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Addenbrooke's Hospital, Cambridge
University of Hertfordshire
Department of Old Age Psychiatry, Colindale Hospital, Colindale Avenue, London NW9 5HG; tel: 020 8952 2381
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Abstract |
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To describe the attitudes of the professionals of a multi-disciplinary crisis intervention service (CIS) towards the service they provide. To establish whether there are differences in attitudes between the different professional disciplines involved. A questionnaire was mailed to all the professionals working in the Barnet CIS (n=94). Differences were analysed using the Kruskal-Wallis test.
RESULTS
The overall response rate was 84%. Statistically significant differences were found between the different disciplines in 10 of the 37 questions (27%) on the questionnaire. Opinions differed most on issues of safety and acceptance of clinical responsibility.
CLINICAL IMPLICATIONS
Despite general agreement on most issues, we found differences of opinion in important areas such as arrangements for team safety and clinical responsibility. These differences may create tensions within the multi-disciplinary groups and may influence the attitudes of professionals to crisis work. Measures need to be taken to address these issues in order to improve morale and staff satisfaction.
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Introduction |
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The crisis team is composed of a trainee psychiatrist with at least 6 months of postgraduate experience in psychiatry, a community psychiatric nurse (CPN) and a psychiatric social worker (PSW). The rationale for inclusion of these specialities is to attempt to identify and meet the psychiatric, social and psychological needs of the patients. They provide a 24-hour service, 7 days a week. The team is always supervised by a consultant on-call. There are two CIS teams operating at any time, one for each side (East and West) of the borough. Referrals are accepted from medical practitioners of any speciality and from other agencies via the patient's general practitioner. During working hours, the referrals are taken by a crisis coordinator who, after screening the calls, arranges for the team to visit. Out of hours the junior doctor coordinates the calls. The team has a quality standard such that patients should be assessed within 4 hours of the referral. The team follows a multi-disciplinary approach to assessments, which take place not only in the accident and emergency departments of local hospitals, but also in the community and in police stations. After the assessment the team formulates a care plan, which is discussed with the patient and significant others. Unless admission is indicated, those patients requiring acute psychiatric care are followed up for a maximum of 6 weeks, after which the patient's care is handed over to the appropriate community mental health team. There are weekly multi-disciplinary meetings where issues relating to the functioning of the CIS are discussed and clinical cases reviewed (Barnet Healthcare NHS Trust, 1999. Crisis Intervention Guidelines. Available from the author upon request).
Initially, the CIS followed the crisis intervention philosophy set up by Lindeman and Caplan (Aguilera & Messik, 1982). However, there seems to be no consensus as to what constitutes crisis intervention among practitioners (Hobbs, 1984), and it has been shown that practitioners working in the CIS may have different attitudes towards the same intervention approach (Winter et al, 1987).
Different models of crisis intervention are required for different types of crisis. The Barnet CIS deals with what Baldwin (1978) described as "psychiatric emergencies". With the closure of large psychiatric hospitals there have been decreasing numbers of acute beds available, and a growing trend towards treatment in the community. Crisis intervention has been reported to reduce the number of admissions to a psychiatric unit (see Szmukler, 1987, for review).
Referrals to the Barnet CIS have shown a steady increase within recent years (see Fig. 1), creating an increasingly stressful situation for its staff. Political initiatives such as the Care Programme Approach (CPA), and growing expectations of accountability by professionals involved in acute psychiatric services, create further stresses and potential conflicts among the different disciplines within the CIS.
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While increasing numbers of crisis intervention services are being established in the UK, relatively little has been reported on the particular stresses experienced by CIS staff and their views on the service they provide. It was felt timely to survey the members of the Barnet CIS in order to describe their attitudes to crisis work, and to note important differences as a way of attempting to address potential conflicts within the service.
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Method |
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As the data were categorical, and hence non-normally distributed, differences between professional groups were analysed using the Kruskal-Wallis test (a non-parametric analogue of the one-way ANOVA). We had initially used the Chi-square test, which gave very similar results, but the relatively low number of professionals in particular disciplines resulted in a considerable number of empty cells in the various 5 x 4 tables (5-point scale by 4 disciplines), so the test had to be discarded.
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Results |
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There was general agreement in saying that patients were usually physically fit for interview and that a good standard of care is provided by a multi-disciplinary approach, but opinions were divided when considering whether visits were often delayed because a team member was engaged in other activities. Interviews were not thought to be unnecessarily prolonged as a result of three disciplines being involved. All disciplines felt that, whenever possible, patients should be assessed at home. Setting up care plans was not viewed as a source of disagreements, but the CIS was felt to be under-resourced.
Difficulties in finding beds, necessitating extra-contractual referral placements, were reported as a problem. Two major difficulties were identified in relation to Mental Health Act assessments; the frequent unavailability of an independent doctor approved under Section 12(2) and difficulties in arranging a police escort when needed.
All disciplines thought that working in the CIS was a valuable experience, and professionals felt well supported by senior colleagues and colleagues from other disciplines.
Ten of the 37 questions revealed statistically significant differences of opinion between disciplines. Table 1 shows the percentage of the different professionals that agreed with each statement and the accompanying P value. Divergent views between professionals were reported regarding the volume of referrals (with CPNs being less likely to consider referrals to the CIS as being appropriate), safety arrangements and issues about clinical responsibility.
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Fifty-eight per cent of CIS staff reported having been threatened and 21% had been assaulted (with consultants showing the greater proportion). However, despite this only 19% reported frequently feeling unsafe while on CIS duty.
There were significant differences in opinions on the issue of clinical responsibility. Where CPNs and PSWs tended to feel that clinical responsibility for patients was shared by the team, the majority of junior doctors and consultants felt that the doctor held overall clinical responsibility. Moreover, junior doctors felt that they were clinically responsible in the majority of cases when the on-call consultant was not contacted. This view was also held by 62% of the consultants. It was also noted that junior doctors were the professional group that were least likely to report that working in the CIS was satisfying and fulfilling (33%).
Finally, opinion was divided on the question of whether the multi-disciplinary meetings were thought to be of value. The majority of psychiatrists felt that the meetings were not an appropriate venue at which to review cases and discuss care plans.
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Discussion |
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There seems to be agreement on the majority of issues affecting the CIS among the different disciplines involved in its functioning. However, significant differences of opinion have been detected on issues of importance, such as security arrangements and clinical responsibility. The impact of these differences on clinical practice merits further attention. A multi-disciplinary approach to practice is felt to be of paramount importance. This would entail not only an appropriate training common to all disciplines, but adequate support from senior colleagues, team building and renewal of core values, aiming, as suggested by Tyrer (1998), at a common philosophy of care.
It is not known to what extent the differences in opinions observed within the different disciplines from the CIS are unique, or whether these would occur in another multi-disciplinary team setting. This is outside the scope of this paper, but could be the subject of a further study.
It is plausible that the attitudes and views of the CIS professionals may have a bearing on the ability of the service to operate effectively. Similar surveys, perhaps conducted on a regular basis, might serve as a means of allowing the views of professionals to be explored and shared. This may in turn have a beneficial affect on the CIS, helping to ensure its efficient and cohesive operation.
We have not attempted to correlate the attitudes of CIS professionals with patient outcome measures such as patient satisfaction. Keeble et al (1997) showed high levels of satisfaction of patients and significant others with the service provided by the CIS.
The issues raised here are of importance to existing crisis services and to those that may be planning to establish a CIS.
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Acknowledgments |
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References |
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BALDWIN, B. A. (1978) A paradigm for the classification of emotional crises: implications for crisis intervention. American Journal of Orthopsychiatry, 48, 538-551.[Medline]
HOBBS, M. (1984) Crisis intervention in theory and practice: a selective review. British Journal of Medical Psychology, 57, 23-34.
KEEBLE, P., METCALFE, C., RILEY, T., et al (1997) Cross purposes. Health Services Journal, 107, 28-29.[Medline]
RATNA, L. (1978) The Practice of Psychiatric Crisis Intervention. St Albans, Hertfordshire: Napsbury Hospital League of Friends.
SZMUKLER, G. I. (1987) The place of crisis intervention in psychiatry. Australian and New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry, 21, 24-34.[Medline]
TYRER, P. (1998) Cost-effective or profligate
community psychiatry? British Journal of Psychiatry,
172, 1-3.
WINTER, D. A., SHIVAKUMAR, H., BROWN, R. J., et al
(1987) Explorations of a crisis intervention service.
British Journal of Psychiatry,
151,
232-239.
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