患者参与改善精神卫生住院治疗的证据基础:感知方案

Q4 Medicine
T. Wykes, E. Csipke, D. Rose, T. Craig, P. McCrone, P. Williams, L. Koeser, Stephen Nash
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引用次数: 8

摘要

尽管朝着社区护理的方向发展,但国民保健制度用于精神保健的预算中仍有40%用于住院服务。然而,早在弗朗西斯报告强调住院治疗方面的严重缺陷之前,服务使用者群体就报告了这些精神卫生服务的质量很差。该方案提供了一个特别的重点,包括在证据的发展和评估患者的观点。通过使用利益相关者参与方法,了解住院护理的变化如何影响服务使用者和工作人员对病房的看法。该方案包括四个工作包。(1)急性住院环境的持续改善(LIAISE):使用参与式方法,我们开发了两个新的量表[对治疗环境的看法(投票)和对住院护理的意见(VOICE)的服务使用者]。(2)住院病人客户服务收据清单(CITRINE):我们与护士和服务使用者合作,制定了衡量服务使用者与工作人员接触次数的健康经济指标。自我报告测量记录了与工作人员的互动以及参加治疗活动的次数。(3)为康复提供机会(DOORWAYS):一项阶梯式随机对照试验,以测试培训病房护士提供治疗小组活动是否会提高服务用户和工作人员对病房的看法。共有16个病房被逐步随机化,我们比较了干预前后的VOICE、VOTE和CITRINE测量。共有1108名服务用户和539名工作人员参与了本次试验。(4) BETTER PATHWAYS (Bringing Emergency TreatmenT to Early Resolution)是比较两种服务系统的观察性研究。第一个是“分诊”系统,服务使用者进入分诊病房,然后在7天内转到他们所在的病房或出院回到社区。第二个系统是常规护理。我们收集了454名服务使用者和284名护士对病房的看法的数据。DOORWAYS和BETTER项目的主要结果是服务用户和工作人员对病房的看法(分别为VOICE和VOTE),健康经济措施是CITRINE。所有病例均发生在WPs 1和WPs 2。我们开发了可靠和有效的测量方法(1)从服务使用者和护士的角度对住院护理的看法(VOICE和VOTE)和(2)服务使用者所重视的互动成本(CITRINE)。在DOORWAYS项目中,在调整了法律地位后,我们发现了微弱的效益证据(标准化效应为-0.18,95% CI 0.38改善到0.01恶化;p = 0.062)。只有非自愿接受医护人员培训的患者获益显著(N582,标准化效应为-0.35,95% CI为-0.57 ~ -0.12;p = 0.002;interactionp-value 0.006)。投票得分没有随时间变化(标准化效应值为0.04,95% CI为-0.09至0.18;p = 0.54)。我们没有发现成本效益改善的证据(估计效果为33英镑,95% CI - 91英镑至146英镑;p = 0.602),但资源分配确实向患者认为有意义的接触者平均改变了12英镑(95% CI - 76英镑至98英镑;p = 0.774)。分诊模式和常规入院模式在服务使用者更好的认知(估计对分诊病房的VOICE评分提高0.77分;p = 0.68)或护士(估计对分诊病房的VOTE评分下降1.68分;p = 0.38)或所提供护理时间的成本(分诊增加391英镑;p = 0.77)方面没有显著差异。我们利用涉及服务使用者和精神卫生服务工作人员的方法制定了措施。这些措施是专门为急症住院服务制定的,因此不能假定对其他服务有用。例如,正在建设扩大这些措施,以便在母婴病房使用。BETTER PATHWAYS和DOORWAYS项目的优势在于大规模的数据收集。然而,我们正在测试基于内城地区的特定服务,并将其扩展到内城地区。可能在更多的农村社区或不同类型的住院治疗中会发现不同的效果。我们的数据库将用于发展的中介和调节因素的理解,以提高护理质量。当前对照试验ISRCTN06545047。本项目由国家卫生研究院应用研究计划资助,并将全文发表在《应用研究计划资助》上;第六卷第七期请参阅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。
Patient involvement in improving the evidence base on mental health inpatient care: the PERCEIVE programme
Despite the movement towards care in the community, 40% of the NHS budget on mental health care is still attributed to inpatient services. However, long before the Francis Report highlighted grave shortcomings in inpatient care, there were reports by service user groups on the poor quality of these services in mental health. The programme provides a particular focus on the inclusion of the patient’s perspective in the development and evaluation of evidence.To understand how changes to inpatient care affect the perceptions of the ward by service users and staff by using stakeholder participatory methods.The programme consisted of four work packages (WPs). (1) Lasting Improvements for Acute Inpatient SEttings (LIAISE): using participatory methods we developed two new scales [Views On Therapeutic Environment (VOTE) for staff and Views On Inpatient CarE (VOICE) for service users]. (2) Client Services Receipt Inventory – Inpatient (CITRINE): working with nurses and service users we developed a health economic measure of the amount of contact service users have with staff. The self-report measure records interactions with staff as well as the number of therapeutic activities attended. (3) Delivering Opportunities for Recovery (DOORWAYS): a stepped-wedge randomised controlled trial to test if training ward nurses to deliver therapeutic group activities would improve the perception of the ward by service users and staff. A total of 16 wards were progressively randomised and we compared the VOICE, VOTE and CITRINE measures before and after the intervention. A total of 1108 service users and 539 staff participated in this trial. (4) Bringing Emergency TreatmenT to Early Resolution (BETTER PATHWAYS) was an observational study comparing two service systems. The first was a ‘triage’ system in which service users were admitted to the triage ward and then either transferred to their locality wards or discharged back into the community within 7 days. The second system was routine care. We collected data from 454 service users and 284 nurses on their perceptions of the wards.The main outcomes for the DOORWAYS and BETTER project were service user and staff perceptions of the ward (VOICE and VOTE, respectively) and the health economic measure was CITRINE. All were developed in WPs 1 and 2.We developed reliable and valid measures of (1) the perceptions of inpatient care from the perspectives of service users and nurses (VOICE and VOTE) and (2) costs of interactions that were valued by service users (CITRINE). In the DOORWAYS project, after adjusting for legal status, we found weak evidence for benefit (standardised effect of –0.18, 95% CI 0.38 improvement to 0.01 deterioration;p = 0.062). There was only a significant benefit for involuntary patients following the staff training (N582, standardised effect of –0.35, 95% CI –0.57 to –0.12;p = 0.002; interactionp-value 0.006). VOTE scores did not change over time (standardised effect size of 0.04, 95% CI –0.09 to 0.18;p = 0.54). We found no evidence of an improvement in cost-effectiveness (estimated effect of £33, 95% CI –£91 to £146;p = 0.602), but resource allocation did change towards patient-perceived meaningful contacts by an average of £12 (95% CI –£76 to £98;p = 0·774). There were no significant differences between the triage and routine models of admission in terms of better perceptions by service users (estimated effect 0.77-point improvement in VOICE score on the triage ward;p = 0.68) or nurses (estimated effect of 1.68-point deterioration in VOTE on the triage ward;p = 0.38) or in terms of the cost of the length of care provided (£391 higher on triage;p = 0.77).We have developed measures using methods involving both service users and staff from mental health services. The measures were developed specifically for acute inpatient services and, therefore, cannot be assumed to be useful for other services. For instance, extensions of the measures are under construction for use in mother and baby units. The strength of the BETTER PATHWAYS and DOORWAYS projects is the large-scale data collection. However, we were testing specific services based in inner city areas and stretching to inner urban areas. It may be that different effects would be found in more rural communities or in different types of inpatient care.Our database will be used to develop an understanding of the mediating and moderating factors for improving care quality.Current Controlled Trials ISRCTN06545047.This project was funded by the NIHR Programme Grants for Applied Research programme and will be published in full inProgramme Grants for Applied Research; Vol. 6, No. 7. See the NIHR Journals Library website for further project information.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
9
审稿时长
53 weeks
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