|
|
|||||||||||
Keele University and Combined Healthcare NHS Trust, Department of Psychiatry, Keele University, Thornburrow Drive, Stoke-on-Trent ST4 7QB, tel: 01782 554047
Correspondence: e-mail: David_Foreman{at}doctors.net.uk
|
|
Abstract |
|---|
|
|
|---|
General practitioners' (GPs') informed awareness of the various medical specialities underpins their ability to manage and commission services for their patients. Three questions, relevant to GP practice, to test awareness of child and adolescent mental health services (CHMHS) were developed and sent to 238 GP principals in North Staffordshire.
One hundred and seventy-six responded.
RESULTS
Forty-seven per cent had no undergraduate training in CAMHS and 93% had negligible postgraduate experience. Only 27% thought they saw CAMHS cases frequently. Sixty-four per cent usually referred those they saw. Relevant expertise made referral to CAMHS less likely, as did membership of the Royal College of General Practitioners. Seventy-three per cent wanted more training, but only 7% thought training easy to obtain.
CLINICAL IMPLICATIONS
These findings confirm the need for child and adolescent psychiatrists to become directly involved in the commissioning of their services and GP training.
|
|
Introduction |
|---|
|
|
|---|
|
|
The study |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Analysis
No returned questionnaire needed to be discarded and no question had more
than 7% missing data. Each awareness question was used as a
dependent variable in separate logistic regression analyses. Independent
variables in all three logistic regression models included the two
experience variables, time spent as a GP, GP gender,
undergraduate training, the form training took and possession of Membership of
the Royal College of General Practitioners by examination or election. Data
analysis was performed using SPSS for Windows 7.5.1, supplemented by StatXact
3 for exact tests.
|
|
Findings |
|---|
|
|
|---|
|
We were unable to trace any information on four non-respondents. Returners differed from non-returners solely on Membership of the Royal College of General Practitioners (MRCGP) (9% of 58: 24% of 176, P<0.001). Only one of the two GPs who reported child and adolescent psychiatry to be available on their training rotations acquired between 1 and 3 months' experience in CAMHS. This was the sole UK graduate with more than 1 month's experience.
Experience in child and adolescent psychiatry alone was not associated with answers to any awareness question (Fisher exact test: all probabilities above 0.3). The results of the three logistic regression analyses on these questions are given in Table 2. This shows that the analysis of the question would further training in child and adolescent psychiatry be useful? was not significant overall, so CAMHS related experience and GP gender alone were included in an additional logistic regression, which was significant (P=0.005). Child-related expertise was individually significant at P=0.01 (odds ratio 1.26, 95% Cl 1.05-1.51). GP sex was not significant at P=0.1 (odds ratio 2.4, 95% Cl 0.85-6.79).
|
Although child-related experience did not predict seeing CAMHS cases frequently, those who did think they saw such cases frequently were more likely to have a great deal of relevant experience (Moses test of extreme reactions (trimmed) P=0.02). Cross-tabulating the three awareness questions showed that, among those who considered further training was useful, those who thought they saw CAMHS cases rarely were more likely to say they usually referred such cases on (Fisher's exact test P=0.04).
|
|
Discussion |
|---|
|
|
|---|
There is some good news. The logistic regression analyses suggest that relevant training is associated with improved awareness and most GPs considered further training in CAMHS to be at least valuable. The Royal College of General Practitioners (Anonymous, 1992) may also be having a beneficial influence. Unfortunately, those who did not think that further training was useful were likely to be those with the least relevant training, and most GPs thought access to such training was poor. Undergraduate training seems ineffective.
If the individual questions of the awareness construct are valid, increasing child-related expertise should predict, for each question, an answer in the preferred direction. The logistic regression analyses showed this for attitudes to training and referral. For attitude to frequency, predictive validity was supported by the Moses test only. The less convincing validation here probably reflects wide variation in interpretation of the term rarely, causing conservative error, but previous studies also suggest that GPs lack sensitivity to child psychiatric disorders (Evans & Brown, 1993). The questions were interrelated: those less confident in their knowledge, and who thought they saw CAMHS cases more rarely, were more likely to refer on. This is consistent with measuring awareness. The failure of specific training in CAMHS to predict any awareness question probably reflects the small number of GPs who had such training, and so does not invalidate the major validity findings. Further development of the method would involve the assessment of larger numbers of questions and the comparison of questionnaire responses with the respondents' assessment of standardised cases or vignettes.
The survey sample represents a sub-sample of the GP principals across all of Staffordshire surveyed by Chambers and Campbell (1996), which is considered nationally representative of GP principals. This differed only in having slightly more single-handed practices than they did (18.9% of 176: 12.3% of 609 GPs, P<0.05), which probably reflects the inner-city bias of this simple, as North Staffordshire is dominated by the conurbation of Stoke-on-Trent. As child and adolescent psychiatric disorders concentrate in cities (Offord & Fleming, 1996), the bias is towards GPs who are most likely to see psychiatrically disturbed children, and increases the relevance of the study sample. It is likely that those GPs who did not return their questionnaires were less interested in CAMHS than those who did. Therefore, the preponderance of GPs who were not Members of their Royal College in the non-responding group is likely to have resulted in conservative bias in relation to that variable.
The major conclusion to be drawn from this survey is that child and adolescent psychiatrists need to increase their involvement with GPs, both as collaborators in the commissioning process (Simpson, 2000) and as trainers, possibly in collaboration with other paediatric or psychiatric courses for GPs. The alternative may be to see The New NHS pass CAMHS by.
|
|
Acknowledgments |
|---|
|
|
References |
|---|
|
|
|---|
BAILEY, D. & GARRALDA, M. E. (1989) Referral to child psychiatry parent and doctor motives and expectations. Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry and Allied Disciplines, 30, 449-458.
CHAMBERS, R. & CAMPBELL, I. (1996) Anxiety and
depression in general practitioners: associations with type of practice,
fundholding, gender and other personal characteristics. Family
Practice, 13,
170-173.
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH (1997) The New NHS: Modern, Dependable. London: HMSO.
EVANS, S. & BROWN, R. (1993) Perception of need for child psychiatry services among parents and general practitioners. Health Trends, 25, 53-56.[Medline]
GARRALDA, M. & BAILEY, D. (1988) Child and family
factors associated with referral to child psychiatrists. British
Journal of Psychiatry, 153,
81-89.
GOODMAN, R. (1999) Mental Health of Children and Adolescents (ONS (99) 409). London: Office for National Statistics.
HEALTH ADVISORY SERVICE (1995) Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services: Together We Stand. London: Health Advisory Service.
OFFORD. D. & FLEMING, J. (1996) Epidemiology. In Child and Adolescent Psychiatry: A Comprehensive Textbook (ed. M. Lewis, 2nd edn), pp. 1166-1178. Baltimore: Williams & Wilkins.
SCHOWALTER, J. & SOLNIT, A. (1998) Working with the Primary Care Physician. Child and Adolescent Psychiatric Clinics of North America, 7, 599-613.[Medline]
SIMPSON, C. (2000) Commissioning mental health
services: role of the consultant psychiatrist. Advances in
Psychiatric Treatment, 6,
73-80.
This article has been cited by other articles:
![]() |
N. Madge, D. Foreman, and F. Baksh Starving in the Midst of Plenty? A Study of Training Needs for Child and Adolescent Mental Health Service Delivery in Primary Care Clinical Child Psychology and Psychiatry, July 1, 2008; 13(3): 463 - 478. [Abstract] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
S. Huline-Dickens The interface between child and adult mental health services Psychiatr. Bull., December 1, 2005; 29(12): 471 - 471. [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| HOME | HELP | FEEDBACK | SUBSCRIPTIONS | ARCHIVE | SEARCH | TABLE OF CONTENTS |
| British Journal of Psychiatry | Advances in Psychiatric Treatment | All RCPsych Journals |