Bilingual Professionals in Community Mental Health Services

1998 ◽  
Vol 32 (3) ◽  
pp. 424-433 ◽  
Author(s):  
Penny Mitchell ◽  
Abd Malak ◽  
David Small

Objective: This paper presents results from research that explored the roles of bilingual professionals in community mental health services in the Sydney metropolitan area of New South Wales. There were two main objectives to the research: (i) to identify and describe the roles of bilingual professionals that are important in improving the quality of community mental health services for clients from non-English-speaking backgrounds (NESB); and (ii) to identify and describe the factors that facilitate and inhibit the conduct of these roles. Method: Data collection involved indepth interviews with bilingual professionals and team leaders in community mental health services and various other community health services; and various staff responsible for policy and service development with regard to cultural diversity. Results: Bilingual mental health workers were found to have at least four critical roles. These were (i) direct clinical service provision to NESB clients; (ii) mental health promotion and community development; (iii) cultural consultancy; and (iv) service development. Respondents reported that the latter three roles were seriously underdeveloped compared to the clinical service provision role. Conclusions: It is critical that service managers implement strategies to make better use of the linguistic and cultural skills of bilingual professionals. In addition to their role in clinical service provision ways must be found to facilitate the community-focused, cultural consultancy and service development roles of bilingual professionals employed in mental health services.

2009 ◽  
Vol 33 (1) ◽  
pp. 13 ◽  
Author(s):  
Liz Prowse ◽  
Tim Coombs

Discharge from public community mental health services has proven difficult for mental health workers and managers. Mental illness can often be long term, with ongoing disability, requiring a need for corresponding long-term care. Community mental health services are now becoming recovery focused and are recognising the need for alternative management arrangements for individuals with long-term care needs. There are, however few tools to assist in the decision making about discharge or transfer of care between community mental health teams. This article describes a quality improvement project to develop a flag for mental health workers to prompt decisions regarding discharge and transfer using the Health of the Nation Outcome Scales (HoNOS). Relevant literature and HoNOS data collected as part of routine clinical practice were reviewed to develop the flag. The implementation process is described along with plans for future developments.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Konstantinos Panagiotis Anargyros ◽  
Andreas Spyridon Lappas ◽  
Nikos Christodoulou

The current system of mental health care in Greece was created in accordance with the European Union and other international principles for mental health care provisions. Whereas Greece has been reforming its system of mental healthcare since at least the 80s, the main recent Greek effort has been Psychargos, a programme which began in 2000 and is still in effect. During the last two decades the Greek mental health system has been gradually shifting to a community-based system of care. Various different services with unique, yet intertwined, responsibilities have been introduced. The Greek system of mental health care still faces challenges, and the mental health reform is on-going. Future goals should be to improve the current framework of care, improve access to care by establishing fit-for-purpose community mental health services across the country, enhance multidisciplinary collaboration and patient involvement, integrate community mental health care with physical and social care services, and to ensure that service development is driven by need. Crucially, such aims demand the adoption of a culture of clinical governance and a consistent shift from traditional therapeutic care to person-centered psychiatry and preventive psychiatry.


1998 ◽  
Vol 173 (5) ◽  
pp. 423-427 ◽  
Author(s):  
Graham Thornicroft ◽  
Til Wykes ◽  
Frank Holloway ◽  
Sonia Johnson ◽  
George Szmuckler

BackgroundThe PRiSM Psychosis Study investigated the outcomes of community mental health services for epidemiologically representative cases of psychosis in London.MethodThe results presented in the preceding nine papers are interpreted.Results(a) The health and social gains reported in experimental studies of community health services are replicable in ordinary clinical settings, and are more effective than hospital-oriented services which they replace, (b) Dilution does occur - these gains are less pronounced than in experimental (efficacy) studies, (c) Both models of community services produced a range of improved outcomes, (d) Some limited extra advantages (in terms of met needs, improved quality of life, and social networks) were found in the intensive sector, (e) There is no consistent evidence that community-oriented services (which include in-patient beds) fail service users, their families or the wider public. On balance the results weigh slightly in favour of the two-team model (for acute and continuing care) in terms of clinical effectiveness, but the general model is almost as effective and is less expensive.ConclusionsThe evidence supports a community-oriented rather than a hospital-oriented approach and there is little difference between the community mental health team models.


2011 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 3 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alex Cohen ◽  
Julian Eaton ◽  
Birgit Radtke ◽  
Christina George ◽  
Bro Manuel ◽  
...  

1998 ◽  
Vol 7 (2) ◽  
pp. 98-109 ◽  
Author(s):  
Antonio Lora ◽  
Gabriella Bai ◽  
Callisto Bravi ◽  
Roberto Bezzi ◽  
Francesco Bulgarini ◽  
...  

RIASSUNTOScopo — L'obiettivo di questo studio è quello di descrivere i patterns di utilizzazione dei pazienti in contatto con 5 Unità Operative di Psichiatria lombarde secondo quattro classi: alti utilizzatori lungoassistiti, alti utilizzatori non lungoassistiti, lungoassistiti non alti utilizzatori, non alti utilizzatori non lungoassistiti. Disegno — Studio descrittivo a partire dai dati ricavati dal Sistema Informativo Psichiatrico regionale; è stata analizzata una coorte di 5.670 pazienti nell'ambito della prevalenza annua relativa all'anno 1994. Setting — 5 Unità Operative di Psichiatria della Regione Lombardia (Merate, Treviglio, Crema, Desio, Castano Primo), con una popolazione complessiva di 610.184 residenti di eta superiore ai 14 anni. Principali misure utilizzate — Sono state prese in considerazione alcune variabili sociodemografiche e cliniche relative ai pazienti; oltre un'analisi descrittiva dei quattro patterns, è stata effettuata una analisi logistica multinomiale. Risultari — Gli alti utilizzatori lungoassistiti (AU-LA), pur rappresentando solo il 5.3% del campione (4.9 casi per 10.000 residenti di età superiore ai 14 anni), consumano il 60% delle risorse espresse in SCS; solo la condizione di separato, divorziato, vedovo è predittiva per tale pattern. Gli alti utilizzatori non lungoassistiti (AU-non LA) costituiscono 1.2% del campione (1.1 casi per 10.000) ed utilizzano il 7.8% del SCS. Variabili predittrici di tale pattern sono l'eta compresa tra i 15-44 anni, l'assenza di un'attivita lavorativa e di un partner, la diagnosi di un disturbo mentale grave e la presenza di contatti con i servizi psichiatrici negli anni 1985-1989. I lungoassistiti non alti utilizzatori (LA-non AU) rappresentano il 23.4% della coorte (21.6 casi per 10.000) e vengono al secondo posto per consumo dirisorse (18.1% del SCS). Sono variabili predittive: l'età compresa tra i 15-44 anni, il vivere da solo, l'assenza di un'attività lavorativa e di un partner, la diagnosi di un disturbo mentale grave e la presenza di contatti con i servizi psichiatrici antecedenti al 1990. I pazienti non lungoassistiti non alti utilizzatori (non LA-non AU), pur rappresentando il 70.1% della coorte (64.8 casi per 10.000), consumano solo il 13.8% del SCS. Conclusioni — I dati mostrano che complessivamente l'attivita delle UOP è orientata nei confronti dei pazienti piu gravi, anche se sono rilevabili marcate differenze tra le UOP lombarde rispetto all'utilizzazione dei servizi. È confermata l'utilita di un Sistema Informativo a diffusione regionale che permetta di monitorare l'evoluzione nel tempo e nel territorio regionale dei patterns di utilizzazione.


1994 ◽  
Vol 45 (8) ◽  
pp. 793-797 ◽  
Author(s):  
Phyllis Solomon ◽  
Jeffrey Draine ◽  
Arthur Meyerson

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