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Providing the safety net: Case management for people with a serious mental illness.
82
Citations
5
References
1995
Year
Psychiatric EvaluationIllness Severity GuidelinesCase ManagersMental Health InterventionMental HealthHealth Services ResearchMental Health ServicesPsychiatrySafety NetPatient SupportNursingService ContactCommunity Mental HealthCase ManagementCase ConceptualizationSerious Mental IllnessPatient SafetyMedicinePsychopathologyEmergency Medicine
Case managers in four teams provided intensive community support, focusing on assertive outreach and being a single accountable point of contact. "Most in need" mentally ill people were selected using illness severity guidelines. On one site entry to case management or a control condition was randomised for an 18 month follow-up period; 3% (1/39) of clients lost contact with specialist psychiatric services in the experimental group compared to 24% (9/38) in the control condition (p<0.05). Contacts with all forms of health and social care were greater for the case managed group. Similar low levels of lost contact (1% to 8%) for a further sample of 291 clients were found across the other three sites with non-randomised entry. These findings suggest that intensive community support for people with long-term mental illness, at risk of injury to themselves or others, can maintain service contact in many different settings.
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