Nottinghamshire Healthcare NHS Trust, Division of Psychiatry, First Floor, Duncan Macmillan House, Porchester Road, Nottingham NG3 6AA, email: ian.rothera{at}nottshc.nhs.uk
Nottinghamshire Healthcare NHS Trust
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To identify problems with the management of perinatal mental health disorders and areas where improvements are thought-required. The study used qualitative methods comprising focus groups with recovered patients and interviews with health professionals.
RESULTS
Issues we identified included a lack of knowledge, skills, integrated working, poor access to resources and ill-defined professional roles and responsibilities. Improving care and service provision requires the development of training and education programmes, care pathways and protocols, and referral guidelines and liaison services.
CLINICAL IMPLICATIONS
Difficulties over managing perinatal mental illnesses occur at all levels of healthcare provision. Our findings confirm best practice recommendations which emphasise improved joint working and the provision of specialist services in all localities.
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Semi-structured individual interviews were conducted with 39 health professionals who were recruited through a combination of non-probabilistic purposive sampling with pre-defined criteria (professional group and locality) and snowball sampling, in which new informants were identified through existing contacts. Informants from involved localities and professions, including mainstream and specialist perinatal services, were recruited to ensure a representative range of views (Table 1). These comprised general adult and perinatal psychiatrists, obstetricians, health visitors, midwives, general practitioners, primary care mental health practitioners and health services managers.
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View this table: [in a new window] | Table 1. Composition of interview samples |
Two focus groups of five and seven recovered women were conducted. Group size was kept relatively small in order to facilitate participant interaction and maximise group focus (Morgan, 1997). Participants were all women who had been admitted to a specialist mother and baby unit and we hoped to capitalise on their shared experiences (Kitzinger, 1995). Admissions to all three mother and baby units within the study area were sampled, so as to capture a wide range of views. Former in-patients were recruited through their consultant perinatal psychiatrists, who ensured that all identified informants had recovered sufficiently in order to participate. A further focus group was conducted with staff from two of the three mother and baby units, so as to broaden the range of experiences.
Using the principle of analytic induction (in which data collection and data analysis occurred simultaneously), participants were recruited for individual interviews and focus groups were continued until no new issues emerged (data saturation).
Based on the broad area of enquiry and previous research, an interview schedule was developed to explore participants beliefs and understandings of the nature and management of perinatal mental illness, their views about shortfalls in care and service provision (and the implications of these), and their suggestions for improving healthcare and outcomes for women and their families.
Data were analysed using data reduction and data complication techniques (Seidel & Kelle, 1995; Coffey & Atkinson, 1996) and simplified into initial themes, or codes, which reflected participants meanings and experiences of services. These were used to identify similarities, patterns and inconsistencies in the data; the coding framework was then refined and developed and the process repeated until no new themes emerged.
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Knowledge and skills
Many non-specialist healthcare practitioners felt they lacked the knowledge
and skills required to effectively manage the whole range of perinatal mental
health problems. They were unaware of the significance of previous history of
mental illness and the risk of recurrence following delivery, which resulted
in a lack of forward planning. A lack of awareness over how to access
specialist services for referral and advice and under which circumstances this
would be appropriate was also evident. At all levels of healthcare and service
provision an absence of systematic training was noted. In order to acquire the
necessary skills and knowledge, non-specialist professionals agreed that they
should have access to specialist education, training, enhanced guidelines and
care pathways, and standardised referral criteria.
Access
Difficulties in accessing psychiatric services, particularly in emergency
situations, was a common factor. This was attributed to rigid protocols or
practices used by non-specialist psychiatric services, slow response times or
insufficient awareness or understanding of the referral criteria of specialist
services by referring professionals. Practitioners also experienced
difficulties in obtaining specialist advice and information from psychiatric
colleagues, particularly when following formal communication routes such as
telephone support. Informants felt that more effective systems are needed to
ensure that non-specialists are able to access specialist care and treatment
and/or advice and information, when required (see below).
Pathways and protocols
The development of care pathways and protocols was felt to be important in
the management of serious perinatal illness but this was seen to have been
adhoc and unsystematic. Such tools were considered particularly important in
helping non-specialist professionals decide when and how to make referrals for
specialist care and treatment, although it was emphasised that they would need
to be flexible both to the skills and judgment of the practitioner (in order
to maintain clinical autonomy and decision-making) and tailored to the
patients individual needs. It was agreed that systematic pathways,
protocols and guidelines should be developed at all levels of perinatal
healthcare provision and for all localities.
Comprehensiveness and integration
Informants felt that the lack of any systematic development of specialist
services in the region had resulted in a fragmented and disjointed approach to
the management of perinatal mental illness. This, coupled with the fact that
health professionals often failed to communicate important information to one
another, meant that services were unable to provide the most effective
response to meet the needs of their service users.
The need to develop better links and improve liaison between maternity, psychiatric and primary care services, together with systems that encourage integrated or joint working, such as care pathways and protocols was emphasised. It was felt that improving liaison and interagency working could also be achieved through designated link workers, who would provide a single point of contact for specialist advice and information.
Roles and responsibilities
Health professionals across all levels of service provision were unclear
about their roles and responsibilities. They felt this often led to
misunderstandings and uncertainty and could result in delayed care. These
concerns were more pronounced in non-specialist services and where there were
many interfaces between services and levels of provision, such as in primary
care. Informants agreed that all services involved in the management of
perinatal mental illness should be clear about their own responsibilities. It
was felt that the use of systematic procedures, including guidelines, improved
access to specialist advice and information, referral criteria, supervision
and training, could help achieve this.
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Key findings
The key themes identified demonstrated a high degree of consistency across
informant groups, both professional and patient. There was strong agreement
that non-specialist practitioners need to have the right skills and knowledge
to properly manage perinatal mental illness. Tied to this, practitioners need
to have access to specialist care and treatment for women who require these
services and to specialist advice and information to assist in management of
complex and serious conditions. Issues around knowledge and access were
strongly related to the use of care pathways and clinical guidelines to assist
professionals in managing perinatal illness and referring women more
appropriately. Concerns over the lack of clarity and definition of
professional roles and responsibilities at all levels of healthcare provision
were linked to the need for systematic procedures for managing perinatal
mental illness. Finally, the need for improved liaison and communication
between services at all levels of healthcare was emphasised, with systems in
place to increase and support joint working.
Implications for service provision
The major themes highlighted by the health professionals and service users
who participated in this project demonstrate the importance of the
interrelationships between different elements of service provision and
delivery essential to the proper care and management of perinatal mental
illness. These findings are consistent with the provision and organisation of
healthcare around whole:systems working
(Senge et al, 1994;
Plsek & Greenhalgh, 2001),
rather than focusing on discrete aspects of service development and
improvement. For perinatal mental health, such an approach emphasises the need
for integrated and joint working at all levels of healthcare, particularly at
the interfaces between maternity, psychiatry and primary care. Policy at both
the national and local level supports the implementation of a perinatal mental
health strategy in every health community (Oates,
2000,
2004;
Department of Health, 2004;
National Institute for Health and Clinical
Excellence, 2007). By promoting a hierarchical, tiered system of
healthcare, such a strategy supports a comprehensive and integrated model of
service provision, which should enable women to receive care and treatment at
a level most appropriate to their needs.
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