Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-2brh9 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-26T18:58:37.576Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

What do consultants think about the development of specialist mental health teams?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2018

Judy Harrison
Affiliation:
Manchester Mental Health & Social Care Trust, Chorlton House, 70 Manchester Road, Chorlton, Manchester
Barry Traill
Affiliation:
Manchester Mental Health & Social Care Trust, Chorlton House, 70 Manchester Road, Chorlton, Manchester
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Aims and Method

The UK Government is promoting three types of specialist team in psychiatry: assertive outreach, crisis resolution and early intervention in psychosis. Policy guidance suggests that psychiatrists be recruited to work exclusively within these teams, but little is known about the views of psychiatrists regarding their development. A postal survey was undertaken to seek the views of consultant psychiatrists in the North West.

Results

Seventy per cent of psychiatrists responded to the questionnaire. Equal numbers agreed and disagreed with the development of specialist roles. Few services had been able to recruit to extra consultant sessions within the new teams and only a third of consultants believed the resources so far available to be reasonable. Overall views of the new teams were positive (mean scores 6.36, 6.51 and 6.03 on a 1–10 visual analogue scale for assertive outreach, crisis resolution and early onset psychosis teams). Consultants are particularly likely to believe that the new teams will increase patient satisfaction and provide a welcome change in role for some psychiatrists. A total of 64% of consultants believe that crisis resolution services could reduce hospital admissions, compared with 41% for assertive outreach and 31% for early onset psychosis teams. The concern most often voiced was that new services are being developed at the expense of existing teams.

Clinical Implications

Consultants perceive benefits associated with the new teams but are concerned about their impact on the rest of the organisation. If resource and recruitment issues can be addressed, consultants could prove to be supportive of these new models of service.

Type
Original Papers
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC-BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © Royal College of Psychiatrists, 2004

These are times of considerable change for consultants in general adult psychiatry. Most existing services are organised around sectorised community teams, with consultants accepting all patients from a clearly-defined geographical area and remaining responsible for patients across the full range of treatment settings. This has advantages for continuity of care and clear allocation of responsibility, but the sustainability of the model is increasingly questioned. Many consultants feel burdened by large personal caseloads (Reference Tyrer, Muderis and GulbrandsenTyrer et al, 2001) and report dissatisfaction with the catch-all nature of the work (Reference ColganColgan, 2002). Recruitment and retention to the specialty continue to be a concern.

At the same time, the Department of Health is promoting the development of three types of specialist mental health team: assertive outreach, crisis resolution and teams for early intervention in psychosis (Department of Health, 2000, 2001). The Policy Implementation Guidance for the development of these teams recommends that psychiatrists be appointed to work exclusively with the new teams. This inherent specialisation could present an opportunity to redefine general adult psychiatry, but it is essential that psychiatrists themselves are involved in the debate. A limited number of enthusiasts (Reference Smyth and HoultSmyth & Hoult, 2000; Reference BirchwoodBirchwood, 2003) have promoted these developments, whereas others are consistently negative about their impact (Reference Pelosi and JacksonPelosi & Jackson, 2000; Reference PelosiPelosi, 2003). The views of the majority of consultant psychiatrists have not been widely sought.

Method

In early 2003, the Sainsbury Centre for Mental Health ran a series of workshops for consultant psychiatrists on the development of assertive outreach and crisis resolution teams. A number of consistent themes emerged from the workshops and were incorporated into a questionnaire seeking the views of a wider audience of consultants.

The questions asked were the same for each of the three types of specialist team. If a team existed in the locality, consultants were asked about level of resources, new money for consultant time and threshold for acceptance by the service. Using a five-point scale (strongly agree/agree/don’t know or no view/disagree/strongly disagree), all consultants were then asked for their views on eight different aspects of each of the new teams (see Tables 1 and 2) and on specialisation for psychiatrists by treatment setting (e.g. in-patient/community) or by clinical groupings. Finally, using a visual analogue scale from 0 to 10, consultants were asked for their overall view about each of the three types of team and space was left for any general comments.

Table 1. Consultant views on structural aspects of new teams

Sound research evidence for efficacy Accompanied by new money
Agree No view Disagree Agree No view Disagree
Assertive outreach 32 (46%) 19 (27%) 19 (27%) 30 (43%) 14 (20%) 26 (37%)
Crisis resolution 26 (37%) 28 (40%) 16 (23%) 35 (50%) 18 (26%) 17 (24%)
Early onset psychosis 24 (34%) 21 (30%) 25 (37%) 33 (47%) 26 (37%) 11 (16%)
P=0.303 P=0.164
Welcome change in role for some psychiatrists Negative effect on other parts of service
Agree No view Disagree Agree No view Disagree
Assertive outreach 40 (57%) 26 (37%) 4 (6%) 33 (47%) 18 (26%) 19 (27%)
Crisis resolution 37 (53%) 24 (34%) 9 (13%) 20 (29%) 23 (33%) 27 (39%)
Early onset psychosis 39 (56%) 24 (34%) 7 (10%) 25 (36%) 25 (36%) 20 (29%)
P=0.287 P=0.023

Table 2. Consultant views on clinical aspects of new teams

Reduce hospital admissions Increase patient satisfaction
Agree No view Disagree Agree No view Disagree
Assertive outreach 29 (41%) 21 (30%) 20 (29%) 51 (73%) 17 (24%) 2 (3%)
Crisis resolution 45 (64%) 21 (30%) 4 (6%) 51 (73%) 16 (23%) 3 (4%)
Early onset psychosis 22 (31%) 29 (41%) 19 (27%) 48 (67%) 19 (27%) 3 (4%)
P<0.001 P=0.735
Improve clinical outcomes Reduce continuity of care
Agree No view Disagree Agree No view Disagree
Assertive outreach 33 (47%) 28 (40%) 9 (13%) 21 (30%) 15 (21%) 34 (49%)
Crisis resolution 26 (37%) 38 (54%) 6 (9%) 22 (31%) 22 (31%) 26 (37%)
Early onset psychosis 36 (51%) 25 (36%) 9 (13%) 21 (30%) 22 (31%) 27 (39%)
P=0.649 P=0.486

The questionnaire was piloted among consultants from one department, and their views incorporated in the final version. Inter-rater reliability was assessed by sending the questionnaire twice to 10 consultants.

The questionnaire was posted to 101 general adult psychiatrists in the Greater Manchester area, employed by four mental health trusts. One reminder was sent after 2 weeks.

Results

Consultants were divided about further specialisation, either by treatment setting or clinical groupings (Table 3). Sixty-six consultants (67%) said they had an assertive outreach team in their area, 26 (37%) a crisis resolution team and 14 (20%) an early onset psychosis team. Where a team existed, 33% of consultants felt the resources available were reasonable (75% or more of that needed), 23% barely adequate (50-75%), 25% inadequate (25-50%) and 10% totally inadequate (less than 25%). The majority of consultants (69%) felt the thresholds adopted by the new teams were about right.

Table 3. Consultant views on specialisation

Consultants should specialise Strongly agree Agree No view Disagree Strongly disagree
By treatment setting (e.g. in-patients, home treatment) 7 (10%) 20 (29%) 18 (25%) 21 (30%) 4 (6%)
By clinical groupings (e.g. affective disorders, psychotic illness) 6 (9%) 23 (33%) 12 (17%) 22 (31%) 7 (10%)

For assertive outreach, 13 consultants (28%) reported that their local team had been able to secure additional consultant time, a further 11 (23%) reported that money had been allocated but it had not been possible to recruit, and 21 (45%) reported that no additional money had been made available for extra consultant sessions. For crisis resolution, only four respondents (15%) reported that extra consultant sessions had been filled, two (8%) had been unable to fill extra sessions and 17 (65%) said no additional money had been provided. For early onset psychosis teams, three consultants (20%) reported that extra sessions had been filled and 11 (73%) reported that no extra money had been provided.

Consultant views on most aspects of the new teams were divided (Tables 2 and 3). At least a fifth of respondents were uncertain about their views on each item, with the highest level of uncertainty relating to the impact of the new services on clinical outcomes. The highest positive ratings were for the new teams providing a welcome change in role for some psychiatrists (55% of responses positive, 9% negative), increased patient satisfaction (71% positive, 4% negative) and improved clinical outcomes (45% positive, 11% negative). The most strongly held negative view was that the new teams would have a negative impact on other parts of the service (37% agreeing, 31% disagreeing).

There were few differences between teams with consultants who viewed one type of team positively, tending to have the same view of other teams. The main exception to this was that 64% of consultants agreed that crisis resolution services could reduce hospital admissions, compared with 41% for assertive outreach and 31% for early onset psychosis teams.

Overall views of the new teams were widely distributed, with mean scores higher than 6 in each case: assertive outreach mean score 6.36, crisis resolution mean score 6.51, early onset psychosis mean score 6.03. Both median and mode scores were highest for assertive outreach (7 and 8, respectively v. 6 and 6 for crisis resolution and 6 and 5 for early onset psychosis teams), but the difference in scores between teams was not statistically significant (Friedman’s test for related samples, P=0.252).

Discussion

The survey generated a high level of interest with a good response rate. Many consultants added their own comments and there was a clear sense of doctors wanting to be heard.

Predictably, there was a wide range of views among consultants about the new teams and about increasing specialisation. It may be possible for some consultants to specialise while others remain generalists (Reference Dratcu, Grandison and AdkinDratcu et al, 2003), but whole service reorganisation will need to take account of this diversity of views.

Overall consultants were positive about the development of assertive outreach and crisis resolution teams and slightly less so about early onset psychosis teams. Consultants could see clear clinical benefits arising from the teams, with most consultants believing that the new teams would be associated with increased patient satisfaction and better clinical outcomes. Crisis resolution teams in particular were thought to be likely to reduce hospital admissions, and in general consultants did not seem too concerned about a reduction in continuity of care.

Consultants seemed less troubled than might have been predicted about the research evidence for the efficacy of the new teams, and were particularly positive about the potential change in role for some psychiatrists. This was tempered by concern about the negative impact of the new teams on the remainder of the service and a view that the new teams had not been accompanied by extra resources. The lack of new money for extra consultant sessions is of particular concern as this suggests that existing consultants are being asked to take on additional responsibilities at a time when many are already overstretched and demoralised.

The negative effect on other parts of the service was not explored further in the structured questionnaire, but many consultants commented that good staff were moving to the new teams causing additional recruitment problems elsewhere. This might also apply to psychiatrists as new recruits and existing consultants are drawn to posts within specialist teams leaving established generalist posts even harder to fill.

The role of the consultant psychiatrist is currently being reviewed within the Royal College of Psychiatrists and the Department of Health, and new ways of working are likely to emerge. It is essential that consultants are not simply asked to take on more and more responsibilities: the development of new teams must be accompanied by money for extra consultant sessions or a clear reduction in responsibilities in other parts of the service through changes to traditional models of working (Kennedy & Griffiths, Reference Kennedy and Griffiths2001, Reference Kennedy and Griffiths2002).

Psychiatrists have too often been viewed as opponents of change. The results of this local survey suggest that consultants see considerable advantages in the new teams but are concerned about the impact on the whole service. If the new teams are well resourced, their introduction sensitively managed and sufficient attention given to the rest of the system, psychiatrists might turn out to be surprising enthusiasts.

Acknowledgements

Many thanks to all consultants who returned questionnaires.

References

Birchwood, M. (2003) Is early intervention for psychosis a waste of valuable resources? British Journal of Psychiatry, 182, 196199.Google Scholar
Colgan, S. (2002) Who wants to be a general psychiatrist? Psychiatric Bulletin, 26, 35.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Department of Health (2000) The NHS Plan. A Plan for Investment. A Plan for Reform. Department of Health: London.Google Scholar
Department of Health (2001) The Mental Health Policy Implementation Guide. Department of Health: London.Google Scholar
Dratcu, L., Grandison, A. & Adkin, A. (2003) Acute hospital care in inner London: splitting from mental health services in the community. Psychiatric Bulletin, 27, 8387.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kennedy, P. & Griffiths, H. (2001) General psychiatrists discovering new roles for anew era. British Journal of Psychiatry, 179, 283285.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kennedy, P. & Griffiths, H. (2002) What does responsible medical officer mean in a modern mental health service? Psychiatric Bulletin, 26, 205208.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pelosi, A. & Jackson, G. (2000) Home treatment – enigmas and fantasies. BMJ, 320, 308316.Google Scholar
Pelosi, A. (2003) Is early intervention for psychosis a waste of valuable resources? British Journal of Psychiatry, 182, 196199.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Protheroe, D. & Carroll, A. (2001) 24 hour crisis assessment and treatment teams: too radical for the UK? Psychiatric Bulletin, 25, 416417.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Smyth, M. G. & Hoult, J. (2000) The home treatment enigma. BMJ, 320, 305309.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Tyrer, P., Muderis, O. & Gulbrandsen, D. (2001) Distribution of caseloads in community mental health teams. Psychiatric Bulletin, 25, 1012.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Figure 0

Table 1. Consultant views on structural aspects of new teams

Figure 1

Table 2. Consultant views on clinical aspects of new teams

Figure 2

Table 3. Consultant views on specialisation

Submit a response

eLetters

No eLetters have been published for this article.