Geoffrey Waghorn1, Eoin Killackey2, Philleen Dickson3, Liza Brock4, Catherine Skate5. 1. The ORS Group. 2. Orygen, The National Centre of Excellence in Youth Mental Health, Parkville. 3. Western Australian Association for Mental Health. 4. STEPS Group Australia. 5. Independent Practice.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: This report summarizes the major developments in Australia since the first introduction of Individual Placement and Support (IPS) in 2005 in order to outline the current situation and discuss future challenges and opportunities. METHOD: Using an informal snowball sampling method, all those known to be involved in IPS implementations in Australia in the last 5 years were contacted. RESULTS: The program has expanded from 2 full-time employment specialists in 2005 to 87.6 in 2018. The expansion has been most promising in youth mental health where an initial national 14-site trial of IPS was recently expanded to 24 sites. If the trial is successful, IPS may become a core component of a national youth mental health initiative. Expansion in the adult community mental health sector has been constrained by several factors including the low priority for rehabilitation in the public mental health system. On the positive side, the availability of independent technical support from Western Australia means that all new IPS sites can receive expert technical support for program implementation, continuing high-fidelity delivery, external fidelity assessment, outcome evaluation, and cohort-based outcome reporting. CONCLUSION AND IMPLICATIONS FOR PRACTICE: The expansion of IPS in the public funded adult mental health sector has not kept pace with progress in the youth mental health sector. There is an urgent need for adult mental health services to cease excluding vocational rehabilitation from treatment, care, and recovery plans. Disability Employment Service contract managers could increase disincentives for providers to adopt high caseloads and low intensity services, at the expense of more intensive evidence-based practices. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2020 APA, all rights reserved).
OBJECTIVE: This report summarizes the major developments in Australia since the first introduction of Individual Placement and Support (IPS) in 2005 in order to outline the current situation and discuss future challenges and opportunities. METHOD: Using an informal snowball sampling method, all those known to be involved in IPS implementations in Australia in the last 5 years were contacted. RESULTS: The program has expanded from 2 full-time employment specialists in 2005 to 87.6 in 2018. The expansion has been most promising in youth mental health where an initial national 14-site trial of IPS was recently expanded to 24 sites. If the trial is successful, IPS may become a core component of a national youth mental health initiative. Expansion in the adult community mental health sector has been constrained by several factors including the low priority for rehabilitation in the public mental health system. On the positive side, the availability of independent technical support from Western Australia means that all new IPS sites can receive expert technical support for program implementation, continuing high-fidelity delivery, external fidelity assessment, outcome evaluation, and cohort-based outcome reporting. CONCLUSION AND IMPLICATIONS FOR PRACTICE: The expansion of IPS in the public funded adult mental health sector has not kept pace with progress in the youth mental health sector. There is an urgent need for adult mental health services to cease excluding vocational rehabilitation from treatment, care, and recovery plans. Disability Employment Service contract managers could increase disincentives for providers to adopt high caseloads and low intensity services, at the expense of more intensive evidence-based practices. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2020 APA, all rights reserved).
Authors: Isabelle Weld-Blundell; Marissa Shields; Alexandra Devine; Helen Dickinson; Anne Kavanagh; Claudia Marck Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health Date: 2021-11-17 Impact factor: 3.390