England Elizabeth, Lester Helen
Department of Primary Care, University of Birmingham, Edgbaston, England, UK.
Int J Integr Care. 2005;5:e24. doi: 10.5334/ijic.140.
The purpose of this paper is to examine the effects of health care policy on the development of integrated mental health services in England.
Drawing largely from a narrative review of the literature on adult mental health services published between January 1997 and February 2003 undertaken by the authors, we discuss three case studies of integrated care within primary care, secondary care and across the primary/secondary interface for people with serious mental illness.
We suggest that while the central thrust of a raft of recent Government policies in England has been towards integration of different parts of the health care system, policy waterfalls and implementation failures, the adoption of ideas before they have been thoroughly tried and tested, a lack of clarity over roles and responsibilities and poor communication have led to an integration rhetoric/reality gap in practice. This has particular implications for people with serious mental health problems.
We conclude with suggestions for strategies that may facilitate more integrated working.
本文旨在探讨医疗保健政策对英格兰综合心理健康服务发展的影响。
主要借鉴作者对1997年1月至2003年2月期间发表的关于成人心理健康服务的文献进行的叙述性综述,我们讨论了针对严重精神疾病患者在初级保健、二级保健以及跨初级/二级界面的综合护理的三个案例研究。
我们认为,尽管英格兰近期一系列政府政策的核心主旨是推动医疗保健系统不同部分的整合,但政策的层层下达和实施失败、在想法未经充分试验和检验之前就予以采用、角色和责任不明确以及沟通不畅,导致了实践中整合的言辞与现实之间存在差距。这对严重心理健康问题患者具有特殊影响。
我们最后提出了有助于促进更综合协作的策略建议。