| Literature DB >> 22815648 |
James D Livingston, Alicia Nijdam-Jones, Johann Brink.
Abstract
Several questions remain unanswered regarding the extent to which the principles and practices of patient-centered care are achievable in the context of a forensic mental health hospital. This study examined patient-centered care from the perspectives of patients and providers in a forensic mental health hospital. Patient-centered care was assessed using several measures of complementary constructs. Interviews were conducted with 30 patients and surveys were completed by 28 service providers in a forensic mental health hospital. Patients and providers shared similar views of the therapeutic milieu and recovery orientation of services; however, providers were more likely to perceive the hospital as being potentially unsafe. Overall, the findings indicated that characteristics of patient-centered care may be found within a forensic mental health hospital. The principles of patient-centered care can be integrated into service delivery in forensic mental health hospitals, though special attention to providers' perceptions of safety is needed.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22815648 PMCID: PMC3396355 DOI: 10.1080/14789949.2012.668214
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Forens Psychiatry Psychol ISSN: 1478-9949
Patient and provider ratings of recovery-oriented care.
| Patients | Providers | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| RSA Scales (possible range) | |||||||||
| Life goals (1–5) | 29 | 3.30 | .72 | 27 | 3.22 | .60 | .48 | 54 | .635 |
| Involvement (1–5) | 29 | 2.77 | .93 | 26 | 2.44 | .75 | 1.44 | 53 | .157 |
| Treatment options (1–5) | 29 | 2.76 | .85 | 24 | 3.22 | .70 | −2.15 | 51 | .036 |
| Choice (1–5) | 29 | 3.11 | .77 | 25 | 2.94 | .81 | .79 | 52 | .432 |
| Individualized services (1–5) | 29 | 2.95 | .89 | 26 | 3.28 | .73 | −1.48 | 53 | .145 |
| Inviting (1–5) | 30 | 3.28 | 1.06 | 27 | 3.09 | .91 | .73 | 55 | .471 |
| Total (1–5) | 29 | 3.06 | .61 | 27 | 3.03 | .60 | .21 | 54 | .831 |
Strengths and gaps of recovery-oriented care.
| Patient perspectives | Provider perspectives | |
| Strengths | Staff believe in patients’ recovery ( Staff are diverse ( Staff encourage hope and recovery ( Staff believe in symptom self-management ( Staff are welcoming ( | Staff are diverse ( Discharge criteria are discussed ( Spiritual needs are discussed ( Plans are made for life goals ( Staff ask patients about their interests ( |
| Gaps | Staff encourage positive risk-taking ( Patient role models/mentors are used ( Staff help patients give back to the community ( Sexual needs/interests discussed ( Patients are involved in staff training ( | Patients are involved in staff training ( Patients can access their records ( Staff believe in symptom self-management ( Sexual needs/interests discussed ( Patient role models/mentors are used ( |
Notes: *Indicates commonalities between patients and staff; †Indicates differences between patients and staff.
Patient and provider ratings of therapeutic milieu.
| Patients | Providers | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| EssenCES scales (possible range) | |||||||||
| Patient cohesion (0–20) | 29 | 9.86 | 3.85 | 28 | 8.32 | 4.03 | 1.47 | 55 | .146 |
| Experienced safety (0–20) | 28 | 9.11 | 3.21 | 28 | 4.18 | 3.33 | 5.63 | 54 | .000 |
| Therapeutic hold (0–20) | 29 | 10.86 | 4.03 | 28 | 11.46 | 4.19 | −.55 | 55 | .583 |
| Total average (0–4) | 29 | 2.01 | .49 | 28 | 1.61 | .51 | 2.99 | 55 | .004 |
Correlations between patient-rated measures.
| RSA | EssenCES | MHRM | MDES | SOLES | ISMI | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| a. Recovery-oriented care (RSA) | 1 | |||||
| b. Therapeutic milieu (EssenCES) | .66 | 1 | ||||
| c. Personal recovery (MHRM) | .28 | .12 | 1 | |||
| d. Empowerment (MDES) | .25 | .00 | .60 | 1 | ||
| e. Engagement (SOLES) | .55 | .36 | .06 | .05 | 1 | |
| f. Internalized stigma (ISMI) | −.18 | .05 | −.79 | −.61 | −.05 | 1 |
Notes: *Significant at a .01 level (2-tailed); **Significant at a .001 level (2-tailed).