Department of Psychological Medicine, University of Otago, Wellington, Wellington, New Zealand.
Biostatistics Group, Dean's Department, University of Otago, Wellington, Wellington, New Zealand.
Aust N Z J Psychiatry. 2023 Apr;57(4):572-582. doi: 10.1177/00048674221109131. Epub 2022 Jul 10.
Mental health-related calls to emergency services made via 111 (New Zealand) or 000 (Australia) often represent critical junctures for the person in crisis. Traditionally, police, ambulance and mental health services work separately to manage such emergencies. Sequential agency responses may be protracted and cause escalation. This study tests multi-agency co-response aiming for more integrated, faster, safer and less coercive management of mental health crises.
Immediate and 1-month outcomes of mental health emergency calls made to police and ambulance were compared according to whether they occurred on days with co-response availability. Outcomes measured included emergency department admission and waiting times, psychiatric admissions, compulsory treatment, use of force, detention in police cells and the time to resolution of the event. Relative risk estimates were constructed.
A total 1273 eligible mental health emergency callouts occurred between March 2020 and March 2021 (38% coded 'mental health' emergencies, 48% suicide risk and 14% as 'other'), 881 on days with co-response availability and 392 on days without. Co-response interventions were resolved faster and were more likely to be community-based. Fewer than one-third (32%) led to emergency department admissions, compared with close to half (45%) on days without co-response (risk ratio: 0.7 [0.6, 0.8]). In the following month, the number of emergency department and mental health admissions reduced ( < 0.01 and 0.05, respectively). There were no statistically significant differences in use of force and few people were detained in police custody.
Co-response intervention increased the likelihood of mental health crises being resolved in the community and reduced hospitalisations. Benefits were sustained at 1 month.
通过 111(新西兰)或 000(澳大利亚)拨打的与心理健康相关的紧急服务电话,往往代表着危机中的人面临的关键转折点。传统上,警察、救护车和心理健康服务机构分别负责管理此类紧急情况。按顺序响应机构可能会拖延,并导致情况升级。本研究测试多机构联合响应,旨在更综合、更快、更安全、更少强制地管理心理健康危机。
根据是否在联合响应可用的日子拨打心理健康紧急电话,比较拨打给警察和救护车的心理健康紧急电话的即时和 1 个月结果。测量的结果包括急诊科入院和等待时间、精神科入院、强制治疗、使用武力、在警察牢房中的拘留以及事件解决的时间。构建了相对风险估计。
2020 年 3 月至 2021 年 3 月期间,共发生了 1273 起符合条件的心理健康紧急电话(38%编码为“心理健康”紧急情况,48%自杀风险,14%为“其他”),881 起在联合响应可用的日子,392 起在联合响应不可用的日子。联合响应干预措施解决得更快,并且更有可能是基于社区的。与没有联合响应的日子相比,不到三分之一(32%)导致急诊科入院,而近一半(45%)(风险比:0.7 [0.6, 0.8])。在下一个月,急诊科和精神科入院人数减少(分别为<0.01 和 0.05)。在使用武力方面没有统计学上的显著差异,很少有人被拘留在警察拘留所。
联合响应干预措施增加了在社区中解决心理健康危机的可能性,并减少了住院治疗。在 1 个月时仍有获益。