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Characteristics of teams, staff and patients: associations with outcomes of patients in assertive outreach

Authors :
Tom Burns
Ian R. White
Paul Bebbington
Joanna Billings
Iain Ryrie
Stefan Priebe
Sonia Johnson
Christine Wright
Joanna Watts
Matt Muijen
Walid K.H. Fakhoury
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

BackgroundLittle is known about what characteristics of teams, staff and patients are associated with a favourable outcome of severe mental illness managed by assertive outreach.AimsTo identify predictors of voluntary and compulsory admissions in routine assertive outreach services in the UK.MethodNine features of team organisation and policy, five variables assessing staff satisfaction and burn-out and eleven patient characteristics taken from the baseline data of the Pan-London Assertive Outreach Study were tested as predictors of voluntary and compulsory admissions within a 9-month follow-up period.ResultsWeekend working, staff burn-out and lack of contact of the patient with other services were associated independently with a higher probability of both voluntary and compulsory admission. In addition, admissions in the past predicted further voluntary and compulsory admissions, and teams not working extended hours predicted compulsory admissions in the follow-up period.ConclusionsCharacteristics of team working practice, staff burn-out and patients' history are associated independently with outcome. Patient contact with other services is a positive prognostic factor.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....deab4d155d04c72040f57a276dc2c134
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1192/bjp.185.4.306