Fletcher Janine, Gavin Michael, Harkness Elaine, Gask Linda
School of Nursing, Midwifery and Social Work, University of Manchester, Manchester, UK.
Health Soc Care Community. 2008 Sep;16(5):451-9. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2524.2007.00754.x. Epub 2008 Jan 24.
The UK National Health Service (NHS) workforce has recently seen the arrival of the Graduate Mental Health Worker (GMHW) in primary care. We established a Quality Improvement Collaborative to assist in embedding this new workforce in one Strategic Health Authority Area of England. The intervention utilised 'collaborative' technology which involves bringing together groups of practitioners from different organizations to work in a structured way to improve the quality of their service. The process was evaluated by an action research project in which all stakeholders participated. Data collection was primarily qualitative. During the project, there was an increase in throughput of new patients seen by the GMHWs and increased workforce satisfaction with a sense that the collaborative aided the change process within the organizations. Involvement of managers and commissioners from the Primary Care Trusts where the GMHWs were employed appeared to be important in achieving change. This was not, however, sufficient to combat significant attrition of the first cohort of workers. The project identified several barriers to the successful implementation of a new workforce for mental health problems in primary care, including widespread variation in the level and quality of supervision and in payment and terms of service of workers. A collaborative approach can be used to support the development of new roles in health care; however, full engagement from management is particularly necessary for success in implementation. The problems faced by GMHWs reflect those faced by other new workers in healthcare settings, yet in some ways are even more disturbing given the lack of governance arrangements put in place to oversee these developments and the apparent use of relatively unsupported and inexperienced novices as agents of change in the NHS.
英国国家医疗服务体系(NHS)的初级医疗保健领域最近迎来了研究生心理健康工作者(GMHW)。我们成立了一个质量改进协作组织,以协助在英格兰的一个战略健康管理局区域内引入这支新的工作队伍。该干预措施采用了“协作”技术,即把来自不同组织的从业者群体聚集在一起,以结构化的方式开展工作,从而提高他们的服务质量。整个过程由一个所有利益相关者都参与的行动研究项目进行评估。数据收集主要采用定性方法。在项目实施期间,GMHW接待的新患者数量有所增加,工作人员的满意度也有所提高,大家感觉这种协作有助于各组织内部的变革进程。在GMHW受雇的初级医疗保健信托机构中,管理人员和专员的参与对于实现变革似乎很重要。然而,这还不足以应对首批工作人员的大量流失。该项目确定了在初级医疗保健领域成功引入一支针对心理健康问题的新工作队伍所面临的几个障碍,包括监督水平和质量以及工作人员薪酬和服务条款方面存在广泛差异。协作方法可用于支持医疗保健领域新角色的发展;然而,管理层的充分参与对于实施成功尤为必要。GMHW面临的问题反映了医疗保健环境中其他新员工所面临的问题,但鉴于缺乏监督这些发展的治理安排,而且在NHS中显然使用相对缺乏支持且经验不足的新手作为变革推动者,这些问题在某些方面甚至更令人不安。