As a patient, I was recently under the care of a London crisis intervention team. The compassion of the individual staff members was negated by systemic flaws in the way the service was delivered.
The experience was very unsettling. Different staff would arrive twice daily at my home because shift patterns would not allow the same workers to see me regularly. Consequently, a constructive, consistent relationship with members of the crisis team was not possible. A stream of strangers entered my small, cramped flat, and the crisis team actually became part of my mental trauma.
The problem with the crisis team as an institution is that it is about cost-cutting rather than caring. It felt like a mere sticking plaster on a huge mental wound.
While cost-cutting remains the ethos, patients are bound to suffer. The loss of in-patient beds is putting pressure on community services that they cannot sustain. Cost-cutting may masquerade as streamlined efficiency and effectiveness, but it is really a way to hobble and cripple psychiatric provision.
Good treatment cannot be delivered without flexibility and variety, both community-based and hospital-based. The crisis team concept is an ineffective half-way (and half-baked!) house between community and hospital.
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