Preventing unnecessary referrals into specialist mental health services: an interrupted time-series evaluation of a new primary care-linked mental health service

IF 1 Q4 PSYCHIATRY
A. Healey, A. Melaugh, Len Demetriou, T. Power, N. Sevdalis, M. Pritchard, L. Goulding
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Abstract

Many patients referred by their GP for an assessment by secondary mental health services are unlikely to ever meet eligibility thresholds for specialist treatment and support. A new service was developed to support people in primary care. “the authors evaluate” whether the phased introduction of the Lambeth Living Well Network (LWN) Hub to a population in south London led to: a reduction in the overall volume of patients referred from primary care for a secondary mental health care assessment; and an increase in the proportion of patients referred who met specialist service eligibility criteria, as indicated by the likelihood of being accepted in secondary care.,The evaluation applied a quasi-experimental interrupted time series design using electronic patient records data for a National Health Service (NHS) provider of secondary mental health services in south London.,Scale-up of the Hub to the whole of the population of Lambeth led to an average of 98 fewer secondary care assessments per month (95% CI −118 to −78) compared to an average of 203 assessments per month estimated in the absence of the Hub; and an absolute incremental increase in the probability of acceptance for specialist intervention of 0.20 (95% CI; 0.14 to 0.27) above an average probability of acceptance of 0.57 in the absence of the Hub.,Mental health outcomes for people using the service and system wide-service impacts were not evaluated preventing a more holistic evaluation of the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of the LWN Hub.,Providing general practitioners with access to service infrastructure designed to help people whose needs cannot be managed within specialist mental health services can prevent unnecessary referrals into secondary care assessment teams.,Reducing unnecessary referrals through provision of a primary-care linked mental health service will reduce delay in access to professional support that can address specific mental-health related needs that could not be offered within the secondary care services and could prevent the escalation of problems.,The authors use NHS data to facilitate the novel application of a quasi-experimental methodology to deliver new evidence on whether an innovative primary care linked mental health service was effective in delivering on one of its key aims.
防止不必要的转诊到专业精神卫生服务:对一项新的与初级保健有关的精神卫生服务的中断时间序列评估
许多由全科医生转诊接受二级心理健康服务评估的患者不太可能达到专科治疗和支持的资格门槛。开发了一项新的服务来支持初级保健人员。“作者评估”伦敦南部人群分阶段引入兰贝斯健康生活网络(LWN)中心是否导致:从初级保健转诊进行二级心理健康评估的患者总数减少;以及符合专科服务资格标准的转诊患者比例的增加,如被二级护理接受的可能性所示。,该评估采用了准实验性中断时间序列设计,使用了伦敦南部国家医疗服务体系(NHS)二级心理健康服务提供者的电子患者记录数据。,将该中心扩大到兰贝斯的全体人口,导致平均每月减少98次二级护理评估(95%CI−118至−78),而在没有该中心的情况下,估计平均每月减少203次评估;以及接受专家干预的概率的绝对增量增加0.20(95%CI;0.14至0.27),高于在没有集线器的情况下接受0.57的平均概率。,使用该服务的人的心理健康结果和全系统服务影响没有得到评估,这阻碍了对LWN中心的有效性和成本效益进行更全面的评估。,为全科医生提供服务基础设施,旨在帮助那些无法在专业心理健康服务中管理需求的人,可以防止不必要的转诊进入二级护理评估团队。,通过提供与初级保健相关的心理健康服务来减少不必要的转诊,将减少获得专业支持的延迟,这些专业支持可以解决次级保健服务中无法提供的特定心理健康相关需求,并可以防止问题升级。,作者利用NHS的数据促进了准实验方法的新应用,以提供新的证据,证明创新的初级保健相关心理健康服务是否能有效实现其关键目标之一。
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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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.20
自引率
8.30%
发文量
32
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