Tailored PBM training for Mental Health Services
Timian’s BILD Act Certified training provides practical, evidence‑aligned skills in positive behaviour management, de‑escalation and trauma‑informed practice that complement clinical care and improve working partnerships across health and social care in mental health settings.
Training designed for teams working across community, crisis and clinical mental health settings
Whether supporting people living in the community, attending crisis services, or being cared for in hospital environments, staff are required to respond to behaviour that may both reflect and amplify underlying distress.
Our training focuses on:
- Understanding behaviour as communication, not a clinical symptom
- Understanding behaviour as communication, not simply a clinical symptom
- Supporting safe responses to escalation in environments under pressure
- Reducing over‑reliance on restrictive physical interventions
- Applying trauma‑informed principles that respect autonomy and dignity
- Strengthening consistency across multi‑disciplinary teams
Build Sustainable Skills with Timian’s Train-the-Trainer
For organisations looking to embed behaviour support across services, Timian’s Positive Behaviour Management Train‑the‑Trainer programme equips key practitioners to deliver training internally. This approach helps:
Register
Browse our upcoming training dates or get in touch to discuss on-site delivery for your CAMHS service or multidisciplinary team.
Train
Nominate a staff member to attend our instructor course and become a certified Timian trainer, able to deliver BILD Act Certified training tailored to CAMHS-related settings and needs.
Empower
Equip your team to respond calmly, ethically and effectively to behaviour that challenges in young people.
Behaviour Management Training That Reflects Real-World Practice
Timian’s programmes are designed to complement clinical care and strengthen workforce capability across all parts of the mental health system:
Build practical de‑escalation skills
in contexts where distress and dysregulation can emerge unexpectedly.
Embed trauma‑informed approaches
recognising that past experiences shape how people express and respond to stress.
Reduce reliance on restrictive interventions
aligning with NICE recommendations to anticipate and minimise harm.
Strengthen cross‑team consistency
so language and practice are shared across community, crisis and acute environments.
Partnering for Better Behaviour Support
When behaviour support is consistent, ethical and grounded in real‑world practice, teams in community care, crisis response or clinical services, are better equipped to support people through distress and complexity.