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Long-term follow-up of individuals on assertive outreach teams

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2018

Tanvir Rana
Affiliation:
South Staffordshire and Shropshire Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust, Stafford
Martin Commander*
Affiliation:
Birmingham and Solihull Mental Health Trust, Birmingham
*
Martin Commander ([email protected])
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Abstract

Aims and method

To describe the long-term outcome of 165 people taken onto assertive outreach teams.

Results

After a mean follow-up of 6 years and 8 months, 130 people remained in contact with local services of whom 100 were still under the care of an assertive outreach team. Admission rates remained around half those at inception. However, 16 individuals had died, 10 spent time in prison, 12 were homeless and 14 had protracted stays in hospital during the follow-up period.

Clinical implications

Although assertive outreach teams are successful in engaging individuals and reducing admission rates, these benefits plateau after the first few years and could possibly be sustained by other services that may in addition focus more on those areas where teams have proven less effective including physical health, housing and employment.

Type
Research Article
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 © The Royal College of Psychiatrists, 2010

The introduction of assertive outreach teams has been a central pillar of UK mental health policy in recent years. 1 These teams focus on people with severe and enduring mental illness who have high levels of bed usage and are typically disaffected with services. Although they have been successful in engaging individuals and improving satisfaction, Reference Killaspy2 there is uncertainty about their ability to reduce demand on in-patient care, and findings with respect to symptomatology and social functioning have been disappointing. Reference Commander, Sashidharan, Rana and Ratnayake3,Reference Killaspy, Bebbington, Blizard, Johnson, Nolan and Pilling4 Furthermore, little is known about what happens to people on assertive outreach teams in the longer term. In particular, the ability of these teams to overcome perceived shortcomings in community care, notably increased homelessness, imprisonment and mortality, remains uncertain. In north Birmingham, assertive outreach teams were routinely introduced as part of a comprehensive strategy for integrated community-based services in the mid- to late 1990s. The sustained implementation of these teams offers the opportunity to evaluate the longer-term impact of assertive outreach in the UK.

Method

As a result of limited resources it was only possible to include individuals from three of the five eligible assertive outreach teams in the follow-up. The teams operated according to the model laid out in the Department of Health Implementation Guidelines 1 and have been described in detail elsewhere. Reference Commander, Sashidharan, Rana and Ratnayake3 In addition to two or more admissions/home treatment episodes in the past 2 years, it was expected that participants would fulfil three or more of the following criteria: a history of persistent offending or violence; at risk of persistent self-harm or neglect; a failure to respond to treatment; comorbid substance misuse; and a history of compulsory detention.

Initial data were collected between 1999 and 2002 for each individual as they were recruited onto the assertive outreach teams and again 2 years after entry into the service (for further details see Commander et al). Reference Commander, Sashidharan, Rana and Ratnayake3 The additional follow-up data reported here were subsequently obtained through hospital case records and interviews with care coordinators. A simple proforma was developed to ensure uniform data collection. The variables included housing and employment, violence and imprisonment, admission and medication, current psychiatric team and engagement with services. Data were analysed using the Statistical Package for Social Sciences 12.01 for Windows. The chi-squared test was used to compare different groups within each time point. The Cochrane (for categorical data) and Friedman's tests (for ranked data) were used to compare paired findings for each individual across the three time points.

Results

Of the 165 eligible individuals, 130 (79%) were in contact with local services at follow-up. Of the remaining 35 individuals (13 of whom were under different teams at the time of their last contact), 6 had been discharged to a general practitioner in Birmingham, 9 had moved out of the city and 4 were impossible to trace. The remaining 16 (10%) were deceased. One died of an overdose of street drugs in his flat, another choked to death shortly following an intramuscular injection on a psychiatric ward and a third died of a pulmonary embolism in a general hospital secondary to a fractured ankle sustained when jumping off an elevated road junction. One death remained under investigation by the coroner at the time of data collection and of the remaining individuals, three died of carcinoma and seven of cardiovascular disease.

The characteristics of the 130 participants still known to services are presented in Table 1. Middle-aged men with non-affective psychotic disorders predominated and notably almost half were identified as of Black ethnic group. The mean follow-up period for these individuals was 6 years and 8 months (s.d. = 7 months). One hundred participants (77%) were still under the care of an assertive outreach team. Of the 30 people who were now under other teams, there was a median 5 years (mean 59 months (s.d. = 18), data missing for 5 people) since their change of team. One person currently on an assertive outreach team had been transferred to a different team but subsequently returned. During the follow-up period only two people had an unplanned loss of contact with services lasting more than 3 months. All 130 individuals were currently in regular contact with services, although 3 had refused prescribed medication during the previous month. When compared with data from the baseline assessment, these findings indicate a sustained improvement in cooperation with services albeit one that was evident at the initial 2-year follow-up (Table 2).

Table 1 Characteristics

Participants (n = 130)
Variable n %
Age, years
   16–24 2 1
   25–44 105 81
   45–64 23 18
Gender, male 94 72
Ethnicity
   Asian 9 7
   Black 61 47
   White 50 39
   Other 10 7
Diagnosis
   Schizophrenia, schizotypal or delusional disorder 92 71
   Bipolar disorder 33 25
   Other 5 4
Team
   Same assertive outreach team 94 72
   Different assertive outreach team 6 5
   Rehabilitation and recovery team 17 13
   Primary care liaison team/community mental health team 13 10

Table 2 Outcomes

Variable n paired data Baseline 2-year follow-up Long-term follow-up (mean 6 years 8 months) Statistical test P
Unplanned disengagement past month, n (%) 122 12/129 (9) 4/123 (3) 0/130 (0) Cochrane's Q = 14.93 0.001
Discontinuation of medication past month, n (%) 113 28/129 (22) 8/113 (7) 3/130 (2) Cochrane's Q = 26.61 <0.001
Prison in past 2 years, n (%) 122 6/122 (5) 3/123 (2) 5/130 (4) Cochrane's Q = 1.08 0.58
Physical harm to others in past month, n (%) 122 3/129 (2) 4/123 (3) 4/130 (3) Cochrane's Q = 0.22 0.90
In work, n (%) 122 7/129 (5) 2/123 (2) 4/130 (3) Cochrane's Q = 3.71 0.16
Independent accommodation, n (%) 118 93/130 (72) 80/118 (62) 78/130 (60) Cochrane's Q = 8.07 0.02
Admission in past 2 years, n (%) 124 102/124 (82) 65/126 (52) 53/130 (41) Cochrane's Q = 52.02 <0.001
Compulsory admission in past 2 years, n (%) 118 80/118 (68) 50/126 (40) 43/130 (33) Cochrane's Q = 34.99 <0.001
Number of admissions in past 2 years, median (2.5–97.5 percentiles) 124 1.0 (0.0–5.0) 1.0 (0.0–3.8) 0.0 (0.0–3.0) Friedman's = 49.54 <0.001
Number of compulsory admissions past 2 years, median (2.5–97.5 percentiles) 118 1.0 (0.0–3.0) 0.0 (0.0–2.0) 0.0 (0.0–2.7) Friedman's = 36.68 <0.001
Days in hospital in past 2 years, median (2.5–97.5 percentiles) 114 81.5 (0.0–720.0) 4.0 (0.0–566.3) 0.0 (0.0–668.8) Friedman's = 28.63 <0.001

Ten individuals (8%) spent time in prison during the follow-up period for stays of between 1 and 10 months (median 3 months). This showed little change over time (Table 2). Thirty participants (23%) were involved in episodes of violent behaviour (defined as the person being involved in a fight, hitting or otherwise assaulting someone) during the follow-up period. Of these incidents, 27 involved the use of hands or other parts of the body, 2 the use of an object such as a chair, and 1 an offensive weapon (a knife). Minor injury (requiring first aid) was caused in 25 instances, moderate (needing some medical attention) in 4, and 1 incident resulted in serious injury. Four individuals (3%) had spent time, and indeed remained, in a medium secure unit.

Homelessness (defined as using a homeless hostel/shelter or rough sleeping) was experienced by 12 people (9%) during the follow-up period and was currently the case for 7 (5%) individuals. Employment was extremely low across all three time points and independent living decreased by comparison with baseline findings (Table 2).

Fourteen people (11%) had been in hospital for a stay lasting longer than 6 months during the follow-up period (median 17 months, range from 7 to 49). At the time of data collection, 8 (6%) participants had currently been in hospital for more than 6 months (median 20 months, range from 9 to 49). The number of admissions including those under the Mental Health Act remained around half the level found prior to entry into the service as did total bed days used (for the 114 participants with related data from each time point 15 527 days at baseline, 8571 (55% of baseline) at 2 years and 8353 (54% of baseline) at follow-up; Table 2).

When the 30 individuals who had moved onto and remained with other teams were compared with those remaining on assertive outreach they were significantly less likely to have been admitted in the 2 years up to the final follow-up (3% v. 52%, χ2 = 22.63, P<0.0001) including under the Mental Health Act (3% v. 42%, χ2 = 15.59, P<0.0001).

Discussion

There are obvious limitations with this study. It was undertaken in an urban setting, Birmingham, which has a population of just over a million people (of whom 30% are from an ethnic group other than White (www.birmingham.gov.uk/) and is ranked the fifteenth most deprived local authority in England (Index of Multiple Deprivation 2004, www.communities.gov.uk). The need to confine the sample to three out of five eligible teams for logistical reasons as well as the lack of data on people no longer in contact with local psychiatric services restricts the generalisibility of the findings. Furthermore, the follow-up data encompass only major events likely to be accurately recalled by staff or recorded in the case notes. Nevertheless, the study has notable strengths with respect to the substantial sample size, the lengthy time period covered and the considerable follow-up rate.

The high level of sustained contact with services and low level of disengagement is striking and reinforces a conviction that assertive outreach teams are able to retain people within psychiatric services. By way of contrast, the (natural) death rate is a matter for concern and challenges teams to do far more to ensure satisfactory physical healthcare is provided to people whose access to general practice may be poor. Imprisonment remained consistently low and few individuals were detained in a medium secure unit during the follow-up period. Nevertheless, almost a quarter of participants were involved in violent incidents, reinforcing the need for staff training and support in risk assessment/management. Reference Burns and Firn5

The consistently low level of employment across the follow-up period is disappointing. Although this lends credence to criticisms that assertive outreach teams are insufficiently focused on social inclusion goals, Reference Priebe6 it may also reflect disincentives generated by enhanced access to benefits as well as the fluctuating yet substantial and ongoing distress, disability and disruption experienced by this cohort of individuals. Homelessness was an issue for a significant minority and may have been higher as temporary lodging with friends or relatives was not included. Furthermore, over a third of participants remained living in congregate settings such as hostels and group homes rather than obtaining their own homes. This finding may reflect the difficulties in housing people with histories of antisocial behaviour and substance misuse. It is also notable that one in ten people remained in hospital for protracted periods reinforcing the need for suitable longer-term intensively staffed facilities in the community.

There was a sustained reduction in admissions but the gains appeared to plateau after the initial 2 years raising questions about the ongoing value of assertive outreach teams. As originally conceived, the teams' intervention was intended to be indefinite and the argument made that gains would be lost once the service was withdrawn. However, this position has become increasingly contentious. Indeed, the philosophy of ‘no discharge’ may be to the detriment of both individuals and services. Reference Burns and Firn5 In this study only one person left and then returned to an assertive outreach team, whereas admission rates were lowest for people transferred to other teams. Although indicating that people can do well on moving to less intensive services, this may have been anticipated given the people's perceived suitability for transfer. However, it is possible, given the plateau effect seen here after the first 2 years, that turnover of people on assertive outreach case-loads is too low (less than 5% per year here) and suggests that teams need to give more emphasis to exit strategies and set targets for moving on. Reference Burns and Firn5

Footnotes

Declaration of interest

None.

References

1 Department of Health. The Mental Health Policy Implementation Guide. Department of Health, 2001.Google Scholar
2 Killaspy, H. Assertive community treatment in psychiatry. BMJ 2007; 335: 311–2.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
3 Commander, M, Sashidharan, S, Rana, T, Ratnayake, T. North Birmingham assertive outreach evaluation. Patient characteristics and clinical outcomes. Soc Psychiatry Psychiatr Epidemiol 2005; 40: 988–93.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
4 Killaspy, H, Bebbington, P, Blizard, R, Johnson, S, Nolan, F, Pilling, S, et al. The REACT study: randomised evaluation of assertive community treatment in north London. BMJ 2006; 332: 815–8.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
5 Burns, T, Firn, M. Assertive Outreach in Mental Health – A Manual for Practitioners. Oxford University Press, 2002.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
6 Priebe, S. Institutionalisation revisted – with and without walls. Acta Psychiatr Scand 2004; 110: 81–2.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Figure 0

Table 1 Characteristics

Figure 1

Table 2 Outcomes

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