|
|
|||||||||||
Leeds Mental Health Trust, Academic Unit of Psychiatry and Behavioural Sciences, 15 Hyde Terrace, Leeds LS2 9JT.
Academic Unit of Psychiatry and Behavioural Sciences, University of Leeds
Correspondence: E-mail: r.a.ruddy{at}leeds.ac.uk
|
|
Abstract |
|---|
|
|
|---|
We surveyed all psychiatric services in the six northeast strategic health authorities to determine how the provision of liaison psychiatry services related to College recommendations and the size of the general hospital trusts served.
RESULTS
Thirty-six (100%) services provided usable data, 8% of general hospital trusts had no liaison psychiatry service, 41% of teams were not multidisciplinary with their only staff being nurses, only 38% of services had dedicated consultant psychiatry time and only a quarter met the recommended minimum standard of 0.5 whole-time equivalents. No teams contained clinical psychologists. Disorder-specific out-patient clinic provision was idiosyncratic.
CLINICAL IMPLICATIONS
There is a lack of rational planning of liaison psychiatry services and as a result, many services are not needs-based and do not comply with College recommendations. One indication of this is the lack of multidisciplinary teams.
|
|
Introduction |
|---|
|
|
|---|
In the light of these recommendations, we decided to study liaison psychiatry provision within six strategic health authorities. We questioned whether there is evidence of rational planning in liaison psychiatry service provision.
|
|
Methods |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Area
The region covered was defined by the strategic health authority boundaries
(Trent, South Yorkshire, West Yorkshire, North and East Yorkshire and Northern
Lincolnshire, County Durham, and Tees Valley and Northumberland Tyne and Wear)
(Fig. 1).
|
Questionnaire
The questionnaire sought information in the following areas:
Number of hospital beds in the general hospital NHS trust within which the liaison psychiatry service operated was used as an indicator of need (Department of Health, 2002).
Analysis
The quantitative response items are presented using descriptive statistics.
Qualitative items were analysed using thematic analysis to be able to group
responses. The qualitative items were analysed by two independent people and
the results pooled.
|
|
Results |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Service provision
Table 1 shows the
distribution of liaison psychiatry services provided to the participating
trusts. Despite the fact that only 24% of services provided disorder-specific
out-patient clinics, these covered over 10 medical subspecialities. All
services that responded provide a service for working age adults and 69%
provide some services to over-65s. Sixty-one per cent of services said their
referral rate had increased and 55% had increased their capacity over the past
3 years. Sixty-one per cent of services did not have their office on general
hospital property and 38% of services had no current arrangements for
supervision from a consultant psychiatrist.
|
Personnel
Forty-one per cent of services were not multidisciplinary, with their only
staff being nurses. No service contained a clinical psychologist. Only 38% of
services had designated consultant psychiatry time (25% met the recommended
minimum of 0.5 whole-time equivalents). Fifty-five per cent had no
administrative support. We calculated work rate by identifying the number of
whole-time equivalent clinical staff (any discipline) in each service and the
number of beds in the trust served by those staff.
Figure 2 shows the number of
general hospital beds for one whole-time equivalent member of the liaison
psychiatry team in the trusts surveyed.
|
|
|
Discussion |
|---|
|
|
|---|
How does liaison psychiatry service provision relate to College
recommendations?
In the past decade, there have been two College reports recommending
changes to liaison psychiatry service provision
(Royal College of Psychiatrists &
British Association of Accident and Emergency Medicine, 1996;
Royal College of Physicians & Royal
College of Psychiatrists, 2003). Despite these reports, the
findings of this survey highlight similar problems to those found by a survey
of liaison psychiatry services in 1990
(Mayou et al, 1990). There are still general hospital NHS trusts that do not have a liaison
psychiatry service, although lack of provision is less of a problem in the
northeast compared with the southwest (Howe
et al, 2003). Current liaison psychiatry services are not
multidisciplinary. Most have nursing staff, none contain integrated clinical
psychologists, many lack administrative support and only a quarter have the
recommended minimum consultant psychiatrist input. This could indicate that
the functions a multidisciplinary team has in assessment, diagnosis,
supervision and interventions in this client group are undervalued. It also
highlights that the specialist skills a consultant liaison psychiatrist offers
in terms of leadership, diagnosis, medical interventions and liaison with
consultants from other specialities are poorly understood
(Royal College of Physicians & Royal
College of Psychiatrists, 2003).
Finally, only a third of services surveyed have their base within general hospital grounds. This could reflect the status of liaison psychiatry within the general hospital and distance will also affect patients waiting times for an assessment.
How does liaison psychiatry service provision relate to need?
It is clear that there is a wide variation in the number of general
hospital beds per liaison psychiatry practitioner. This survey shows that 14%
of general hospital NHS trusts do not even receive a specialist self-harm
service. Sixty-nine per cent of working age liaison psychiatry services
provide a service to over-65s. This supports the results of a recent survey of
consultant old age psychiatrists that found 71% of respondents felt the
current liaison psychiatry service they provided was poor and required
improvement (Holmes, 2002). This gap in provision is being covered by already
understaffed services.
It is unclear from this survey whether the idiosyncratic provision of liaison psychiatry-specific out-patient clinics relate to differing general hospital NHS trust needs or represent an unacceptable variation in service provision (Secretary of State for Health, 1998). This would be an interesting area for further investigation.
Clinical implications
Many government initiatives are driven by the fact that variations in
services across the country are unacceptable, and result in poor quality of
care and inequality of service provision
(Secretary of State for Health,
1998). Unfortunately this is the case for liaison psychiatry, and
patients of different general hospital NHS trusts will receive vastly
different services for their psychiatric needs according to the structure of
the liaison psychiatry service provided. This lack of rational planning of
liaison psychiatry services means that many services are not needs-based and
do not comply with College recommendations. Key areas that need to be
addressed are the lack of multidisciplinary liaison services and inadequate
consultant liaison psychiatry input.
|
|
Acknowledgments |
|---|
|
|
References |
|---|
|
|
|---|
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH (2002) Bed availability and occupancy, NHS organizations in England, 2001-02, website: http://www.doh.gov.uk.
HOLMES, J., BENTLEY, K. & CAMERON, I. (2002) Between Two Stools: Psychiatric Services for Older People in General Hospitals. Leeds: University of Leeds.
HOUSE, A. & HODGSON, G. (1994) Estimating needs and meeting demands. In Liaison Psychiatry: Defining Needs and Planning Services (eds S. Benjamin, A. House & P. Jenkins). London: Gaskell.
HOWE, A., HENDRY, J. & POTOKAR, J. (2003) A survey
of liaison psychiatry services in the south-west of England.
Psychiatric Bulletin,
27, 90-92.
MAYOU, R. A., ANDERSON, H., FEINMANN, C., et al (1990) The present state of consultation and liaison psychiatry. Psychiatric Bulletin, 3, 321 -325.
ROYAL COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS & ROYAL COLLEGE OF PSYCHIATRISTS (2003) The Psychological Care of Medical Patients: A Practical Guide. 2nd Edition (Council Report CR108). London: Royal College of Physicians & Royal College of Psychiatrists.
ROYAL COLLEGE OF PSYCHIATRISTS & BRITISH ASSOCIATION OF ACCIDENT AND EMERGENCY MEDICINE (1996) Psychiatric Services to Accident and Emergency Departments (Council Report CR43). London: Royal College of Psychiatrists & British Association of Accident and Emergency Medicine.
SECRETARY OF STATE FOR HEALTH (1998) A First Class Service: Quality in the New NHS. London: HMSO.
This article has been cited by other articles:
![]() |
D. Sakhuja and J. I. Bisson Liaison psychiatry services in Wales Psychiatr. Bull., April 1, 2008; 32(4): 134 - 136. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
N. O'Keeffe, U. S. Ramaiah, E. Nomani, M. Fitzpatrick, and G. Ranjith Benchmarking a liaison psychiatry service: a prospective 6-month study of quality indicators Psychiatr. Bull., September 1, 2007; 31(9): 345 - 347. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
T. Kewley and J. Bolton A survey of liaison psychiatry services in general hospitals and accident and emergency departments: do we have the balance right? Psychiatr. Bull., July 1, 2006; 30(7): 260 - 263. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
R. RUDDY and A. HOUSE Meta-review of high-quality systematic reviews of interventions in key areas of liaison psychiatry The British Journal of Psychiatry, August 1, 2005; 187(2): 109 - 120. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
R. Ruddy and A. House Is clinical service development simply applied evidence-based medicine? A focus group study Psychiatr. Bull., July 1, 2005; 29(7): 259 - 261. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| HOME | HELP | FEEDBACK | SUBSCRIPTIONS | ARCHIVE | SEARCH | TABLE OF CONTENTS |
| British Journal of Psychiatry | Advances in Psychiatric Treatment | All RCPsych Journals |