| Literature DB >> 34045644 |
Jo-An Occhipinti1,2,3,4, Adam Skinner5, Samantha Carter6, Jacinta Heath7, Kenny Lawson5,8, Katherine McGill9,10, Rod McClure11, Ian B Hickie5.
Abstract
For more than a decade, suicide rates in Australia have shown no improvement despite significant investment in reforms to support regionally driven initiatives. Further recommended reforms by the Productivity Commission call for Federal and State and Territory Government funding for mental health to be pooled and new Regional Commissioning Authorities established to take responsibility for efficient and effective allocation of 'taxpayer money.' This study explores the sufficiency of this recommendation in preventing ongoing policy resistance. A system dynamics model of pathways between psychological distress, the mental health care system, suicidal behaviour and their drivers was developed, tested, and validated for a large, geographically diverse region of New South Wales; the Hunter New England and Central Coast Primary Health Network (PHN). Multi-objective optimisation was used to explore potential discordance in the best-performing programs and initiatives (simulated from 2021 to 2031) across mental health outcomes between the two state-governed Local Health Districts (LHDs) and the federally governed PHN. Impacts on suicide deaths, mental health-related emergency department presentations, and service disengagement were explored. A combination of family psychoeducation, post-attempt aftercare, and safety planning, and social connectedness programs minimises the number of suicides across the PHN and in the Hunter New England LHD (13.5% reduction; 95% interval, 12.3-14.9%), and performs well in the Central Coast LHD (14.8% reduction, 13.5-16.3%), suggesting that aligned strategic decision making between the PHN and LHDs would deliver substantial impacts on suicide. Results also highlighted a marked trade-off between minimising suicide deaths versus minimising service disengagement. This is explained in part by the additional demand placed on services of intensive suicide prevention programs leading to increases in service disengagement as wait times for specialist community based mental health services and dissatisfaction with quality of care increases. Competing priorities between the PHN and LHDs (each seeking to optimise the different outcomes they are responsible for) can undermine the optimal impact of investments for suicide prevention. Systems modelling provides essential regional decision analysis infrastructure to facilitate coordinated federal and state investments for optimal impacts.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34045644 PMCID: PMC8160145 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-90762-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1A high-level overview of the causal structure and pathways of the system dynamics model.
Description of interventions examined (additional details regarding evidence and parameters used are provided in the Supplementary Materials).
| Intervention | Description |
|---|---|
| Post-attempt assertive aftercare | Post-attempt assertive aftercare is an active outreach and enhanced contact program to reduce readmission in those presenting to services after a suicide attempt. It is implemented through existing community-based mental healthcare (CMHC) services and includes individually tailored contact, solution focused counselling, and motivations to adherence to follow-up treatments and continuity of contact |
| GP training | Short (1–2 days) training programs aimed at reducing suicidal ideation through referral to specialised psychiatric services. This includes people who may be thinking about suicide for the first time or have survived a previous attempt |
| Community-based education programs | Community-based education programs aim to improve recognition of suicide risk and increase help seeking through improved understanding of the causes and risk factors for suicidal behaviour. The effectiveness of this intervention is assumed to increase with increasing community support due to greater opportunity for identification of at-risk individuals by community and organisational gatekeepers |
| Family education and support | Provision of education and support to families and carers of patients presenting to or engaged with mental health services, with the aim of supporting family or carer involvement in the management of mental disorders |
| Safety planning | Safety planning aims to reduce suicidal behaviour through the provision of a specific plan for staying safe during crisis to suicidal patients presenting to an emergency department. The modelled intervention also includes up to 2 follow-up phone calls to monitor suicide risk and support treatment engagement |
| Safe space alternative to emergency departments | Based on the United Kingdom’s Safe Haven café model, this intervention provides an alternative point of contact with mental health services for people experiencing acute psychological distress who may otherwise present to an emergency department |
| Social connectedness programs | Community support programs and services that increase social connectedness, reducing isolation and enhancing resilience in the face of adversity |
| Community-based acute care services | Responsive clinical mental health services delivered by community mental health teams. People in crisis may call and request either a home-based visit or a centre-based visit, depending on their level of functioning and risk |
| GP mental health services | Multiplies the annual rate of increase in the total number of mental health-related GP consultations that can be completed per week. The default value (1) corresponds to the business as usual case, in which services capacity continues to increase at the current rate, estimated using Medicare Benefits Schedule (MBS) data for 2012–2017 assuming services were operating at (near-) maximum capacity over this period |
| Psychiatrists and allied services | Multiplies the annual rate of increase in the total number of psychiatrist and allied services that can be provided per week. The default value (1) corresponds to the business as usual case, in which services capacity continues to increase at the current rate, estimated using Medicare Benefits Schedule (MBS) data for 2012–2017 assuming services were operating at (near-) maximum capacity over this period |
| Psychiatric hospital care | Multiplies the annual rate of increase in the maximum number of psychiatric hospital admissions per week. The default value (1) corresponds to the business as usual case, in which services capacity continues to increase at the current rate, estimated using hospital separations data for 2011–2018 available from HealthStats NSW ( |
| Community mental healthcare services | The annual increase in the total number of community mental health service contacts per 10,000 population that can be provided per week. The default value (0, corresponding to no capacity growth) was derived from service usage data for 2008–2017 published by the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare (available at: |
Figure 2Numbers of suicides, emergency department (ED) presentations, and patients disengaging from services per year under the baseline scenario (i.e., business as usual) and the optimal intervention scenario for each outcome (see Table 2 for intervention scenario details). The dotted lines show estimates of numbers of suicides and ED presentations published by NSW Health (http://www.healthstats.nsw.gov.au) and the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare (2019). Model outputs from the sensitivity analyses, incorporating uncertainty in the intervention effects and the duration of increased distress onset due to the COVID-19 pandemic, are shown as lighter solid lines; the heavier solid lines show model outputs obtained assuming the default parameter values.
Non-dominated solutions for the hunter New England and central coast primary health network (HNECC PHN).
| Intervention scenario | Suicides (% reduction) | ED presentations (% reduction) | Disengagements (% reduction) | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0 | Business as usual (no interventions) | 1778 | 155,901 | 544,972 | |||
| a | Family psychoeducation, post-attempt care, safety planning, social connectedness | 1532 | (13.8) | 143,266 | (8.1) | 501,191 | (8.0) |
| b | Acute care services, family psychoeducation, post-attempt care, safety planning | 1534 | (13.7) | 138,444 | (11.2) | 506,134 | (7.1) |
| c | Family psychoeducation, post-attempt care, safety planning, safe space services | 1543 | (13.2) | 141,327 | (9.3) | 505,835 | (7.2) |
| d | Family psychoeducation, post-attempt care, safety planning, CMHC services capacity increase | 1544 | (13.2) | 143,114 | (8.2) | 496,362 | (8.9) |
| e | Acute care services, family psychoeducation, post-attempt care, social connectedness | 1566 | (11.9) | 138,145 | (11.4) | 501,555 | (8.0) |
| f | Family psychoeducation, post-attempt care, safe space services, social connectedness | 1576 | (11.4) | 141,079 | (9.5) | 501,267 | (8.0) |
| g | Family psychoeducation, post-attempt care, social connectedness, CMHC services capacity increase | 1578 | (11.2) | 142,842 | (8.4) | 491,787 | (9.8) |
| h | Acute care services, family psychoeducation, post-attempt care, CMHC services capacity increase | 1578 | (11.2) | 138,001 | (11.5) | 496,730 | (8.9) |
| i | Family psychoeducation, post-attempt care, safe space services, CMHC services capacity increase | 1588 | (10.7) | 140,963 | (9.6) | 496,443 | (8.9) |
| j | Acute care services, family psychoeducation, safety planning, social connectedness | 1619 | (8.9) | 137,991 | (11.5) | 494,169 | (9.3) |
| k | Family psychoeducation, safety planning, safe space services, social connectedness | 1629 | (8.4) | 140,891 | (9.6) | 493,829 | (9.4) |
| l | Family psychoeducation, safety planning, social connectedness, CMHC services capacity increase | 1630 | (8.3) | 142,641 | (8.5) | 484,337 | (11.1) |
| m | Acute care services, family psychoeducation, safety planning, CMHC services capacity | 1632 | (8.2) | 137,852 | (11.6) | 489,305 | (10.2) |
| n | Family psychoeducation, safety planning, safe space services, CMHC services capacity increase | 1642 | (7.6) | 140,782 | (9.7) | 488,964 | (10.3) |
| o | Acute care services, family psychoeducation, social connectedness, CMHC services capacity increase | 1667 | (6.2) | 137,573 | (11.8) | 484,531 | (11.1) |
| p | Family psychoeducation, safe space services, social connectedness, CMHC services capacity increase | 1678 | (5.6) | 140,555 | (9.8) | 484,195 | (11.2) |
| q | Family psychoeducation, social connectedness, GP services capacity increase, CMHC services capacity increase | 1689 | (5.0) | 143,738 | (7.8) | 483,846 | (11.2) |
Each solution is a combination of four interventions that performs better than all other combinations on at least one outcome, preventing more suicides, mental health-related emergency department (ED) presentations, and/or disengagement. Numbers of suicides, mental health-related ED presentations, and patients disengaging across the PHN over the period 2021–2031 are presented for each intervention scenario.
Figure 3Projected reductions (%, relative to business as usual) in total numbers of suicide deaths, mental health-related emergency department (ED) presentations, and patients disengaging from services in the Central Coast Local Health District (LHD) over the period 2021–2031. Results are shown for the optimal intervention scenario(s) for each outcome (see Table 2 for intervention scenario details). Mean percentage reductions and 95% intervals reported in the rightmost column were derived from the distributions of projected outcomes calculated in the sensitivity analyses (note that the 95% intervals provide a measure of the impact of uncertainty in the assumed intervention and pandemic effects, but should not be interpreted as confidence intervals). Numbers of cases (i.e., suicides, ED presentations, and disengagements from services) prevented were obtained assuming the default parameter values. Mean percentage reductions and 50% and 95% intervals are plotted on the right.
Figure 4Projected reductions (%, relative to business as usual) in total numbers of suicides, mental health-related emergency department (ED) presentations, and patients disengaging from services in the Hunter New England Local Health District (LHD) over the period 2021–2031. Results are shown for the optimal intervention scenario(s) for each outcome (see Table 2 for intervention scenario details). Mean percentage reductions and 95% intervals reported in the rightmost column were derived from the distributions of projected outcomes calculated in the sensitivity analyses (note that the 95% intervals provide a measure of the impact of uncertainty in the assumed intervention and pandemic effects, but should not be interpreted as confidence intervals). Numbers of cases (i.e., suicides, ED presentations, and disengagements from services) prevented were obtained assuming the default parameter values. Mean percentage reductions and 50% and 95% intervals are plotted on the right.
Figure 5Projected reductions (%, relative to the baseline scenario) in total numbers of suicides, mental health-related emergency department (ED) presentations, and patients disengaging from services across the Hunter New England and Central Coast Primary Health Network over the period 2021–2031. Intervention scenarios are ordered so that the number of suicides prevented decreases from left to right (see Table 2 for intervention scenario details).