My experience of old age psychiatry in the United Kingdom was gained through a registrar exchange programme organized between Royal Park Hospital in Melbourne and the Royal Free Hospital in London. The Exchange programme involved a direct `swap' for 6 months between a registrar from the Royal Free r
The impact of two changes in service delivery on a geriatric psychiatry liaison service
✍ Scribed by Mala Baheerathan; Ajit Shah
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1999
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 104 KB
- Volume
- 14
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0885-6230
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Background. The impact of two changes in service delivery (alteration in the admission policy of the medical unit and the introduction of a formal liaison component to a `consultation only' liaison geriatric psychiatry service) on the associated liaison geriatric psychiatry service was examined in a naturalistic study. The main null hypothesis was that the referral rate would not be in¯uenced by either change in service delivery.
Method. The 30-month study period was divided into three phases de®ned by the two changes in service delivery. The impact of the two changes in service delivery on the (i) referral rate, (ii) reasons for referral, (iii) demographic and clinical characteristics of the referrals and (iv) advice oered after assessment was examined with a retrospective design.
Results. There was a signi®cant decline in the number of referrals for each month across the three study phases exclusively accounted for by a decline between phase 2 and phase 3. The number of reasons for referral and management advice oered for social treatments per patient were greater in phase 1 compared to phase 2. The total number of management advice oered for medical treatments per patient was greater in phase 2 compared to phase 3. The cost of a specialist registrar attending a geriatric medicine ward round was more than oset by the associated decline in the number of referrals per month.
Conclusion. Although this study was not designed as a cost-eectiveness study, the results suggest that the liaison component has the potential to be cost-eective. There is a need for more formal clinical eectiveness and costeectiveness studies in liaison geriatric psychiatry.
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