Kendrick T, Sibbald B, Burns T, Freeling P
Department of General Practice, St George's Hospital Medical School, London.
BMJ. 1991 Mar 2;302(6775):508-10. doi: 10.1136/bmj.302.6775.508.
To assess general practitioners' involvement with long term mentally ill patients and attitudes towards their care.
Postal questionnaire survey.
General practices in South West Thames region.
507 general practitioners, 369 (73%) of whom returned the questionnaire.
The number of adult long term mentally ill patients whom general practitioners estimate they have on their lists and general practitioners' willingness to take responsibility for them.
110 respondents had noticed an effect of the discharge of adult long term mentally ill patients on their practices. Most (225) respondents estimated that they had 10 or fewer such patients each on their lists. Having higher numbers was significantly associated with practising in Greater London or within three miles of a large mental hospital and having contact with a psychiatrist visiting the practice. 333 general practitioners would agree to share the care of long term mentally ill patients with the psychiatrist by taking responsibility for the patients' physical problems. Only 59 would agree to act as a key worker, 308 preferring the community psychiatric nurse to do it. Only nine had specific practice policies for looking after long term mentally ill patients and 287 agreed that such patients often come to their general practitioner's attention only when there is a crisis.
The uneven distribution of long term mentally ill patients suggests that community pyschiatric resources might be better targeted at those practices with higher numbers of such patients. Most general practitioners seem to be receptive to a shared care plan when the consultant takes responsibility for monitoring psychiatric health with the community nurse as key worker. The lack of practice policies for reviewing the care of long term mentally ill patients must limit general practitioners' ability to prevent crises developing in their care.
评估全科医生对长期精神病患者的参与程度及其对患者护理的态度。
邮寄问卷调查。
泰晤士河西南部地区的全科诊所。
507名全科医生,其中369名(73%)回复了问卷。
全科医生估计在其名单上的成年长期精神病患者数量以及全科医生对为这些患者负责的意愿。
110名受访者注意到成年长期精神病患者出院对其诊所产生了影响。大多数(225名)受访者估计他们名单上此类患者每人有10名或更少。患者数量较多与在大伦敦地区执业或在大型精神病院三英里范围内执业以及与到诊所出诊的精神科医生有接触显著相关。333名全科医生会同意与精神科医生分担长期精神病患者的护理工作,负责患者的身体问题。只有59名会同意担任关键工作者,308名更倾向于由社区精神科护士来担任。只有9名有照顾长期精神病患者的具体诊所政策,287名同意此类患者通常只有在出现危机时才会引起全科医生的注意。
长期精神病患者分布不均表明社区精神科资源可能更好地针对此类患者数量较多的诊所。当顾问医生负责监测精神健康,社区护士担任关键工作者时,大多数全科医生似乎愿意接受共同护理计划。缺乏审查长期精神病患者护理的诊所政策必然会限制全科医生预防其护理中危机发生的能力。