Bevington, Fuggle, Fonagy (2015) Applying attachment theory to effective practice with hard-to-reach youth: the AMBIT approach

21st March 2018

Reference:

Bevington, Fuggle, Fonagy (2015) "Applying attachment theory to effective practice with hard-to-reach youth: the AMBIT approach." Attachment & Human Development DOI: 10.1080/14616734.2015.1006385 (link to it here)

Abstract:

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.