| Literature DB >> 24885746 |
Nia Coupe, Emma Anderson, Linda Gask, Paul Sykes, David A Richards, Carolyn Chew-Graham1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Collaborative care (CC) is an organisational framework which facilitates the delivery of a mental health intervention to patients by case managers in collaboration with more senior health professionals (supervisors and GPs), and is effective for the management of depression in primary care. However, there remains limited evidence on how to successfully implement this collaborative approach in UK primary care. This study aimed to explore to what extent CC impacts on professional working relationships, and if CC for depression could be implemented as routine in the primary care setting.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24885746 PMCID: PMC4030004 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2296-15-78
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Fam Pract ISSN: 1471-2296 Impact factor: 2.497
The collaborative care framework (Gunn et al, 2006) [12]
| Care provided by a case manager working with the family doctor under weekly supervision from specialist mental health medical and psychological therapies clinicians. | |
| Medication support and brief psychological therapy | |
| Proactive care | |
| Patient-specific written feedback to family doctors via electronic records and personal contact |
Normalisation process theory has four key elements (from May and Finch, 2009, pp: 542-545 [24] and http://www.normalizationprocess.org)
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Demographics of GPs interviewed
| Female | 25 years | Afro-Caribbean, Asian, Eastern European and Turkish, long stay, suburban. | 14000 | 4339 | 16 | No | |
| Male | 17 years | 50% Caucasian 50% Asian, urban, deprived, socio-economic mix, many family residents. | 2800 | 2938 | 12 | Yes | |
| Male | 39 years | Urban, mixed social class - less deprived (group 1 & 2). | 8000 | 26048 | 13 | No | |
| Male | 31 years | Urban, mixed social class - less deprived (group 1 & 2). | 8000 | 26048 | 13 | No | |
| Female | 25-26 years | Almost totally white, not deprived, urban edges/semi-rural. Core of family-based patients. | 2350 | 14588 | 11 | No, but is mental health lead for PCT | |
| Male | 28 years | High deprivation, 5-10% Asian population, 1/3 transient, 2/3 settled (lots of families), over-represented mental health comp to other practices. | 3500 | 1128 | 9 | No | |
| Female | 21 years | High deprivation, white British, high unemployment, many patients with smoking-related illnesses. | 6000 | 317 | 13 | Yes in future | |
| Male | 15 years | Afro-Caribbean, Asian, Eastern European and Turkish, long stay, suburban. | 14000 | 4339 | 16 | No | |
| Male | 14 years | Younger population, high turnover, Eastern Europeans, Afro-Caribbean, South Asian, Minority Far East, higher than ‘normal’ mental health issues. | 7500 | 1809 | 8 | Yes but resigning due to political nature | |
| Male | 30 years | Diverse, multi-ethnic. Top 10% most deprived areas in country. A lot of mental health issues. | 8000 | 3428 | 12 | Not for last 18 months | |
| Male | 18 years | Two branches, slightly different demographics in each. One has new Eastern European immigrants; other has significant Asian and African Caribbean. Suburban teaching/training practice. | 8300 | 9601/128182 branches | 12 | Not any more | |
| Male | 7 years | Same surgery as above. This GP says is inner city practice. Lots of people with English as second language. Mobile patient population (high turnover). | 8300 | 9601/128182 branches | 12 | Not asked | |
| Male | 17 years | Mainly white males aged 25-35, a few Asian, Chinese and Black people. | 7600 | 8179 | 16 | No | |
| Female | 10 years | Mainly white males aged 25-35, a few Asian, Chinese and Black people. | 7600 | 8179 | 16 | No | |
| Male | 22 years | Majority white British, very few black and minority ethnic groups. | 7750 | 317 | 13 | No |
Initial thematic analysis
| Recognizing the need for change | GPs’ understanding of current services | “ |
| | Limited access to services | “… |
| | Reflections on the past | “ |
| Operationalising collaborative care | Understanding collaborative care | “ |
| | Delivering the intervention | “ |
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| | Facilitating communication | “ |
| | | “… |
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| | Enhanced supervision | “ |
| | Communication vs. collaboration | “ |
| Catering for complexity | Recognition of complexity | “ |
| The need to avoid mind-body dualism | “ | |
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| Usefulness of a collaborative care approach for people with complex problems | “ |