M. Rodgers, Siân Thomas, Jane Dalton, M. Harden, A. Eastwood
{"title":"Police-related triage interventions for mental health-related incidents: a rapid evidence synthesis","authors":"M. Rodgers, Siân Thomas, Jane Dalton, M. Harden, A. Eastwood","doi":"10.3310/HSDR07200","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"\n \n Police officers are often the first responders to mental health-related incidents and, consequently, can become a common gateway to care. The volume of such calls is an increasing challenge.\n \n \n \n What is the evidence base for models of police-related mental health triage (often referred to as ‘street triage’) interventions?\n \n \n \n Rapid evidence synthesis.\n \n \n \n Individuals perceived to be experiencing mental ill health or in a mental health crisis.\n \n \n \n Police officers responding to calls involving individuals experiencing perceived mental ill health or a mental health crisis, in the absence of suspected criminality or a criminal charge.\n \n \n \n Inclusion was not restricted by outcome.\n \n \n \n Eleven bibliographic databases (i.e. Applied Social Sciences Index and Abstracts, Criminal Justice Abstracts, EMBASE, MEDLINE, PAIS® Index, PsycINFO, Scopus, Social Care Online, Social Policy & Practice, Social Sciences Citation Index and Social Services Abstracts) and multiple online sources were searched for relevant systematic reviews and qualitative studies from inception to November 2017. Additional primary studies reporting quantitative data published from January 2016 were also sought.\n \n \n \n The three-part rapid evidence synthesis incorporated metasynthesis of the effects of street triage-type intervention models, rapid synthesis of UK-relevant qualitative evidence on implementation and the overall synthesis.\n \n \n \n Five systematic reviews, eight primary studies reporting quantitative data and eight primary studies reporting qualitative data were included. Most interventions involved police officers working in partnership with mental health professionals. These interventions were generally valued by staff and showed some positive effects on procedures (such as rates of detention) and resources, although these results were not entirely consistent and not all important outcomes were measured. Most of the evidence was at risk of multiple biases caused by design flaws and/or a lack of reporting of methods, which might affect the results.\n \n \n \n All primary research was conducted in England, so may not be generalisable to the whole of the UK. Discussion of health equity issues was largely absent from the evidence.\n \n \n \n Most published evidence that aims to describe and evaluate various models of street triage interventions is limited in scope and methodologically weak. Several systematic reviews and recent studies have called for a prospective, comprehensive and streamlined collection of a wider variety of data to evaluate the impact of these interventions. This rapid evidence synthesis expands on these recommendations to outline detailed implications for research, which includes clearer articulation of the intervention’s objectives, measurement of quantitative outcomes beyond section 136 of the Mental Health Act 1983 [Great Britain. Mental Health Act 1983. Section 136. London: The Stationery Office; 1983 URL: www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/1983/20/section/136 (accessed October 2017)] (i.e. rates, places of safety and processing data) and outcomes that are most important to the police, mental health and social care services and service users. Evaluations should take into consideration shorter-, medium- and longer-term effects. Whenever possible, study designs should have an appropriate concurrent comparator, for example by comparing the pragmatic implementation of collaborative street triage models with models that emphasise specialist training of police officers. The collection of qualitative data should capture dissenting views as well as the views of advocates. Any future cost-effectiveness analysis of these interventions should evaluate the impact across police, health and social services.\n \n \n \n The National Institute for Health Research Health Services and Delivery Research programme.\n","PeriodicalId":12880,"journal":{"name":"Health Services and Delivery Research","volume":" ","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2019-06-05","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"13","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Health Services and Delivery Research","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.3310/HSDR07200","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 13
Abstract
Police officers are often the first responders to mental health-related incidents and, consequently, can become a common gateway to care. The volume of such calls is an increasing challenge.
What is the evidence base for models of police-related mental health triage (often referred to as ‘street triage’) interventions?
Rapid evidence synthesis.
Individuals perceived to be experiencing mental ill health or in a mental health crisis.
Police officers responding to calls involving individuals experiencing perceived mental ill health or a mental health crisis, in the absence of suspected criminality or a criminal charge.
Inclusion was not restricted by outcome.
Eleven bibliographic databases (i.e. Applied Social Sciences Index and Abstracts, Criminal Justice Abstracts, EMBASE, MEDLINE, PAIS® Index, PsycINFO, Scopus, Social Care Online, Social Policy & Practice, Social Sciences Citation Index and Social Services Abstracts) and multiple online sources were searched for relevant systematic reviews and qualitative studies from inception to November 2017. Additional primary studies reporting quantitative data published from January 2016 were also sought.
The three-part rapid evidence synthesis incorporated metasynthesis of the effects of street triage-type intervention models, rapid synthesis of UK-relevant qualitative evidence on implementation and the overall synthesis.
Five systematic reviews, eight primary studies reporting quantitative data and eight primary studies reporting qualitative data were included. Most interventions involved police officers working in partnership with mental health professionals. These interventions were generally valued by staff and showed some positive effects on procedures (such as rates of detention) and resources, although these results were not entirely consistent and not all important outcomes were measured. Most of the evidence was at risk of multiple biases caused by design flaws and/or a lack of reporting of methods, which might affect the results.
All primary research was conducted in England, so may not be generalisable to the whole of the UK. Discussion of health equity issues was largely absent from the evidence.
Most published evidence that aims to describe and evaluate various models of street triage interventions is limited in scope and methodologically weak. Several systematic reviews and recent studies have called for a prospective, comprehensive and streamlined collection of a wider variety of data to evaluate the impact of these interventions. This rapid evidence synthesis expands on these recommendations to outline detailed implications for research, which includes clearer articulation of the intervention’s objectives, measurement of quantitative outcomes beyond section 136 of the Mental Health Act 1983 [Great Britain. Mental Health Act 1983. Section 136. London: The Stationery Office; 1983 URL: www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/1983/20/section/136 (accessed October 2017)] (i.e. rates, places of safety and processing data) and outcomes that are most important to the police, mental health and social care services and service users. Evaluations should take into consideration shorter-, medium- and longer-term effects. Whenever possible, study designs should have an appropriate concurrent comparator, for example by comparing the pragmatic implementation of collaborative street triage models with models that emphasise specialist training of police officers. The collection of qualitative data should capture dissenting views as well as the views of advocates. Any future cost-effectiveness analysis of these interventions should evaluate the impact across police, health and social services.
The National Institute for Health Research Health Services and Delivery Research programme.
警察通常是心理健康事件的第一反应者,因此,可以成为获得护理的常见途径。此类电话的数量是一个日益增加的挑战。警察相关心理健康分诊(通常被称为“街头分诊”)干预模式的证据基础是什么?快速证据合成。被认为正在经历心理疾病或处于心理健康危机的个人。在没有涉嫌犯罪或刑事指控的情况下,警察对涉及被认为患有精神疾病或精神健康危机的个人的电话作出回应。入选不受结果限制。检索了11个书目数据库(即应用社会科学索引和摘要、刑事司法摘要、EMBASE、MEDLINE、PAIS®索引、PsycINFO、Scopus、Social Care Online、社会政策与实践、社会科学引文索引和社会服务摘要)和多个在线来源,以获取从成立到2017年11月的相关系统综述和定性研究。还寻求报告2016年1月公布的定量数据的其他初步研究。由三部分组成的快速证据综合包括街道分流型干预模型效果的综合、英国相关实施定性证据的快速综合和整体综合。包括5项系统综述、8项报告定量数据的初步研究和8项报告定性数据的初步调查。大多数干预措施涉及警察与心理健康专业人员合作。这些干预措施通常受到工作人员的重视,并对程序(如拘留率)和资源产生了一些积极影响,尽管这些结果并不完全一致,也不是所有重要结果都得到了衡量。大多数证据都有由于设计缺陷和/或缺乏方法报告而导致多重偏见的风险,这可能会影响结果。所有的初步研究都是在英国进行的,因此可能无法推广到整个英国。证据中基本上没有关于健康公平问题的讨论。大多数已发表的旨在描述和评估各种街头分流干预模式的证据在范围和方法上都很有限。几项系统综述和最近的研究呼吁对更广泛的数据进行前瞻性、全面和精简的收集,以评估这些干预措施的影响。这种快速的证据综合扩展了这些建议,概述了对研究的详细影响,其中包括更明确地阐明干预的目标,衡量1983年《精神卫生法》[大不列颠,1983年《心理卫生法》]第136条之外的定量结果。第136条。伦敦:文具办公室;1983 URL:www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/1983/20/section/136(2017年10月访问)](即费率、安全地点和处理数据)以及对警察、心理健康和社会护理服务以及服务用户最重要的结果。评价应考虑短期、中期和长期影响。在可能的情况下,研究设计应该有一个适当的并行比较器,例如,将协作式街道分流模式的实际实施与强调警察专业培训的模式进行比较。定性数据的收集应反映不同意见以及倡导者的意见。未来对这些干预措施的任何成本效益分析都应评估对警察、卫生和社会服务的影响。国家卫生研究所卫生服务和交付研究方案。