| Literature DB >> 28963308 |
Aysegul Dirik1, Sima Sandhu1, Domenico Giacco1,2, Katherine Barrett1, Gerry Bennison1, Sue Collinson1, Stefan Priebe1.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Family involvement is strongly recommended in clinical guidelines but suffers from poor implementation. To explore this topic at a conceptual level, a multidisciplinary review team including academics, clinicians and individuals with lived experience undertook a review to explore the theoretical background of family involvement models in acute mental health treatment and how this relates to their delivery.Entities:
Keywords: adult psychiatry; anxiety disorders; mental health; qualitative research
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28963308 PMCID: PMC5623469 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2017-017680
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Family involvement models in acute mental healthcare
| Model | Country | Description |
| Calgary Family Assessment and Intervention Models | Canada | Guidelines for family nursing practice and assessment that draw on systems, communication and change theory. In acute care, interventions may target cognitive, affective and behavioural domains of family functioning to invoke change. Staff are trained to use systemic tools such as genograms for the assessment of social relationships. |
| ERIC (Equipe Rapide d’Intervention de Crise) | France | Nurses, doctors and psychologists work together as a large multidisciplinary team in a mobile service. Brief psychotherapy is provided, usually in the patient’s home, with the aim of ‘enveloping’ (containing) the crisis. There is strong emphasis on the role of communication and the competence of the family unit to deal with future crises. |
| Family Psychoeducation Models | UK, USA | The most widely used model globally, developed from research into the role of family communication in relapse. Specialist teams provide a package of support including at least (1) an educational component about the patient’s diagnosis and the recommended treatment; (2) problem-solving and/or communication training to simplify communication for the patient and (3) emotional support for the family. |
| Family Systems Approach, SYMPA (systems therapy methods in acute psychiatry) | Germany | All staff across disciplines are trained to assess and treat patients within a systemic framework. This includes changing language use to less-medicalised terms. Staff are also trained as ‘negotiators’ between the patient and the organisation about matters such as medication and compulsory measures. |
| Open Dialogue | Finland | A multidisciplinary mobile crisis team attend the patient’s home within a short time from referral. Meetings including the patient’s wider social network take place daily, and continue until a ‘joint understanding’ is reached of the patient’s distress. The process of listening and responding is considered central in reducing the patient’s distressed state. |
| Somerset Model | UK | Service-wide approach, developed to address policy and advocacy-led calls for more family-inclusive services. All families are offered an initial needs assessment and information about the service and may be referred to more intensive provision. |
Figure 1PRISMA flow diagram depicting study selection.
Figure 2Placement of family involvement models within the diathesis–stress, systems and postmodern theories.
Common components of family involvement models
| Communication/language use | Joint decision-making | Support for | Wider social network | Medication use | Specialist teams/staff | Whole system approach | |
| Calgary Family Assessment and Intervention Model |
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| ERIC (Equipe Rapide d’Intervention de Crise) |
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| Family Psychoeducation Models |
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| Family Systems Approach (SYMPA) |
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| Open Dialogue |
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| Somerset Service Model |
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Key: √√, Strongly emphasised in model; √, Present in the model, not a key feature; −, Relatively less or no emphasis.
Themes and subthemes relating to the role of patients and families in family involvement models
| Theme | Subthemes |
| 1. Families are a resource | |
| 2. Linear roles and relationships | 2.1. There is a ‘patient’ and a ‘carer’ |
| 2.2. Families want to help | |
| 2.3. Family involvement is always beneficial | |
| 3. Risk of identity loss | |
| 4. Implementation versus choice | |