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Lyme Brook Mental Health Centre, Bradwell Hospital Site, Talke Road, Stoke-on-Trent ST5 7TL
Lyme Brook Mental Health Centre, Stoke-on-Trent
Brunswick House, Stoke-on-Trent
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Abstract |
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To describe Brunswick House, the first crisis house in North Staffordshire, and to assess the use of acute psychiatric wards and the local accident and emergency department by Brunswick House residents. A mirror design study compared the use of these facilities in the year before with the year after a resident's first admission to Brunswick House.
RESULTS
Data collected on a cohort of Brunswick House residents between March 1999 and December 1999 showed a reduction in both the use of acute psychiatric wards and use of the accident and emergency department after the index admission to Brunswick House.
CLINICAL IMPLICATIONS
Brunswick House provides an alternative to NHS facilities for people in crisis.
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Introduction |
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Stroul (1988) has suggested that crisis housing should fulfil a number of roles including the provision of short-term accommodation. The accommodation should only serve small groups of clients and it should provide an alternative to hospitalisation. The interpretation of these criteria can lead to apparently differing provision. For example, Bond et al (1989) described and evaluated two crisis housing schemes in Chicago. One service had a dedicated eight-bedded facility and the other relied on renting accommodation in hotels and boarding houses. The emphasis was on a cost outcome, which revealed no significant difference between the two services. The authors noted a high staff turnover and suggested that this was related to the stressful nature of the work.
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Brunswick House |
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Although Brunswick House was not commissioned specifically to offer a direct alternative to acute ward admission, our hypothesis was that it would reduce the use of acute wards for those in crisis with mental health problems. We set out to investigate the impact of Brunswick House on the use of psychiatric acute wards and accident and emergency services.
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Method |
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Results |
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In the study period Brunswick House provided 620 bed days with a mean occupancy period of 10.7 days. There were 217 admissions (mean 3.7 per person). Bed occupancy was 100% at the start of the study period and throughout it. Less than half the sample (48.3%) used the accident and emergency department in the study period for mental health problems. There was a 30% reduction in number of attendances in the following year. This reduction was statistically significant at 6 months (Wilcoxon signed ranks, Z=-1.973, P=0.048) but not at 1 year (Table 2). Forty-three per cent of users were admitted to acute psychiatric wards, with a reduction in in-patient stays of 411 days (Table 2). The actual number of admissions fell by 22%.
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Thirty-six people could not be accommodated when they requested admission during the first operational year. This is an underestimate, as it does not include informal enquiries. As Brunswick House is a crisis facility we examined accident and emergency records to ascertain any direct consequence of an inability to accommodate. For these 36 people there were five accident and emergency department contacts in the month following the failure to accommodate them at Brunswick House. However, there were also five contacts in the month preceding the failure to obtain accommodation. There was no recorded act of deliberate self-harm in the initial week after such failure, nor was there any admission to a psychiatric ward within that period.
During the study period there was no episode of serious deliberate self-harm or act of violence to either other people or property at Brunswick House. There were three episodes of superficial wrist scratching. One resident was banned for persistent substance misuse. There was no suicide in the study period. One resident was admitted to an acute psychiatric ward directly from Brunswick House following an assessment under the 1983 Mental Health Act. The service was less likely to be used by people living more than 8 km from Brunswick House and by people from ethnic minorities.
Using costing from Haycox et al (1999), the direct cost to the NHS (acute psychiatric bed use and attendance at accident and emergency costs) was £195 456 in the preceding year. The cost in the following year was £152 443, representing a reduction of £43 013. In reality the cost difference is likely to be greater, as we were unable to factor in the cost of subsequent medical admission or psychiatric liaison service use following attendance at the accident and emergency department. However, the running costs for Brunswick House in the first operational year were £125 000.
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Discussion |
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Since it opened Brunswick House has been fully occupied, and an increasing number of potential users have not been accommodated. As a result restrictions have been placed on the number of times a person can be accommodated in a year. This has led to many previous residents receiving telephone support from Brunswick House staff. These pressures have resulted in discussions about opening another crisis house in the county. Even though the unit is fully occupied, efforts have been made to attract ethnic minority users who are significantly underrepresented. Our results and the increased demand for accommodation at Brunswick House suggest that the unit provides a valuable service to the people of North Staffordshire and demonstrates an effective partnership between non-statutory and statutory services.
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References |
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