Literature DB >> 12459824

Follow-up of serious offender patients in the community: multiple methods of tracing.

Elizabeth Jamieson1, Pamela J Taylor.   

Abstract

Longitudinal studies of people with mental disorder are important in understanding outcome and intervention effects but attrition rates can be high. This study aimed to evaluate use of multiple record sources to trace, over 12 years, a one-year discharge cohort of high-security hospital patients. Everyone leaving such a hospital in 1984 was traced until a census date of 31 December 1995. Data were collected from several national databases (Office for National Statistics (ONS), Home Office (HO) Offenders' Index, Police National Computer Records, the Electoral Roll) and by hand-searching responsible agency records (HO, National Health Service). Using all methods, only three of the 204 patients had no follow-up information. Home Office Mental Health Unit data were an excellent source, but only for people still under discharge restrictions (<50% after eight years). Sequential tracing of hospital placements for people never or no longer under such restrictions was laborious and also produced only group-specific yield. The best indicator of community residence was ONS information on general practitioner (GP/primary care) registration. The electoral roll was useful when other sources were exhausted. Follow-up of offenders/offender-patients has generally focused on event data, such as re-offending. People untraced by that method alone, however, are unlikely to be lost to follow-up on casting a wider records net. Using multiple records, attrition at the census was 38%, but, after certain assumptions, reduced further to 5%.

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Mesh:

Year:  2002        PMID: 12459824      PMCID: PMC6878324          DOI: 10.1002/mpr.129

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Methods Psychiatr Res        ISSN: 1049-8931            Impact factor:   4.035


  3 in total

1.  Violence by people discharged from acute psychiatric inpatient facilities and by others in the same neighborhoods.

Authors:  H J Steadman; E P Mulvey; J Monahan; P C Robbins; P S Appelbaum; T Grisso; L H Roth; E Silver
Journal:  Arch Gen Psychiatry       Date:  1998-05

2.  Characteristics of people lost to attrition in psychiatric follow-up studies.

Authors:  E H Fischer; E A Dornelas; J W Goethe
Journal:  J Nerv Ment Dis       Date:  2001-01       Impact factor: 2.254

3.  Reducing violence in severe mental illness: randomised controlled trial of intensive case management compared with standard care.

Authors:  E Walsh; C Gilvarry; C Samele; K Harvey; C Manley; P Tyrer; F Creed; R Murray; T Fahy
Journal:  BMJ       Date:  2001-11-10
  3 in total
  2 in total

1.  Offending in psychiatric patients after discharge from medium secure units: conviction rate may be misleading.

Authors:  Steffan Davies; Martin Clarke; Conor Duggan
Journal:  BMJ       Date:  2004-09-18

2.  Persistence of addictive disorders in a first-offender driving while impaired population.

Authors:  Sandra C Lapham; Robert Stout; Georgia Laxton; Betty J Skipper
Journal:  Arch Gen Psychiatry       Date:  2011-07-04
  2 in total

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