| Literature DB >> 29588643 |
Mark Rodgers1, Jane Dalton1, Melissa Harden1, Andrew Street2, Gillian Parker3, Alison Eastwood1.
Abstract
People with mental health conditions have a lower life expectancy and poorer physical health outcomes than the general population. Evidence suggests this is due to a combination of clinical risk factors, socioeconomic factors, and health system factors, notably a lack of integration when care is required across service settings. Several recent reports have looked at ways to better integrate physical and mental health care for people with severe mental illness (SMI). We built on these by conducting a mapping review that looked for the most recent evidence and service models in this area. This involved searching the published literature and speaking to people involved in providing or using current services. Few of the identified service models were described adequately and fewer still were evaluated, raising questions about the replicability and generalisability of much of the existing evidence. However, some common themes did emerge. Efforts to improve the physical health care of people with SMI should empower staff and service users and help remove everyday barriers to delivering and accessing integrated care. In particular, there is a need for improved communication among professionals and better information technology to support them, greater clarity about who is responsible and accountable for physical health care, and greater awareness of the effects of stigmatisation on the wider culture and environment in which services are delivered.Entities:
Keywords: integrated care; mapping review; mental health; physical health
Year: 2018 PMID: 29588643 PMCID: PMC5854169 DOI: 10.5334/ijic.2605
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Integr Care Impact factor: 5.120
Classification of included publications.
| Evidence type | 1. Information sharing systems | 2. Shared protocols | 3. Joint funding and commissioning | 4. Co-location of services | 5. Multidisciplinary teams | 6. Liaison services | 7. Navigators | 8. Research | 9. Reduction of stigma | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bartels [ | E | • | • | |||||||
| Bellamy [ | E | • | • | • | • | • | ||||
| Bradford [ | E | • | • | • | • | • | • | |||
| Chawstiak [ | E | • | • | • | ||||||
| Curtis [ | E | • | • | |||||||
| De Hert [ | P | • | ||||||||
| Department of Health [ | P, E | • | • | • | • | |||||
| Department of Health [ | P | • | • | |||||||
| Druss [ | E | • | • | • | ||||||
| Greater Manchester CLAHRC [ | E | • | • | • | • | • | ||||
| Happell [ | D, E | • | • | • | • | |||||
| Hardy [ | E | |||||||||
| Jones [ | E | • | ||||||||
| Kelly [ | E | • | • | |||||||
| Kern [ | D | • | • | • | • | • | • | • | • | • |
| Kilany [ | E | • | • | • | • | • | • | • | • | • |
| Kilbourne [ | D, E | • | • | • | ||||||
| Lee [ | E | • | • | |||||||
| Maki [ | E | • | • | • | ||||||
| Mental Health Foundation [ | D | • | • | • | • | • | • | • | • | • |
| NHS IQ [ | E | • | • | • | • | |||||
| NHS London [ | D | • | ||||||||
| Nover [ | D | • | • | • | ||||||
| Parks [ | D | • | • | • | • | • | • | • | • | • |
| Pirraglia [ | E | • | ||||||||
| Rubin [ | E | • | • | • | • | |||||
| Shackleford [ | D | • | • | |||||||
| Solomon [ | D | • | ||||||||
| Stark [ | D | • | • | • | ||||||
| Tallian [ | D | • | ||||||||
| Ungar [ | D | • | • | • | ||||||
| Vanderlip [ | D | • | • | |||||||
| Vinas Cabrera [ | E | • | • | |||||||
| Von Esenwein [ | E | • | ||||||||
| Welthagen [ | D | • | • | |||||||
| Yeomans [ | E | • | ||||||||
• 1–9 indicates components of the intervention, according to the nine factors of good integrated care.
E = Evaluation; P = Policy document; D = Descriptive (non-evaluative) publication.