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Peter Kennedy graduated in Leeds and was an academic psychiatrist in Edinburgh before moving to York where he was Chief Executive of York Whole District Trust for nearly 10 years. He has recently taken up a new post as Co-Director of the Northern Centre for Mental Health (West Lodge, Earls House, Lanchester Road, Durham DH1 5RD), which is affiliated to the Sainsbury Centre for Mental Health.
What is happening in and around psychiatric services that raises fears of a harmful separation between psychiatrists and the rest of the medical fraternity? The last National Health Service (NHS) reforms at the beginning of the 1990s split some mental health services into separate organisations from their local acute services. Paragraph 5.14 in the Government's White Paper The New NHS (NHS Executive, 1997a) seems to favour specialist mental health trusts. Combined whole district trusts are under threat. Shotguns are loaded to "encourage" the marriage with social services. All this may seem to conspire against psychiatrists maintaining close professional relationships with physicians and surgeons in general hospitals. Instead it puts the emphasis on aligning psychiatric work much more closely with social services and primary care. Much restructuring is already afoot. It is a time for sober reflection on what is in the best interests of patients now and in the future (see Box 1
).
| Box 1. Reshaping trusts Trust configurations are changing: time to argue cases Specialist mental health trusts are favoured in England Mental health and community trusts are the model for Scotland Can whole district trusts survive? Could secondary care mental health flourish in a primary care trust?
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This paper will examine the key issues for psychiatrists to consider in influencing the management of their local mental health services.
| Lessons of history |
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The drive to set up psychiatric units in district general hospitals (DGHs) was motivated by the need to overcome both those serious disadvantages. The 1960s saw the blossoming of all the benefits that the medical model can bring to mental illness. It emphasised that the mentally ill had just as much right to all the benefits that society endows on those in the "sick role". Case definition became much more important and randomised controlled trials helped to establish the enormous benefits of pharmacotherapies like antidepressants and neuroleptics. Psychiatric patients received much better assessment of physical causes of their illnesses. Liaison with physicians and surgeons made them more aware of psychological factors affecting the presentations of their patients. Meanwhile, policy-makers and medical schools were responding positively to the epidemiological evidence that a large part of the general practitioner's (GP's) case-load was owing to psychological disturbance.
Those were halcyon days for those of us joining the psychiatric profession. The status of the consultant psychiatrist was rising. Money poured in for research and teaching as the epidemiological evidence and pharmaceutical successes impressed everyone. The succession of enquiries into scandals within the mental hospitals only increased public interest and support for better mental health services from general hospitals and health centres. The major benefits that accrued for patients during the next two decades should not be underestimated.
However, patients with severe mental illnesses, and especially those with chronic disabilities, never fitted into the DGH environment, out-patient clinics or health centres. As homelessness and alcohol and drug misuse increased, making the management of severely mentally ill patients more and more challenging, the limitations of this approach became increasingly apparent.
Concerns about public safety, expressed in the media and by the general public, have made the care of people with severe and chronic mental illnesses a dominant theme of the past decade. The threshold for admission to hospital has fallen. Wards have become overloaded. Patients have become more reluctant to accept care informally. The Government, mental health professionals and the public are not satisfied. There is much evidence of user and carer dissatisfaction with mental health services.
But we must make sure that the pressing need for change does not cause the baby to be thrown out with the bath water.
| The crux of the problem |
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The acute hospital model failed because it assumed that only episodic periods of care were necessary for people who would seek help when they needed it and comply with advice given. True, many psychiatrists and mental health services made enormous efforts to develop community services. Success has been limited by lack of resources, lack of common purpose and lack of collaboration with other agencies.
It is easy to say that mental illness itself is the reason why patients do not like the services provided they vote with their feet, avoiding contact while the illness is getting worse. But carers are also critical of our services, and many mental health professionals themselves have reservations about what is on offer should a relative need help. People from ethnic minorities speak of incomprehension of their needs and insensitivity as a consequence. The very word "non-compliance" is under attack with the suggestion that "non-concordance" is less patronising.
The resource problem is at least partly a matter of redistribution within the available resource envelope. Psychiatric wards are full-to-bursting because community support is so under-resourced and inadequate. People come into hospital who need not, or stay longer than they need for lack of provision to support them in the community. On average, mental health services spend 70% of their budget on hospital beds, and some as high as 85%. The challenge is to transfer resources from hospital to community services (including staffed residential accommodation) specifically designed to reduce the need for hospital beds. It is not only because hospital beds are very expensive, but also because patients dislike the experiences that they have in hospital: a national survey carried out by the Mental Health Act Commission and the Sainsbury Centre for Mental Health (1997) showed wards to be custodial, sometimes frightening, and largely bereft of any active therapeutic activity. Alternative methods of care in the community are usually preferred by users and carers, and so may lead to earlier intervention and continued engagement with services.
Two things are certain. The major social forces that will shape mental health services in the future are: the views of users and carers on what kinds of services they will engage with; and public perceptions of safety. The first of these is an important determinant of the second.
| Government policies |
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The long-waited National Service Framework for Mental Health (NHS Executive, 1999) has just been published. It contains most of what was recommended by the External Reference Group led by Professor Graham Thornicroft. It emphasises comprehensiveness, integration and focus. Comprehensive means that all populations be provided with the full range of services from 24-hour emergency access to long-term housing and social care under sheltered conditions, if required. The good news is that although it sets standards and suggests some models, it does not prescribe what is developed in each area. This means that users, carers, clinicians, social workers, nurses etc. can get together and be creative in tailoring things to unique local conditions.
Integration means that local authority and primary care professionals must be involved in this creative process of developing local services. The building block for mental health services is to be the "locality", where inter-agency agreement on who leads is likely to be followed by pooled budgets.
Focused means services flexible enough to offer the level and type of response that is appropriate to the specific needs of individuals.
All this puts the emphasis on rebuilding mental health services from outside the hospital, with primary care and social services and user and carer preferences to the fore. Such a "sound" and "supportive" approach is more likely to improve "safety" as long as hospital and secure beds are available when needed, with supportive legislation for compulsory treatment. However, it is recognised at a national level that progress depends on enabling and supporting creative change at the local level within this framework, rather than prescribed top-down instruction and guidance. There lies the hope and the challenge.
| There is all to play for |
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Indeed, the White Paper on the future of the NHS in Scotland (NHS Executive, 1997b) prescribes that mental health services will be part of community trusts. Primary care groups in England and Wales may take a few years to become trusts and be able to take on secondary care mental health, but this option being tested in Scotland might recommend itself south of the border. And on the principle that "if it ain't broke, don't fix it", combined acute and mental health services that are doing well in delivering the required improvements in mental health could survive in more rural areas. Any benefits that may be obtained from reconfiguration must always be balanced against the disadvantages of the change process. De-mergers and mergers consume an awful lot of time, worry and uncertainty for all those who are involved: service improvements may be delayed while a new organisation is settling down.
But whatever the shape of the trust in which mental health services are to be provided, there are always challenges in managing the interfaces that are important to delivering mental health services. No organisational structure in health care will ever contain the complete universe of relationships required to deliver a comprehensive service. So, deliberate planning is needed to ensure that any disadvantages likely to occur from separations and new interfaces are counteracted (see Box 2
).
| Box 2. Managed interfaces No organisational structure can contain the universe of relationships required for a comprehensive service Interfaces have to be well managed with:
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| Keeping in touch with the rest of medicine |
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Many accident and emergency (A&E) departments do not have the backing of a lead consultant psychiatrist to ensure that good practice protocols are developed and maintained for dealing with deliberate self-harm and other psychiatric emergencies. Psychiatric emergencies on wards and the subtle problems of comorbidity in general hospitals are often dealt with in a fragmented fashion by a number of psychiatrists, rather than by developing the kind of specialisation that is required to do the job well. Good interpersonal relationships between child and adolescent psychiatrists and paediatricians usually surmount any organisational barriers, and, similarly, between psychiatrists for the elderly and geriatricians. However, like all the other cross-speciality relationships that are essential for good clinical care, they need formal arrangements and accountabilities to make sure they work well, irrespective of informal medical networking.
It is suggested that there needs to be one consultant psychiatrist identified within each mental health service to lead and coordinate the links that need to exist and develop between specialists in the acute sector and specialists in mental health. This needs reciprocation with a lead consultant from the acute hospital. Both should be supported by managers of sufficient seniority to solve interface problems quickly. They should foster the educational side as well, ensuring that case conferences and clinical governance events include the diagnosis and management of comorbidity.
It is not simply a matter of professionals keeping in touch, but rather formalising interdependent relationships that are essential for good patient care. Reconfigurations are not an excuse for neglecting these important relationships, they are a reason for managing them better. It is my experience that acute hospitals that are separating from mental health services become very interested in liaison psychiatry arrangements, psychiatric cover of A&E and alcohol and substance misuse services to patients in the general hospital. It is unlikely to be a one-sided relationship.
| Better engagement with primary care |
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There is much work to do to get that relationship right and it would not be a bad idea if more attention were given to keeping in touch with medicine in primary care than has, perhaps, been given in the past. The National Service Framework (NHS Executive, 1999) recommends that practices and the community mental health team serving them should agree a register of all patients with severe mental illness who must be given priority. Community mental health teams might identify one community psychiatric nurse to link with the practices, not to attract more referrals, but to advise GPs in selecting patients who should be referred and finding alternative ways of managing those who should not. In most areas, there is a huge job to do in reviewing the large investment in "talking therapies". Counselling/psychotherapy is being provided by a wide range of personnel whose methods need to be checked against the evidence we have about what works and what does not work. They need improved training and supervision if they are to work effectively and refer on the right patients.
It is suggested that there are enormous opportunities for improving the efficiency and effectiveness of mental health services, by joint planning of secondary and primary mental health care. The same goes for social care provided by local authorities: it would be foolish to try and get one relationship working better without addressing the other at the same time.
| Integrated locality service |
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These three authorities working within the health authority's Health Improvement Programme have the job of defining localities, agreeing which service will be the lead authority for providing mental health care and jointly appointing a manager for each locality who would be accountable for managing all staff and the pooled budget. The CPA and care management will have to be integrated, if that has not already occurred. Voluntary organisations involved with people with severe mental illnesses might be brought into the locality manager's sphere of responsibility. There will have to be innovative thinking about how to involve local users and carers in developing proposals for change and in auditing the effectiveness of services.
This is a real opportunity for improving the lot of patients with chronic and serious problems. It vitally depends on the engagement of psychiatrists at the leading edge with locality managers or as locality managers. There is the potential for releasing resources from the area in which most of the mental health budget is still spent on hospital beds. It would be a tragedy if keeping in touch with the rest of medicine was used as an excuse for not embracing these new relationships with sufficient interest and vigour.
| Frogs |
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I have read depressing articles and letters in journals suggesting that general psychiatrists may become obsolete as social workers, psychologists and psychiatric nurses competently take over work that was formerly the exclusive province of the consultant. It has even been suggested that the only safe retreat for the consultant psychiatrist is practising "proper medicine" in a liaison role within the general hospital. Nothing could be further from the truth absence has made the heart grow fonder, with around 400 vacant consultant psychiatry posts in the country. Health authorities and trusts have found that they cannot substitute for the consultant psychiatrist. Even the user groups with more extreme views who have been dismissive about the need for consultants, are now saying that they are essential.
It is true that the medical model has its limitations in mental health, but psychiatric training and practice never confined itself to the medical model.
| Some key issues |
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In most areas, there is still time to debate the options about configuration of mental health services with or without acute services. The best arguments will be based on what is in the best interests of people with severe mental illnesses. The Sainsbury Centre for Mental Health report Laying the Foundations ( Naya & Ford, 1998) is as good a text as any to start with.
All organisations have important interfaces that need to be managed proactively. Where mental health services are in a separate organisation from the local acute services, deliberate plans are required to maintain, manage and monitor working relationships between psychiatrists and clinicians in acute hospitals. Whole district trusts that may have taken these things for granted would do well to emulate those specialist mental health trusts where the interface has been managed well. Many will find that it is not all push from the mental health sector to sustain the relationship there is plenty of pull from surgeons and physicians who realise the importance of liaison psychiatry and the necessity of a good emergency psychiatric service to the A&E department and the general wards.
Much closer engagement with primary care medicine in organising community care has enormous potential. Done well it could make the work of a consultant psychiatrist far more rewarding by filtering out referrals that others can deal with. Joint registers of people with severe mental illnesses can help to ensure that they remain the priority. The cost-effectiveness of "talking therapies" and other interventions in primary care could be much improved by application of the evidence on what psychological and social interventions actually work.
Building mental health services with local users and social workers from outside the hospital could make acute psychiatric wards function much better.
Consultant psychiatrists are needed out there in the lead as architects of locality services. Beware of emulating the frog. Reverse the vicious circle that undermines everyone's confidence (see Box 3
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| Box 3. Reverse the vicious circle There is a vicious circle operating: Patients dislike services and disengage Media and public anger follows serious incidents with patients who have been "lost to follow-up" Professionals lose confidence when blamed and dictated to by central direction A benign reversal of the circle could be: Professionals redesigning services with patients and carers Fewer people "lost to follow-up" as a consequence Service failure not the reason when disasters inevitably occur
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| References |
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Mental Health Commission & Sainsbury Centre for Mental Health (1997) The National Visit. London: Sainsbury Centre for Mental Health.
Naya, K . & Ford, R. (1998) Laying the Foundations: Choosing the Right Configuration in the New NHS. London: Sainsbury Centre for Mental Health.
NHS Executive (1997a) The New NHS: Modern, Dependable. London: Department of Health.
(1997b) Designed to Care: Renewing the NHS in Scotland. Edinburgh: Stationery Office.
(1999) National Service Framework for Mental Health: Modern Standards and Service Models. London: NHS Executive.
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P Blenkiron and C A Hammill What determines patients' satisfaction with their mental health care and quality of life? Postgrad. Med. J., June 1, 2003; 79(932): 337 - 340. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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