Tertiary eating disorder services: is it time to integrate specialty care across the life span?

2021 ◽  
pp. 103985622110108
Author(s):  
Stephen Allison ◽  
Tracey Wade ◽  
Megan Warin ◽  
Randall Long ◽  
Tarun Bastiampillai ◽  
...  

Objective: Australian tertiary eating disorder services (EDS) have a divided model of care, where child and adolescent mental health services (CAMHS) support patients until the age of 18 years, and thereafter, adult mental health services (AMHS) provide care. Consumers and carers have criticised this divided model because the age boundary occurs during the peak period of onset and acuity for eating disorders. Most CAMHS patients are lost to specialty follow-up around age 18, increasing the risks of relapse and premature mortality from eating disorders, since young women (aged 15–24) have the highest hospitalisation rates from anorexia nervosa. The current article is a commentary on the transition gap and possible service designs. Conclusions: Eating disorders require access to specialty treatment across the life span. The Australian Federal Government has expanded all-age care through the 2019 Medicare Benefit Schedule (MBS) eating disorder plans. Some new MBS patients require a rapid step-up in care intensity to a tertiary EDS, thereby increasing demand on the public sector. State/Territory Governments should strengthen EDS using the ‘youth reach-down’ model, where AMHS extend EDS to age 12. Vertical service integration from 12 to 64+ facilitates continuity of care for the duration of an eating disorder.

2016 ◽  
Vol 101 (9) ◽  
pp. 836-838 ◽  
Author(s):  
Karen Street ◽  
Susie Costelloe ◽  
Michelle Wootton ◽  
Sonja Upton ◽  
Julie Brough

BackgroundRestrictive eating disorders in young people are increasingly requiring admission to the hospital and can be a challenge to manage on acute general paediatric wards.MethodsWe have developed a joint working model with Child and Adolescent Mental Health services (CAMHS) using short, structured, supported feeding admissions to supplement outpatient treatment in high risk or ‘stuck’ cases.ResultsWe have successfully managed the majority of young people in the community avoiding lengthy, expensive, specialist CAMHS eating disorder inpatient unit admissions (tier 4). Local ward admissions are easier to manage and the attitudes of nursing and medical staff towards these young people have changed.DiscussionJoint working between paediatric and CAMHS teams enables shorter, more manageable local ward admissions, reducing the need for tier-4 units.


Partner Abuse ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
pp. 246-256 ◽  
Author(s):  
Arlene Vetere,

This article describes a methodology for safe therapeutic practice developed more than 16 years in the specialist family violence service—Reading Safer Families, UK (Cooper & Vetere, 2005). This article focuses on how a safety methodology developed in a specialist service can be adapted for use in mainstream mental health and therapeutic services, across the life span, when violence is of concern.


2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (4) ◽  
pp. 771-785
Author(s):  
Bryn Schiele ◽  
Mark D. Weist ◽  
Samantha Martinez ◽  
Mills Smith-Millman ◽  
Mark Sander ◽  
...  

1998 ◽  
Vol 22 (4) ◽  
pp. 214-216 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sophie Roberts ◽  
Toni Foxton ◽  
Ian Partridge ◽  
Greg Richardson

Child and adolescent mental health services operate at four tiers. An eating disorders service is a tier 3 function and in the usual absence of specific funding has to operate from within current resources. The operation of an eating disorders team within a wider child and adolescent mental health service has significant advantages. The operation of such a team is explained and the advantages discussed.


Author(s):  
Elizabeth Wilson ◽  
Hanna Tervonen ◽  
David Currow ◽  
Grant Sara

IntroductionCancer deaths are a major contributor to premature mortality in people with mental health conditions. Some cancers occur more often in people with mental health conditions because of increased risk factors. However, most premature cancer mortality in people with mental health conditions arises from increased cancer case fatality rates due to health care related factors. While there is substantial evidence that a problem exists, further evidence is needed to support effective action and the translation of research findings into better policy, services and care. Objectives and ApproachThe NSW Mental Health Living Longer program involves population-wide data linkage that combines records from nine NSW data collections. Our collection includes over 120 million records for more than nine million people. This presentation focuses on the use of linked data to develop indicators to support reporting on premature breast and cervical cancer mortality for women living with mental illness. These indicators will be used to identify variation in care, assess areas for targeted intervention, and evaluate the effectiveness of research translation into more effective care. ResultsThis work is ongoing and will be finalised by August 2020. We will use regression techniques to examine predictors of participation in breast and cervical  cancer screening for women who use mental health services in NSW. These results will be used to assess geographical variation in risk-adjusted screening participation rates. We will also present methods and results for measuring incidence and stage at presentation, as well as 5 year survival for women who use mental health services in NSW. Conclusion / ImplicationsIf cancer survival is a key measure of the effectiveness of healthcare systems, then reduced survival in people with mental health problems reflects less effective health care. Improving screening and treatment services is likely to be the most important strategy for reducing the cancer mortality gap for women with mental illness.


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