Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-dsjbd Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-28T04:54:40.948Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Peter Bruggen, MB ChB FRCPsych

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 July 2019

Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Type
Obituaries
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © The Author 2019

Formerly Consultant Adolescent Psychiatrist, Hill End Adolescent Unit, St. Albans, Hertfordshire

Peter Bruggen, who died in September last year at the age of 84, developed what was at the time a unique systemic model for managing an in-patient adolescent unit. Admission, Peter believed, resulted from the inability of patient's support systems to cope with the anxiety caused by the patient's behaviour. Medical diagnosis was eschewed in favour of a systemic behavioural formulation. Peter was sensitive to the adverse effects of institutional care and actively sought to prevent admission, or, when inevitable, to keep admission as short as possible. At initial meetings in the community, he and the team often successfully helped to find alternatives to admission. Young people were admitted only if there was nowhere else which could keep them safely.

Admission enhanced parents' authority by making explicit their right to admit their teenager (under 16) to a place of safety. Discharge was predicated on the young person demonstrating, on weekly home visits, their commitment to change by achieving precisely defined, positively framed ‘minimum changes’, agreed at the admission meeting with the parents (or care-holders). To discourage institutional or dyadic dependencies, all psychotherapeutic work was done in groups (family, ‘community’ encounter-style and/or ‘action’ groups) and there were no ‘home comforts’. Boundaries were strictly enforced, and staff immediately confronted adolescents in ad hoc ‘community’ meetings about any anxiety-provoking behaviour. Adolescents in turn were encouraged and enabled to be open and honest with themselves and others, to call meetings, to take responsibility for their actions and the consequences of their actions, to understand their power and its limits, to explore their difficulties and find solutions in innovative ‘action’ groups, and to work to get out of hospital as soon as possible. The austere and non-nurturing atmosphere, and the ways that behaviour was challenged (with community meetings, seclusion and, if all else failed, with sedation) was felt by some young people to be abusive (and indeed recent allegations of historical abuse are currently the subject of a police investigation). However, the transformations for the majority of young people and their families (at least in the short term) were impressively quick, empowering of parents and adolescents, and often restored hope which had previously been lost. Although Peter was explicit about his role and responsibility as the lead clinician, the staff group culture was egalitarian with a strong personal development ethic, and Peter was an enthusiastic advocate for interdisciplinary working. Peter emphasised the contribution of the professional team to the model developed, but it was clear to all that Peter was the instigator of much of the radical thinking, the integrator, the one who made it happen.

Peter will be remembered as a man of principle and purpose, a clear, independent and creative thinker, who challenged the very way in which we understood mental illness and its manifestations. He was a warm, open, honest and humble man, as well as a charismatic leader. He stood up against the conventional when it clashed with his strongly held ethical values, refused military service as a conscientious objector, was an activist marching for the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament, and was a lifelong member of the Labour Party. He traced his enduring enthusiasm for new ways of thinking to sessions he had in the early 1960s of the then-pioneering LSD-augmented psychotherapy.

Qualifying as a doctor in Edinburgh in 1957, he did his training in psychiatry at Warlingham Park Hospital, where he became interested in psychotherapy, had a training analysis with Marion Miller, and joined the Tavistock Clinic, first as a Senior Registrar under Derek Miller and with supervision by Donald Winnicott (he traced his clear thinking about the use of authority to these two mentors), and then as a Consultant in the Adolescent Department. However, by the time of his deployment to Hill End in 1969, he had become more interested in the new, mainly family-based therapies, initially through Robin Skynner's family group approach, and then in the systemic thinking of the Palo Alto group, the structural family therapy of Minuchin, the strategic and pragmatic approaches of the brief therapist, and the inventiveness of neuro-linguistic programming.

Peter was the Medical Director of his Trust (St Albans and Dacorum mental health trust) for 3 years before his retirement in 1994, and subsequently researched and wrote a book about inadequate provision in the National Health Service and low morale among staff.Reference Bruggen1 He also wrote two books about his work with adolescents,Reference Bruggen and O'Brian2,Reference Bruggen and O'Brian3 as many as 40 journal articles, including an influential contribution (with Sandy Bourne) on the inherent prejudice against women consultants in the then ‘merit award’ system, and presented workshops and seminars internationally.

He went on to be a tutor at the Institute of Family Therapy, was a visiting tutor and trainer for a time in Bodo, Norway, and in Adelaide, Australia, a group facilitator and mentor to newly-qualified doctors in Newham, supervisor of a group for special needs adults at the London Hospital, and mentor to numerous newly appointed consultant adolescent psychiatrists. He co-authored podcasts with Raj Persaud and contributed to ITV's ‘The Healing Arts’.

An advocate for assisted dying and a regular discussant at the Death Café, in his later years, Peter maintained a keen socialist-humanist perspective on politics and an interest in theatre and art-house movies. Always a keen swimmer, he raised money in annual Swimathons for the Marie Curie Hospice, where he died in late September after a mercifully short illness.

He leaves behind his wife of 54 years, Joan, three daughters (Emma, Camilla and Alice), four grandchildren, his devoted dog, Reilly, and scores of loyal colleagues and ex-trainees who will remember him with affection and respect and will forever be in his debt.

References

1Bruggen, P. Who Cares? True Stories of the NHS Reforms. Jon Carpenter, 1997.Google Scholar
2Bruggen, P, O'Brian, C. Surviving Adolescence. Faber, 1986.Google Scholar
3Bruggen, P, O'Brian, C. Helping Families: Systems, Residential and Agency Responsibilities. Faber and Faber, 1987.Google Scholar
Submit a response

eLetters

No eLetters have been published for this article.