Use of community treatment orders and their outcomes: an observational study

S. Weich, C. Duncan, L. Twigg, O. McBride, H. Parsons, G. Moon, A. Canaway, J. Madan, David Crepaz-Keay, Patrick Keown, S. Singh, K. Bhui
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It is unclear whether their use varies between patients, places and services, or if they are associated with better patient outcomes.\n \n \n \n To examine variation in the use of community treatment orders and their associations with patient outcomes and health-care costs.\n \n \n \n Secondary analysis using multilevel statistical modelling.\n \n \n \n England, including 61 NHS mental health provider trusts.\n \n \n \n A total of 69,832 patients eligible to be subject to a community treatment order.\n \n \n \n Use of community treatment orders and time subject to community treatment order; re-admission and total time in hospital after the start of a community treatment order; and mortality.\n \n \n \n The primary data source was the Mental Health Services Data Set. 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There was some evidence that the rate of re-admission differed between community treatment order and non-community treatment order patients according to care cluster grouping. Community treatment order patients spent 7.5 days longer, on average, in admission than non-community treatment order patients over the study period. This difference remained when other patient and local area characteristics were taken into account. There was no evidence of significant variation between service providers in the effect of community treatment order on total time in admission. Community treatment order patients were less likely to die than non-community treatment order patients, after taking account of other patient and local area characteristics (odds ratio 0.69, 95% credible interval 0.60 to 0.81).\n \n \n \n Confounding by indication and potential bias arising from missing data within the Mental Health Services Data Set. Data quality issues precluded inclusion of patients who were subject to community treatment orders more than once.\n \n \n \n Community treatment order use varied between patients, provider trusts and local areas. Community treatment order use was not associated with shorter time to re-admission or reduced time in hospital to a statistically significant degree. We found no evidence that the effectiveness of community treatment orders varied to a significant degree between provider trusts, nor that community treatment orders were associated with reduced mental health treatment costs. Our findings support the view that community treatment orders in England are not effective in reducing future admissions or time spent in hospital. We provide preliminary evidence of an association between community treatment order use and reduced rate of death.\n \n \n \n These findings need to be replicated among patients who are subject to community treatment order more than once. The association between community treatment order use and reduced mortality requires further investigation.\n \n \n \n The study was approved by the University of Warwick’s Biomedical and Scientific Research Ethics Committee (REGO-2015-1623).\n \n \n \n This project was funded by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Health Services and Delivery Research programme and will be published in full in Health Services and Delivery Research; Vol. 8, No. 9. 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引用次数: 5

Abstract

Community treatment orders are widely used in England. It is unclear whether their use varies between patients, places and services, or if they are associated with better patient outcomes. To examine variation in the use of community treatment orders and their associations with patient outcomes and health-care costs. Secondary analysis using multilevel statistical modelling. England, including 61 NHS mental health provider trusts. A total of 69,832 patients eligible to be subject to a community treatment order. Use of community treatment orders and time subject to community treatment order; re-admission and total time in hospital after the start of a community treatment order; and mortality. The primary data source was the Mental Health Services Data Set. Mental Health Services Data Set data were linked to mortality records and local area deprivation statistics for England. There was significant variation in community treatment order use between patients, provider trusts and local areas. Most variation arose from substantially different practice in a small number of providers. Community treatment order patients were more likely to be in the ‘severe psychotic’ care cluster grouping, male or black. There was also significant variation between service providers and local areas in the time patients remained on community treatment orders. Although slightly more community treatment order patients were re-admitted than non-community treatment order patients during the study period (36.9% vs. 35.6%), there was no significant difference in time to first re-admission (around 32 months on average for both). There was some evidence that the rate of re-admission differed between community treatment order and non-community treatment order patients according to care cluster grouping. Community treatment order patients spent 7.5 days longer, on average, in admission than non-community treatment order patients over the study period. This difference remained when other patient and local area characteristics were taken into account. There was no evidence of significant variation between service providers in the effect of community treatment order on total time in admission. Community treatment order patients were less likely to die than non-community treatment order patients, after taking account of other patient and local area characteristics (odds ratio 0.69, 95% credible interval 0.60 to 0.81). Confounding by indication and potential bias arising from missing data within the Mental Health Services Data Set. Data quality issues precluded inclusion of patients who were subject to community treatment orders more than once. Community treatment order use varied between patients, provider trusts and local areas. Community treatment order use was not associated with shorter time to re-admission or reduced time in hospital to a statistically significant degree. We found no evidence that the effectiveness of community treatment orders varied to a significant degree between provider trusts, nor that community treatment orders were associated with reduced mental health treatment costs. Our findings support the view that community treatment orders in England are not effective in reducing future admissions or time spent in hospital. We provide preliminary evidence of an association between community treatment order use and reduced rate of death. These findings need to be replicated among patients who are subject to community treatment order more than once. The association between community treatment order use and reduced mortality requires further investigation. The study was approved by the University of Warwick’s Biomedical and Scientific Research Ethics Committee (REGO-2015-1623). This project was funded by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Health Services and Delivery Research programme and will be published in full in Health Services and Delivery Research; Vol. 8, No. 9. See the NIHR Journals Library website for further project information.
社区治疗命令的使用及其结果:一项观察性研究
社区治疗令在英国被广泛使用。目前尚不清楚它们的使用是否因患者、地点和服务而异,或者它们是否与更好的患者预后有关。研究社区治疗命令使用的差异及其与患者预后和医疗保健费用的关系。二级分析采用多层次统计模型。英格兰,包括61个NHS心理健康提供者信托。共有69,832名合资格接受社区治疗令的病人。社区治疗令的使用和受社区治疗令约束的时间;社区治疗令开始后再次入院和住院总时间;和死亡率。主要数据来源是精神卫生服务数据集。心理健康服务数据集的数据与英格兰的死亡率记录和当地贫困统计数据相关联。社区治疗顺序的使用在患者、提供者信任和当地地区之间存在显著差异。大多数差异是由于少数供应商的做法有很大不同。社区治疗令患者更有可能属于“严重精神病”护理组,男性或黑人。在病人继续接受社区治疗的时间上,服务提供者和当地地区之间也存在显著差异。虽然在研究期间,社区治疗命令患者的再入院率略高于非社区治疗命令患者(36.9% vs. 35.6%),但在首次再入院的时间上没有显著差异(两者平均约为32个月)。有证据表明,按护理聚类分组,社区治疗顺序患者和非社区治疗顺序患者的再入院率存在差异。在研究期间,社区治疗顺序患者入院时间平均比非社区治疗顺序患者长7.5天。当考虑到其他患者和局部地区的特征时,这种差异仍然存在。社区治疗顺序对住院总时间的影响在不同服务提供者之间无显著差异。考虑到其他患者和局部区域特征后,社区治疗顺序患者的死亡率低于非社区治疗顺序患者(优势比0.69,95%可信区间0.60 ~ 0.81)。由心理健康服务数据集中的缺失数据引起的指征和潜在偏差引起的混淆。数据质量问题排除了多次接受社区治疗命令的患者。社区治疗命令的使用在患者、提供者信托和当地地区之间存在差异。社区治疗命令的使用与再入院时间的缩短或住院时间的减少没有统计学上显著的关系。我们没有发现证据表明社区治疗订单的有效性在提供者信任之间有显著的差异,也没有证据表明社区治疗订单与降低心理健康治疗成本有关。我们的研究结果支持了这样一种观点,即英格兰的社区治疗订单在减少未来的入院率或住院时间方面并不有效。我们提供初步证据,证明社区治疗命令的使用与死亡率降低之间存在关联。这些发现需要在多次接受社区治疗的患者中得到复制。社区治疗命令的使用与降低死亡率之间的关系需要进一步调查。该研究得到了华威大学生物医学和科学研究伦理委员会(REGO-2015-1623)的批准。该项目由国家卫生研究所(NIHR)卫生服务和交付研究方案资助,将全文发表在《卫生服务和交付研究》上;第8卷第9号请参阅NIHR期刊图书馆网站了解更多项目信息。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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