Identity Development Service GIDS a highly specialised clinic for young people presenting with difficulties with their gender identity 15 In July 2022 following a critical independent review from Hilary Cass it was announced that this service would be discontinued and replaced with regional clinics providing a more holistic approach 16 Training in education edit By the 1960s The Tavistock Clinic was also providing both 1 year and 4 year professional training courses in educational psychology the latter embracing a teacher training element through Leicester University School of Education For a number of years the senior tutor and principal psychologist for these courses was Irene Caspari who did much to promote the concept and practice of Educational therapy In the 1970s systemic psychotherapy became the Tavistock Clinic s newest professional training Applications of the clinical ideas and skills of its multidisciplinary clinicians are at the heart of its education and training with academically validated programmes developing from the early 1990s with the University of East London and later with the University of Essex and Middlesex University Reflecting on the workplace edit Work discussion supervised clinical practice and experiential group relations work are central to many trainings all of which aim to equip mental health workers with the emotional organisational and relational capacities to operate confidently in front line settings A BBC TV series Talking Cure Jan brought the work of the Clinic to a wider audience in 1999 and remains relevant today 17 Organisational consultancy by former CEO Anton Obholzer featured in the TV series and their edited collection with Vega Roberts The Unconscious at Work Individual and Organizational Stress in the Human Services remains one of the classic texts to emerge from the Tavistock Clinic 18 Public sphere edit The Tavistock s tradition of social and political engagement has been renewed in recent years through its programme of Policy Seminars which model a dialogic exploratory approach to policy analysis and debate with the social epidemiologist Richard G Wilkinson the psychologist Oliver James and the columnist Polly Toynbee among recent contributors The series of Thinking Space events follows a similar model of participatory engagement around themes of diversity racism and sexual orientation The Tavistock Institute which had been part of the Tavistock family moved to its own premises in 1994 The Tavistock Centre for Couples Relationships TCCR formerly the Tavistock Institute of Marital Studies was always a separate charitably funded organisation which left the Tavistock Centre for new premises in 2009 NHS Trust editIn 1994 the Tavistock Clinic joined with the Portman Clinic to become the Tavistock and Portman NHS Trust 4 In 2006 the Trust acquired NHS Foundation Trust status and become the Tavistock and Portman NHS Foundation Trust 19 It is an active member of UCL Partners the Academic Health Service Centre located in North London Paul Burstow a former Minister of State for Care and Support in the Cameron Clegg coalition government became Chair of the Trust in November 2015 20 Services edit The Trust provides clinical services for children and families young people and adults It also provides multi disciplinary training and education These programmes include core professional training for example in psychiatry psychology social work and advanced psychotherapy training as well as applied programmes for anyone working in the mental health or social care workforce Since 2010 the clinical work of the Trust has diversified with new services such as the Family Drug and Alcohol Court in Milton Keynes 21 and the City and Hackney community psychotherapy service It is the largest provider of transgender services in England but funding for the service has not kept pace with demand In August 2019 5 717 people were on the waiting list for a first appointment and average waiting time was about two years 22 The Gender Identity Development Service GIDS at the Tavistock Centre has come under scrutiny due to reports that concerns over children s welfare were shut down 23 The Tavistock and Portman NHS Trust defended their practices 23 In July 2022 following criticism in the interim report by Hilary Cass it was announced that this service would be discontinued and replaced with regional clinics providing a more holistic approach 16 It is set to close at the end of March 2024 24 25 26 In February 2023 BBC journalist Hannah Barnes released a book called Time to Think The Inside Story of the Collapse of the Tavistock s Gender Service for Children 27 Barnes describes the premise saying I wanted to write a definitive record of what happened at GIDS because there needs to be one 28 Performance edit It was named by the Health Service Journal as one of the top hundred NHS trusts to work for in 2015 At that time it had 449 full time equivalent staff and a sickness absence rate of 0 92 84 of staff recommend it as a place for treatment and 73 recommended it as a place to work 29 The Trust borrowed 58 million in 2016 which it intends to repay by selling its current sites 30 Discrimination claim edit The Tavistock has been accused of forcing racist ideology on students with lectures such as Whiteness A Problem of Our Time and is currently being sued for discrimination on the basis of race and religion 31 Notable contributors to the clinic editOver the years many hundreds of staff members at all levels have contributed to the work of this institution This list is merely representative of some of the lasting contributors to the different fields encompassed by the Clinic Mary Ainsworth 32 Enid Balint 33 Michael Balint 34 Edward Armstrong Bennet 11 Esther Bick 35 Wilfred Bion 36 John Bowlby 37 Harold Bridger 38 Irene Caspari 39 Henry Dicks 40 Ros Draper 41 Robert H Gosling 42 J A Hadfield 43 Martha Harris 44 Elizabeth Betty Irvine 45 Donald Meltzer 46 Isabel Menzies Lyth 47 Emanuel Miller 48 Eric Miller 49 Anton Obholzer 50 Renos Papadopoulos 51 Sylvia Payne 52 Lily Pincus de 53 John Rawlings Rees 54 A K Rice 55 John Rickman 56 Margaret Rustin 57 John Steiner 58 J D Sutherland 59 Ian Dishart Suttie 60 Neville Symington 61 Eric Trist 62 Wilfred Trotter 63 Pierre Turquet 64 Frances Tustin 65 Margot Waddell 66 Arthur Hyatt Williams 67 R D Laing Medical directors chief executives and Chair of Trust edit Hugh Crichton Miller 1920 1933 John Rawlings Rees 1933 1947 J D Sutherland 1947 1968 Robert H Gosling 1968 1985 Anton Obholzer 1985 2002 Nick Temple 2002 2015 Matthew Patrick Paul JenkinsThe Scottish Institute of Human Relations editMain article Scottish Institute of Human Relations In line with Hugh Crichton Miller s original vision for clinics to be set up in communities across the country his dream was not realised in his native Scotland for another 50 years 68 However with Jock Sutherland s return to Edinburgh in 1968 he became the catalyst for the formation of an organisation modelled on the London centre albeit on a smaller scale The Scottish Institute of Human Relations SIHR now defunct was constituted as a charitable educational institution in Edinburgh in the early 1970s Eventually a branch was opened in Glasgow The MacTavi as it was sometimes fondly called worked closely with the National Health Service in Scotland and provided psychoanalytic training and courses for professionals in the health and educational systems and beyond 69 It also guided adults and children into treatment for the forty years of its operation 70 SIHR was finally dissolved in 2013 and its centres closed down Some of its functions were taken over by a number of other organisations specifically psychoanalytic training has become the remit of the Scottish Association for Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy SAPP See also editBritish Psychotherapy Foundation Child Guidance Educational psychology Havelock Ellis Sigmund Freud Family therapy Group psychotherapy Healthcare in London Margaret Lowenfeld Mental health in the United Kingdom Organizational theory Psychoanalysis Psychoanalytic infant observation Psychotherapy Socio analysis Winifred RushforthReferences edit Crichton Miller Hugh 1922 The New Psychology and the Parent Jarrolds Retrieved 16 November 2016 Tavistock Centre Lost Hospitals of London Retrieved 2 May 2022 Huffington Clare Halton William Armstrong David Pooley Jane 2019 Working Below the Surface The Emotional Life of Contemporary Organizations Abingdon Routledge p 19 ISBN 978 0 429 92423 1 a b Portman Clinic Cindex Council for London Borough of Camden Elliott Anthony Prager Jeffrey 2016 The Routledge Handbook of Psychoanalysis in the Social Sciences and Humanities Abingdon Routledge p 237 ISBN 978 1 317 30820 1 Gossling Glenn March 2021 Celebrating 100 Years of the Tavistock and Portman PDF New Associations British Psychoanalytic Council p 7 ISSN 2042 9096 Dicks H V 1970 Fifty Years of the Tavistock Clinic Psychology Revivals London Routledge doi 10 4324 9781315743028 ISBN 978 1 315 74302 8 Bourke Joanna 1996 Dismembering the Male Men s Bodies Britain and the Great War Reaktion Press and University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 1861 89035 1 Dicks H V 1970 50 Years of the Tavistock Clinic London Routledge and Kegan Paul Reissued by Routledge 2014 ISBN 978 1 138 82194 1 History Tavistock and Portman nhs trust Retrieved 11 September 2016 a b Jung C G 1935 Tavistock Lectures in The Symbolic Life Collected Works vol 18 London Routledge pp 1 182 ISBN 0 7100 8291 6 Pincus Lily Personal Postscript 1984 Personal Postscript Bereavement Care 3 2 15 18 doi 10 1080 02682628408657111 Gill K E Hazel Joyce Harrison 1905 1970 Australian Dictionary of Biography Canberra National Centre of Biography Australian National University retrieved 30 October 2023 The London Child Guidance Clinic in Islington Lost Hospitals of London Retrieved 10 January 2020 About us GIDS gids nhs uk Retrieved 5 December 2017 a b Hayward Eleanor 28 July 2022 Tavistock gender clinic forced to shut over safety fears The Times Retrieved 29 July 2022 Talking Cure Jan bbc 2 November 1999 Retrieved 11 September 2016 Obholzer Anton and Roberts Vega Zagier Eds 1995 The Unconscious at Work Individual and Organizational Stress in the Human Services London Routledge pp 224 ISBN 0 415 10206 5 Our History PDF Tavistock and Portman NHS Foundation Trust Retrieved 11 November 2016 The many sides of the Tavistock amp Portman educator innovator incubator disruptor tavistockandportman nhs uk November 2017 Retrieved 5 December 2017 Court is supporting families to stay together in Milton Keynes and Buckinghamshire MK Web 25 February 2015 Retrieved 20 March 2015 Unprecedented demand leaves thousands waiting two years for specialist service Health Service Journal 23 August 2019 Retrieved 1 October 2019 a b Barnes Hannah Cohen Deborah 19 June 2020 NHS child gender clinic Staff concerns shut down BBC Newsnight BBC News Retrieved 19 June 2020 Stavrou Athena 12 March 2024 NHS says children to no longer receive puberty blockers at gender identity clinics The Independent Retrieved 15 March 2024 Children to no longer be prescribed puberty blockers NHS England confirms Sky News 12 March 2024 Retrieved 15 March 2024 Boal Daniel 12 March 2024 Children will not be prescribed puberty blockers at gender identity clinics NHS says ITV News Retrieved 15 March 2024 Rayner Gordon 14 February 2023 Tavistock clinic ignored link between autism and transgender children The Daily Telegraph Archived from the original on 14 February 2023 Freeman Hadley 11 February 2023 How the Tavistock gender clinic ran out of control The Times Archived from the original on 11 February 2023 HSJ reveals the best places to work in 2015 Health Service Journal 7 July 2015 Retrieved 23 September 2015 Trusts borrow millions to pay for redundancies and beds Health Service Journal 7 June 2016 Retrieved 31 July 2016 Amy Gallagher and critical race theory theweek co uk The Week 5 October 2022 Retrieved 5 September 2023 Bretherton I amp Ainsworth M D S 1974 One year olds in the Strange Situation In Lewis M amp Rosenblum L Eds The Origins of Fear pp 134 164 New York Wiley Enid Balint Women Psychoanalysts in Great Britain Pschoanalytikerinnen org Retrieved 5 December 2015 Hopkins Philip Balint Michael Maurice 1896 1970 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press 2004 accessed 6 Dec 2015 Rustin Margaret 2009 Esther Bick s legacy of infant observation at the Tavistock some reflections 60 years on Infant Observation 12 1 p 32 Pines Malcolm 1 Bion Wilfred Ruprecht 1897 1979 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press September 2004 online edition May 2007 Retrieved 10 September 2008 Holmes J 1993 John Bowlby and Attachment Theory Makers of modern psychotherapy London New York Routledge ISBN 0 415 07730 3 OCLC 27266442 Stein Mark 2005 Obituary Harold Bridger The Guardian Retrieved 18 November 2016 About Us Caspari Foundation Archived from the original on 4 February 2017 Retrieved 3 February 2017 Sutherland J D October 1977 Henry Dicks The Psychiatrist 1 4 6 7 doi 10 1192 pb 1 4 6 Draper Ros Gower Myrna Huffington Clare 1991 Teaching family therapy London Karnac Books ISBN 978 1 85575 021 0 Gosling Robert Another Source of Conservatism in Groups in W Gordon Lawrence ed Exploring Individual and Organizational Boundaries A Tavistock Open Systems Approach Karnac Books 1979 ISBN 1 85575 232 8 Hadfield J A 1962 Childhood and Adolescence Harmondsworth Penguin Books ISBN 0 1402 0531 4 Hoxter S review of Collected Papers of Martha Harris and Esther Bick Journal of Child Psychotherapy 14a 101 106 1988 D Dawes and M Boston eds The Child Psychotherapist London Wildwood House 1977 Harris s description of the model The Tavistock training and philosophy 1977 is reprinted in The Tavistock Model Papers on Child Development and Psychoanalytic Training by Martha Harris and Esther Bick ed M H Williams London Harris Meltzer Trust Karnac 2011 pp 1 24 Cohen Alan The Cohen Interviews Elizabeth Irvine PDF Retrieved 17 November 2016 Hahn Alberto 2004 Obituary of Donald Meltzer International Journal of Psycho Analysis 86 1 175 78 Archived from the original on 15 April 2007 Goldman C Oxford Dictionary of National Biography 2005 8 2013 p 710 Thom Deborah Emanuel Miller Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 61403 Subscription or UK public library membership required Miller Eric 1993 From dependency to autonomy studies in organization and change London Free Association Books ISBN 1 85343 335 7 Obholzer Anton 2009 On Compassion audio London King s Fund https www kingsfund org uk audio video anton obholzer compassion Retrieved 12 November 2016 Profile for Renos Papadopoulos at the University of Essex www essex ac uk Retrieved 12 November 2016 Ogilvie Marilyn Bailey Harvey Joy Dorothy 2000 The Biographical Dictionary of Women in Science L Z ISBN 9780415920407 Retrieved 18 June 2014 Tavistock Relationships Our History Retrieved 18 November 2016 Dicks Henry V John Rawlings Rees Retrieved 23 March 2014 Albert Kenneth Ken Rice ofek groups org Retrieved 11 September 2016 Rickman John 1891 1951 Quaker physician and psychoanalyst Retrieved 31 August 2016 Rustin Margaret 2007 John Bowlby at the Tavistock Attachment and Human Development 9 4 pp 355 359 ISSN 1461 6734 2 Steiner John Psychic Retreats London New York Tavistock Routledge 1993 176 pp ISBN 0 415 09924 2 176pp Corrigan E J D Sutherland in Memoriam http www tandfonline com doi abs 10 1080 10481889209538932 journalCode hpsd20 amp Stavros G S ed The Skilful Soul of the Psychotherapist 2014 p 34 5 Symington Neville 2007 Becoming a Person through Psychoanalysis London Karnac Books ISBN 9781855755406 Miller Eric 14 June 1993 Obituary Eric Trist People The Independent Archived from the original on 26 May 2022 Retrieved 3 September 2012 Trotter Wilfred Instincts of the herd in peace and war 1916 1919 London Keynes Press 1985 Medical History 31 1 113 4 Jordan E 1909 Herd Instinct and its Bearing on the Psychology of Civilized Man Psychological Bulletin 6 12 420 421 doi 10 1037 h0066945 Preface Pierre Maurice Turquet MA MRCS LRCP FRCPsych in W Gordon Lawrence ed Exploring Individual and Organizational Boundaries A Tavistock Open Systems Approach Karnac Books 1979 ISBN 1 85575 232 8 Spensley Sheila 17 December 1994 Obituary Frances Tustin The Independent Archived from the original on 26 May 2022 Waddell Margot Inside Lives Psychoanalysis and the Growth of the Personality London Karnac Books 2002 ISBN 9781849403665 Williams Paul 2009 Obituary Arthur Hyatt Williams The Independent Archived from the original on 26 May 2022 Retrieved 11 September 2016 Crichton Miller was actually born in Italy of Scottish parents and educated mainly in Edinburgh Hugh Moreton s witness statement at the Witness Seminar 2009 about the History of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry 1960 1990 at Yorkhill Glasgow 3 Archived 4 July 2013 at the Wayback Machine p 7 Retrieved 26 December 2016 Mental Health Strategy for Scotland 2011 2015 PDF The Scottish Institute of Human Relations 2012 Retrieved 14 November 2016External links editOfficial website nbsp Tavistock Anthology by Eric Trist and Hugh Murray Tavistock Clinic History Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tavistock and Portman NHS Foundation Trust amp oldid 1214013826, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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