加强儿童和青少年心理健康服务转诊:EN-CAMHS混合方法研究。

Kathryn M Abel, Pauline Whelan, Lesley-Anne Carter, Heidi Tranter, Charlotte Stockton-Powdrell, Kerry Gutridge, Lamiece Hassan, Rachel Elvins, Julian Edbrooke-Childs
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:国家卫生服务儿童和青少年心理健康服务是评估和治疗有心理健康问题的儿童和青少年的专家团队。总体而言,在2020年至2021年期间,497,502名儿童被转介到国家卫生服务儿童和青少年心理健康服务机构,其中近四分之一的转介不成功。不成功的转介对儿童和家庭来说往往是痛苦的,他们通常在漫长的等待期之后被拒绝,而不一定被重新定向到其他服务。这一过程对服务机构来说也是代价高昂的,因为时间被浪费在审查那些本应被转介去寻求其他帮助的儿童的文件上,这可能会阻止那些需要专家帮助的年轻人及时得到帮助。本研究的首要目的是了解儿童和青少年心理健康服务转诊的问题,并确定可以提高转诊成功率的解决方案。一个关键目标是与年轻人和家庭、在儿童和青少年心理健康服务机构工作的人员以及心理健康专业人员广泛交谈,以便我们能够充分了解问题是什么,以及我们如何制定解决办法。我们收集了来自9个儿童和青少年心理健康服务机构的假名患者的个人数据,以及来自4个国家卫生服务信托基金的转诊数据,以查看可用的数据及其完整性。我们报告在信托之间和内部的转诊数量以及未成功治疗的比例方面存在很大差异。定期收集转介到儿童和青少年心理健康服务机构的儿童和青少年的年龄和性别以及转诊者等因素的数据,但并没有在所有信托机构中很好地收集儿童和青少年转诊原因的种族。此外,我们亦安排100多名对儿童及青少年心理健康服务转介过程持不同看法的人士(儿童及青少年、家长及照顾者、主要转介人士及儿童及青少年心理健康服务专业人士)参加焦点小组,并询问转介过程中目前的困难,以及可能的解决办法。结论:确定的问题包括:混淆儿童和青少年心理健康服务的目的,即它提供什么和不提供什么;以及在转诊过程中缺乏支持。可能的解决办法包括:通过数字技术简化转诊途径,同时对国家卫生服务机构儿童和青少年心理健康服务机构的转诊表格进行标准化;在整个转诊“旅程”中,与转诊者/家庭进行早期持续的沟通。今后的工作:应根据本项目概述的建议,考虑将儿童和青少年心理健康服务转诊过程标准化并加以改进。研究注册:本研究在ClinicalTrials.gov上注册,标识符:NCT05412368。https://clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT05412368.Funding:该奖项由国家卫生和保健研究所(NIHR)卫生和社会保健提供研究计划(NIHR奖励编号:NIHR131379)资助,全文发表在《卫生和社会保健提供研究》上;第13卷,第21号有关进一步的奖励信息,请参阅美国国立卫生研究院资助和奖励网站。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Enhancing referrals to Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services: the EN-CAMHS mixed-methods study.

Background: National Health Service Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services are specialist teams that assess and treat children and young people with mental health problems. Overall, 497,502 children were referred to National Health Service Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services between 2020 and 2021, and almost one-quarter of these referrals were not successful. Unsuccessful referrals are often distressing for children and families who are turned away usually after a long waiting period and without necessarily being redirected to alternative services. The process is also costly to services because time is wasted reviewing documents about children who should have been referred for alternative help and may prevent young people who need specialist help receiving it in a timely way. The overarching aim of this study was to understand what the problems are with Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services referrals and identify solutions that could improve referral success. A key objective was to talk widely with young people and families, people working in Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services and mental health professionals so that we could understand fully what the problems were and how we might develop their solutions. We gathered individual pseudonymised patient data from nine Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services, and referral data from four National Health Service Trusts to look at what data are available and how complete it is. We report wide variation in the numbers of referrals between and within Trusts and in the proportions not being successful for treatment. Data on factors such as age and gender of children and young people referred into Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services and who made the referral are routinely collected, but ethnicity of the children and young people's reason for referral are not as well collected across all Trusts. We also conducted focus groups with over 100 individuals with differing perspectives on the Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services referral process (children and young people, parents and carers, key referrers, and Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services professionals) and asked about current difficulties within the referral process, as well as potential solutions to these.

Conclusions: Problems identified included: confusion about what Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services is for, that is what it does and does not provide; and lack of support provided during the referral process. Possible solutions included: streamlining the referral pathways through digital technologies with accompanying standardisation of referral forms for National Health Service Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services; and early ongoing communication throughout the referral 'journey' for the referrer/family.

Future work: Should consider the standardisation of and improvement to the Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services referral process following the recommendations outlined in this project.

Study registration: This study is registered on ClinicalTrials.gov with the identifier: NCT05412368. https://clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT05412368.

Funding: This award was funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) Health and Social Care Delivery Research programme (NIHR award ref: NIHR131379) and is published in full in Health and Social Care Delivery Research; Vol. 13, No. 21. See the NIHR Funding and Awards website for further award information.

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