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Crisis Assessment and Treatment Service, Ravenswood Clinic, Ravenswood Road, Heaton, Newcastle upon Tyne NE6 5TX
Newcastle General Hospital, Newcastle upon Tyne
Institute of Psychiatry, London
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Abstract |
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To evaluate a 50-place partial hospitalisation programme during its first year of operation. Data were recorded for consecutive referrals to the programme. Its effects on the admission unit were also assessed.
RESULTS
The unit received over 200 referrals over 12 months, and more than 60% were for individuals who might otherwise have been admitted. The programme was associated with reductions in number and duration of hospital admissions and in bed occupancy rate; however, the proportion of urgent referrals to the programme doubled over the year, and after 12 months the occupancy rate was 96%.
CLINICAL IMPLICATIONS
The programme was well received by clients and well used by clinicians. Although it initially reduced the pressure on in-patient services, the problems confronting the programme at the end of the evaluation mirrored those of in-patient units.
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Introduction |
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In Newcastle upon Tyne, extremely high bed occupancy rates and increasing concerns over the quality of therapeutic work being undertaken in in-patient facilities led to the development of a partial hospitalisation programme. The first such programme opened in the West End of Newcastle and was the subject of a prospective evaluation of case mix, user satisfaction and impact on admissions.
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Overview of the service |
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The three broad aims of the partial hospitalisation programme were to provide:
Our hypothesis was that targeting these patient groups would reduce acute admissions by providing treatment in a least restrictive alternative setting, would reduce lengths of stay by facilitating earlier discharge and would prevent repeated admissions by extending the support offered to vulnerable individuals in the community (Scott, 1995).
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Method |
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To assess patient views of the service offered, current attenders (n=47) were asked to complete the eight-item version of the Client Satisfaction Questionnaire (CSQ8; Larson et al, 1979). Four additional openended questions were added, asking participants in what ways the programme had been helpful or unhelpful, what they liked or disliked about the service, and asking for any further comments or recommendations. The final score for the CSQ8 is in the range 14 and is derived by dividing the total score by the number of items answered.
To explore any impact of the partial hospitalisation programme on the admission unit, information from the Patient Information Management System was used to assess measures of the units activity for the year prior to and the year after the introduction of the service. For each year we recorded the median number of occupied bed days per month, the mean bed occupancy rate per month, the mean number of admissions per month and the median length of stay per patient.
Data were analysed using the Statistical Package for the Social Sciences, version 9.5. Descriptive statistics were used to compare continuous and categorical ratings.
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Results |
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The number of referrals to the programme per month ranged from 19 to 28
(mean 23.2, s.d. 4.1). Over the year, the proportion of referrals for urgent
assessment increased significantly from 29% in months 13 to 55% in
months 1012 (
2=7.1, d.f.=4; P=0.04). Of the
219 programme attenders, 162 were discharged over the year (turnover rate
77%), leaving 47 of the available 50 places (96%) occupied.
Characteristics of programme attenders
Details of the 209 people who attended the partial hospitalisation
programme are given in Table 1.
Their mean age was 42.2 years (s.d. 13.7, range 1971) and they had a
mean age of onset of mental disorder of 26.3 years (s.d. 10.1). Just under
half (45%) lived alone, and 58% were female. Twenty-four were currently in
paid employment. For 26 people (12%), the programme was their first-ever
contact with the mental health services. However, 109 people (52%) had had at
least one admission in the year prior to referral to the programme, of whom 23
had been admitted under a section of the Mental Health Act 1983. A third (33%,
n=69) met criteria for affective disorders (unipolar and bipolar),
31% (n=66) for schizophrenia or other psychoses, 17% (n=36)
for other Axis I disorders (such as obsessivecompulsive disorder or
eating disorder), 13% (n=28) for dual diagnosis (comorbid substance
dependence and Axis I disorder) and 5% (n=10) had a primary diagnosis
of personality disorder. Thirty-four individuals (16%) required admission to
hospital during the study period despite attending the programme.
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There were relatively few differences between the three referral subgroups
except that statistically significantly more individuals were referred as an
alternative to admission (53%;
2=8.1, d.f.=4; P=0.03)
compared with those referred for other reasons. No person in the TRANS group
was new to the service, compared with 16% of the ALTADM group
(
2=6.1, d.f.=4; P=0.05), and significantly fewer
people in the TRANS group (8%) compared with the rest of the sample (19%)
required readmission while attending the programme (
2=6.3,
d.f.=4; P=0.04).
Client satisfaction
Thirty of the 47 people currently treated by the programme (64%) returned a
completed CSQ8 form. The overall scores ranged from 1.78 to 4.0, with a
mean of 3.1 indicating that the clients were mostly satisfied with the
service. Thirteen clients gave an overall rating of 3 or above, while only
three clients indicated indifference or mild dissatisfaction, with a CSQ score
below 2. Answers to specific questions revealed that two-thirds of clients
felt that the programme met most of their needs, but seven people felt that it
was not appropriate and another three found the travelling a strain.
One in five of those who completed the CSQ commented that the atmosphere of partial hospitalisation programme felt safe and positive, and two in five reported that the staff were accessible and supportive. Nineteen per cent of respondents said that they liked the structure that the programme gave to their lives, while 73% commented that it offered them the opportunity to socialise with others. Twenty-seven per cent of respondents said that the programme had taught them new skills and problem-solving techniques, but eight others said they disliked it because they did not get on with some or all of the other clients. Eight respondents suggested improvements to the programme, such as extending the number of hours and also the overall length of time that clients could attend.
Impact on the in-patient unit
The year following the introduction of the partial hospitalisation
programme was associated with reductions in several measures of admissions
unit activity (Table 2). The
median number of occupied bed days per month fell from 1461 (interquartile
range (IQR) 12911506) to 1209 (IQR 10111336), and the mean bed
occupancy rate per month fell by 18% (from 113.8% to 95.7%). The mean number
of admissions per month fell from 57.3 (s.d. 12.2) to 47.4 (s.d. 10.7) and the
median length of stay per patient fell by 24% from 17 days (IQR 1136)
to 13 days (IQR 627). The latter trend just failed to reach statistical
significance (MannWhitney U test, P=0.06). However,
there was one statistically significant difference in admission patterns: in
the year prior to the introduction of the programme, 44% of admissions were
for 2 weeks or less and 18% for 3 months or more; in the year after the
introduction of the programme the equivalent figures were 57% and 8%
respectively (
2=6.2, d.f.=4; P=0.05).
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Discussion |
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These positive aspects of the partial hospitalisation programme are tempered by the emergence of three problems. First, over the course of the year, 30 individuals attending the programme (22 referred as an alternative to admission) were eventually admitted to hospital, suggesting that the programme can delay but not prevent admission in about 15% of referrals. Second, the small number of core staff and lack of dedicated medical input meant that it was not always possible to offer a place to individuals with the most acute severe problems; at the same time, staff making the referrals increasingly wanted the programme to be a substitute for in-patient care, and there was a significant increase in the number of urgent referrals (rising from 29% to 55% of all referrals). Last, the ability of the programme to offer transitional or time-limited community support was compromised by difficulties in finding alternative facilities for clients to move to after completing the programme; as a result, some individuals started to see the programme as a long-term day care facility. All of the issues described appeared to contribute to the reduced rate of turnover of clients at the programmes unit and to the occupancy rate (96%); anecdotally, this appeared to influence the ability of the programme to deliver a range of therapies. Ironically, by the end of the evaluation period, the operational difficulties encountered by the programme were a mirror image of the problems noted in the in-patient unit that had prompted the development of the partial hospitalisation programme in the first place.
In summary, although the partial hospitalisation programme had clear goals for reducing acute admissions, preventing readmission of vulnerable clients and facilitating earlier discharge from in-patient care, this study suggests its early success may not be sustainable. The ability of the programme to continue to take urgent referrals may be compromised unless additional medical and non-medical staffing is provided to enable it to manage a greater proportion of severe acute cases. The programmes ability to offer time-limited treatment to vulnerable individuals may be undermined by the lack of alternative care for individuals to move on to (or back to) in the community. Finally, although the programme was initially devised to target three patient populations simultaneously, the increasing bias toward urgent referrals and the greater proportion of referrals for the partial hospitalisation programme as an alternative to in-patient care, potentially distorts the intervention programmes being offered. It may be that the unit will need to have a more selective focus in the future if it is to function effectively and data on the effectiveness of the partial hospitalisation programme is required.
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Acknowledgments |
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References |
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DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH (1999) The National Service Framework for Mental Health. London: HMSO.
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH (2001) The Mental Health Policy Implementation Guide. London: HMSO.
CREED, F., BLACK, D., ANTHONY, P., et al (1990) Randomised controlled trial of day patient versus inpatient psychiatric treatment. BMJ, 300, 1033 1037.
CREED, F., MBAYA, P., LANCASHIRE, S., et al (1997) Cost effectiveness of day and in patient psychiatric treatment. BMJ, 314, 1382 1385.
HARRISON, J., POYNTON, A., MARSHALL, J., et al
(1999) Open all hours: extending the role of the psychiatric day
hospital. Psychiatric Bulletin,
23, 400
404.
LARSON, D., ATKINSON, O., HARGREAVES, W., et al (1979) Assessment of client satisfaction: development of a general scale. Evaluation Programme Planning, 2, 197 207.
SCOTT, J. (1995) A 12 month pilot evaluation of a British partial hospitalisation program. International Journal of Mental Health, 24, 60 69.
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