community mental health centre
Recently Published Documents


TOTAL DOCUMENTS

63
(FIVE YEARS 5)

H-INDEX

11
(FIVE YEARS 0)

2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Inger Elise Opheim Moljord ◽  
Kine Gabrielsen Stensvåg ◽  
Vidar Halsteinli ◽  
Marit By Rise

Abstract Background Self-referral to inpatient treatment (SRIT) is built on user participation and patient autonomy. SRIT was conducted for patients with severe mental disorders in a Norwegian Community Mental Health Centre. The aims of the present study were to describe the implementation of SRIT, explore the professionals’ experiences of SRIT and assess the costs entailed. Methods Qualitative document analysis, interviews with professionals and quantitative analysis of register data from a randomized controlled trial were used. Results SRIT seemed to be implemented as intended. According to the professionals, SRIT allowed the patients to cope, be empowered, more active and responsible. Some professionals experienced increased responsibility for patients’ medication and for assessing health and suicide risks. SRIT did not reduce hospital costs. The professionals were satisfied with nurse-led SRIT treatment. Conclusions SRIT appears to be a high-quality mental health service that empowers and activates patients. Nurse-led treatment may entail more efficient use of professional resources. In future implementations of SRIT, the efficient use of service resources and the administration of beds should be investigated. More flexible availability should be considered in line with the intentions behind SRIT, as well as ensuring adequate professional training in assessing health and suicide risk.



BJPsych Open ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 7 (S1) ◽  
pp. S148-S149
Author(s):  
Noor Melissa Nor Hadi ◽  
Jiann Lin Loo

AimsThe MRCPsych (Membership of the Royal College of Psychiatrists, United Kingdom) parallel training pathway has been introduced in Malaysia to produce competent psychiatrists to deliver evidence-based psychiatric care. Certain training centres faced specific challenges during the process of implementation, including the lacking of supervisors with experience in the MRCPsych examination, over-reliance on self-study and existing continuous medical education (CME), logistic difficulty in accessing specific training courses, the sustainability of local training, and loss of manpower due to frequent mobilisation of trainees. This article is aimed to illustrate the Northern STARS (Supervision, Training, and Reflective System) project, i.e. a project implemented as a solution for those challenges and an effort to develop a sustainable model of training for the local talents in Perlis, a northern state in Malaysia.MethodThe Northern STARS initiatives included: setting up a library with more MRCPsych-related materials; introducing trainees to virtual MRCPsych support groups; organizing both physical and virtual training locally, collaborating with local and international experts for consultation and teaching, and the introduction of protected study time. Virtual platforms were used innovatively to minimise cost. Ongoing data were collected for programme evaluation and quality improvement. Trainees were actively involved in the process to facilitate the development of leadership and administrative skills.ResultA total of seven courses covering both skill and theory training had been organised: Ultra-brief Psychological Intervention Workshop, Dialectic Behavioural Therapy workshop, Personality Disorder Workshop, Critical Appraisal Workshop, MRCPsych Lecture Series, Addiction Psychiatry Lecture, and Basic Revision Course on Electroconvulsive Therapy. An estimated amount of twenty thousand Malaysian Ringgit had been generated and channelled into the community mental health centre, accounting for the indirect cost of a subscription to ZoomTM and the intangible cost of labour effort. Overall feedback revealed a high level of satisfaction together with some specific suggestions on areas of improvement, including the timing of course and coverage of the curriculum. To date, six medical officers are pursuing this pathway with three of them passing one paper and another two pursuing the final part.ConclusionThe Northern STARS project is an ecosystem of training solutions while generating income and producing more local talents to expand this project further. More long-term evaluation from the perspective of human resource and health economics can be considered to understand the efficiency of the current initiative.



2021 ◽  
pp. 002076402110084
Author(s):  
Sudhir Babu Sriramulu ◽  
Aravind Raj Elangovan ◽  
Mohan Isaac ◽  
Janaki Raman Kalyanasundaram

Background: Treatment gap causes significant loss to individuals, families, societies and the nation. Treatment adherence enhancement is a major challenge in psychiatric disorders. Globally, the community mental health services are obligated to minimize the treatment and adherence gap. In recent years’ retrospective studies are gaining importance to measure the trend of mental health service utilization, cost effectiveness, resources allocation and similar aspects. Aim: To explore the treatment adherence pattern of persons with neuropsychiatric illness from a rural community mental health centre. Method: Five hundred and ninety-six medical records of persons with neuropsychiatric disorders who registered for outpatient treatment between 2015 and 2017 at Sakalawara Rural mental health centre of National Institute of Mental Health and Neuro Sciences, Bangalore, India, were reviewed to understand their adherence pattern Results: Out of 596 patients, 68 (11.4%) were referred to tertiary care mental health and District Mental Health Programme (DMHP) services. Out of the remaining 528 patients, 29.7% were regular to mental health services over a period of 12 months and above; majority of the patients (36.2%) dropped out of their treatment after their first contact and 34.1% discontinued their follow up visits over a period of first week to 12 months. Conclusion: Community based mental health centres too face challenges of and problems related to treatment non-adherence. Persons with neuropsychiatric disorders require continuity of care through regular home visits, out-reach services and innovative methods which will enhance treatment adherence.



Author(s):  
Candice L.Y.M. Powell ◽  
Alfred Pak-Kwan Lo ◽  
Gladys T.Y. Yeung ◽  
Natalie T.Y. Leung ◽  
Winnie W.S. Mak ◽  
...  

Abstract Background: To cope with the rising demand for psychological treatment, evidence-based low-intensity cognitive behavioural therapy (LiCBT) delivered by trained para-professionals was introduced internationally. Aims: This pilot study aimed at examining the effectiveness of LiCBT in Hong Kong. Method: This study was of an uncontrolled pre- and post-treatment design, testing LiCBT at a local community mental health centre in Hong Kong. Two hundred and eighty-five Chinese adult help-seekers to the centre attended two or more sessions of LiCBT delivered by trained para-professionals. These participants also rated their depression and anxiety on the Patient Health Questionnaire-9 (PHQ-9) and Generalised Anxiety Disorder Scale-7 (GAD-7), respectively, at pre- and post-treatment. Results: Comparison of the pre- and post-treatment PHQ-9 and GAD-7 scores of 285 participants indicated significant improvements in depression and anxiety with large effect sizes (depression: d = 0.87; anxiety: d = 0.95). For those participants reaching the clinical level of either depression and/or anxiety at pre-treatment (n = 229, 80.4%), they reported even larger effect sizes (depression: d = 1.00; anxiety: d = 1.15). The recovery rate was 55.9% with a reliable improvement rate of 63.9%. An average of 5.6 sessions was offered to the participants with each session spanning a mean of 42 minutes. The baseline clinical conditions and participants’ educational level were predictive of post-treatment recovery. Conclusions: The results supported the effectiveness and cost-efficiency of LiCBT for depression and anxiety at a Hong Kong community mental health centre. The effect sizes and the recovery and reliable improvement rates achieved were comparable to those reported from countries such as the UK and Australia.



Author(s):  
Gulay Tasdemir Yigitoglu ◽  
Gulseren Keskin

Abstract Objective: To assess schizophrenia patients’ approach toward coping with stress in terms of demographic variables. Methods: The cross-sectional descriptive study was conducted at the State Hospital Community Mental Health Centre, Turkey, from November 1, 2013, to April 30, 2014, and comprised patients diagnosed with schizophrenia. Data was collected using Sociodemographic Information Form, and the Coping Assessment Questionnaire Inventory. It was analysed using SPSS 18.  Results: Of the 53 patients, 14(26.4%) were females, and 39(73.5%) were males. The overall mean age was 38±10.66 years. Highest mean score was recorded for the emotion-focussed coping subscale which was 63.49±10.64. Female patients used emotional social support, focussing on problems and venting emotions techniques (p<0.05). Patients who did not use alcohol received higher scores from religious coping subscales, while patients who used alcohol scored higher from substance use and dysfunctional coping subscales (p<0.05). Conclusion: Most schizophrenia patients were found to be using emotion-focussed coping methods. Continuous....



2020 ◽  
Vol 20 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jorun Rugkåsa ◽  
Ole Gunnar Tveit ◽  
Julie Berteig ◽  
Ajmal Hussain ◽  
Torleif Ruud

Abstract Background Health policy in many countries directs treatment to the lowest effective care level and encourages collaboration between primary and specialist mental health care. A number of models for collaborative care have been developed, and patient benefits are being reported. Less is known about what enables and prevents implementation and sustainability of such models regarding the actions and attitudes of stakeholders on the ground. This article reports from a qualitative sub-study of a cluster-RCT testing a model for collaborative care in Oslo, Norway. The model involved the placement of psychologists and psychiatrists from a community mental health centre in each intervention GP practice. GPs could seek their input or advice when needed and refer patients to them for assessment (including assessment of the need for external services) or treatment. Methods We conducted in-depth qualitative interviews with GPs (n = 7), CMHC specialists (n = 6) and patients (n = 11) in the intervention arm. Sample specific topic guides were used to investigate the experience of enablers and barriers to the collaborative care model. Data were subject to stepwise deductive-inductive thematic analysis. Results Participants reported positive experiences of how the model improved accessibility. First, co-location made GPs and CMHC specialists accessible to each other and facilitated detailed, patient-centred case collaboration and learning through complementary skills. The threshold for patients’ access to specialist care was lowered, treatment could commence early, and throughput increased. Treatment episodes were brief (usually 5–10 sessions) and this was too brief according to some patients. Second, having experienced mental health specialists in the team and on the front line enabled early assessment of symptoms and of the type of treatment and service that patients required and were entitled to, and who could be treated at the GP practice. This improved both care pathways and referral practices. Barriers revolved around the organisation of care. Logistical issues could be tricky but were worked out. The biggest obstacle was the funding of health care at a structural level, which led to economic losses for both the GP practices and the CMHC, making the model unsustainable. Conclusions Participants identified a range of benefits of collaborative care for both patients and services. However, the funding system in effect penalises collaborative work. It is difficult to see how policy aiming for successful, sustainable collaboration can be achieved without governments changing funding structures. Trial registration ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT03624829.



2019 ◽  
Vol 27 (6) ◽  
pp. 637-640
Author(s):  
Tom Meehan ◽  
Hong Wang ◽  
Allan Drummond ◽  
Hazlin Lockman

Objective: To assess the extent to which therapeutic drug monitoring during maintenance phase treatment with lithium and clozapine was performed according to an agreed protocol and to identify strategies that may support monitoring. Methods: Data concerning the prescribing and monitoring patterns of lithium for 31 patients and clozapine for 53 patients were collected retrospectively over a period of 2 years. Results: Adherence to clozapine monitoring throughout the study period was 90.5%, while the monitoring of lithium was less likely at 58.1% ( P < 0.001). While those prescribed lithium were less likely to adhere to prescribed dosing than those prescribed clozapine ( P < 0.007), they were also more likely to have a change of medication ( P < 0.005) and require admission to inpatient care ( P < 0.002). Conclusions: Despite the initiatives established to improve adherence to monitoring, there was a significantly lower level of lithium monitoring compared to that of clozapine. Strategies that are likely to support monitoring include the use of labels to clarify tests required, the use of a database to keep track of those requiring pathology tests and allocation of time each week for a nurse to work with medical staff and case managers to support monitoring.



Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document