Farrelly Simone, Brown Gill, Rose Diana, Doherty Elizabeth, Henderson R Claire, Birchwood Max, Marshall Max, Waheed Waquas, Szmukler George, Thornicroft Graham
Section of Community Mental Health, Box PO29, Health Service and Population Research Department, Institute of Psychiatry, King's College London, De Crespigny Park, London, SE5 8AF, UK,
Soc Psychiatry Psychiatr Epidemiol. 2014 Oct;49(10):1609-17. doi: 10.1007/s00127-014-0869-1. Epub 2014 Apr 2.
Recent legislation and guidance in England emphasises the importance of service user choice in care planning. However, it is not obvious how best to facilitate choices in care planning, and some clinicians are concerned that service users may make 'unwise' decisions. This study aimed to examine mental health service users' preferences and priorities in the event of a future mental health crisis or relapse.
Thematic analysis of 221 joint crisis plans (JCP) developed by service users and their clinical team as part of the CRIMSON randomised controlled trial. Participants had a diagnosis of a psychotic disorder, at least one psychiatric admission in the past 2 years, contact with a community mental health team, and complex care needs.
Two major categories of preferences were identified: first the manner in which crisis care would be delivered; and second, specific treatment interventions. Most service users requested full involvement in decisions about their care, clear and consistent treatment plans, access to familiar clinicians who knew them well, and to be treated with respect and compassion. Some service users requested hospitalisation, but the majority preferred alternatives. The most frequently preferred intervention was care by a home treatment team. Just under half made a treatment refusal, the majority being for specific medications, alternatives were offered.
Joint crisis planning resulted in service users making choices that were clinically reasonable. The technique employed by JCPs appeared to empower service users by engaging them in a productive dialogue with their clinicians.
英国近期的立法和指南强调了服务使用者在护理计划中选择的重要性。然而,目前尚不清楚如何在护理计划中最好地促进选择,一些临床医生担心服务使用者可能会做出“不明智”的决定。本研究旨在调查精神卫生服务使用者在未来精神健康危机或复发情况下的偏好和优先事项。
对服务使用者及其临床团队制定的221份联合危机计划(JCP)进行主题分析,这些计划是CRIMSON随机对照试验的一部分。参与者被诊断患有精神障碍,在过去2年中至少有一次精神病住院经历,与社区精神卫生团队有接触,且有复杂的护理需求。
确定了两类主要偏好:一是危机护理的提供方式;二是具体的治疗干预措施。大多数服务使用者要求全面参与有关其护理的决策、清晰一致的治疗计划、能够接触熟悉他们的临床医生,并得到尊重和同情的对待。一些服务使用者要求住院治疗,但大多数人更喜欢其他选择。最常被偏好的干预措施是由家庭治疗团队提供护理。近一半的人拒绝治疗,大多数是拒绝特定药物,会提供替代药物。
联合危机计划使服务使用者做出了临床上合理的选择。联合危机计划采用的技术似乎通过让服务使用者与临床医生进行富有成效的对话,增强了他们的能力。