## Background: Current policy in england emphasises the importance of caring for highly dependent older people for as long as possible at home. it is therefore crucial that day care services are effective and widely available. ## Aim: To compare the type and standard of care provided for older pe
A UK survey of psychiatric services for older people in general hospitals
✍ Scribed by John Holmes; Kris Bentley; Ian Cameron
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2003
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 74 KB
- Volume
- 18
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0885-6230
- DOI
- 10.1002/gps.911
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Abstract
Background
Psychiatric illness is common in older people in general hospitals, but little is known of the service models operating in the UK, or of the views of old age psychiatrists regarding service provision in this area. We set out to determine the range of UK old age psychiatry service models for older people in general hospital wards, and the opinions of clinicians on future service priorities and development.
Method
A postal questionnaire survey of old age psychiatrists providing psychiatric services to older people in general hospital wards.
Results
73% of services were provided through a generic, sector‐based, consultation psychiatry model. The remaining 27% employed a range of general hospital‐based liaison psychiatry services for older people, involved in proactively seeking referrals and educating general hospital staff. Those providing a generic sector‐based model were significantly slower at responding to referrals. 89% of respondents were unhappy with their service to older people in general hospital wards, with only 11% preferring the generic sector‐based model. Organisational barriers to change identified included the management of mental health care and physical care by different organisations. Training, both of psychiatric staff in this specialist area, and of general hospital staff in the detection and basic management of common psychiatric conditions in the general hospital setting, was felt to be necessary.
Conclusions
The management of co‐morbid psychiatric and physical illness in older people is an important issue for health services. Old age psychiatrists are unhappy with the prevalent, reactive, consultation‐based model, preferring a range of liaison psychiatry models based in the general hospital. The most important barriers to service development in this area were the separate managerial arrangements for psychiatric and physical care services, and a lack of evidence for effective old age psychiatry services in this setting. Copyright © 2003 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract ## Objective To assess perceived need and adequacy of service provision by old age psychiatrists (OAPs) to older people living in care homes in the UK. ## Methods A postal survey of managers of a stratified random sample of 2638 (14% of 18,698) care homes in the UK caring for older r
## A COMMITMENT TO CHANGE The commitment to developing mental health services away from their traditional institutional base into the community is now widespread and old age psychiatry has been prominent in that process. Recognizing the magnitude of the task in many districts, in 1991 the Departm
## Introduction: There are high levels of co-morbid mental illness amongst older people in general hospitals; this study explored the training needs of general nurses to care for this group. ## Method: Focus groups with general nurses were analysed using framework analysis. ## Findings and concl
## Abstract There are substantial logistical difficulties in conducting community surveys of minority ethnic group populations. Primary care lists have been identified as an important potential resource but the representativeness of samples derived through this method has received little evaluation
Using data derived from a recent survey of psychiatric services for old people in the UK, services provided by 'specialized' consultants (committing 5 / 11 or more of their working week to old people) were compared with those provided by 'non-specialized' consultants (working less than 5 / 11 with o