| Literature DB >> 30763961 |
F Markus Leweke1,2, Dusan Hirjak1, Claus Staudter1, Doris Borgwedel1, Maria Coenen-Daniel1, Marco Heser1, Katrin Erk1, Georg Juckel3, Andreas Beivers4, Andreas Meyer-Lindenberg1.
Abstract
During the past decades, important progress was made in the treatment of patients with mental disorders. Nevertheless, the guideline-based treatment still represents a significant challenge that must take into account novel diagnostic and therapeutic possibilities as well as recent social development and the economic framework. Therefore, there is a need for further improvement of care in inpatient, day-care and outpatient hospital units. An effective and economic over-arching treatment setting may be the so called "Track-unit". This is a symptom- and syndrome-based, decentralised, and modular constructed unit adjusted to the patient's individual stage-specific needs for his / her treatment across in- and outpatient sectors. This concept allows a team of clinicians to accompany a patient from acute (even coercive) admission through to discharge and outpatient department in order to ensure the best-fitted treatment providing a maximum continuity of care without break-points in responsibilities and information flow. The Track-unit may improve the quality of mental health care while at the same time meeting economic and social interests. However, its implementation is challenging for both staff and internal processes. Here, we focus on underlying principles of the Track-concept in a German psychiatric department emphasizing ethical, therapeutic, personnel, and educational benefits of this alternative and promising setting in modern psychiatry. © Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30763961 DOI: 10.1055/a-0759-1859
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Fortschr Neurol Psychiatr ISSN: 0720-4299 Impact factor: 0.752