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Services to support adults with acquired brain injury (ABI) and return to work goals are varied. In Queensland, Australia, return to work goals may be addressed through private or publicly funded rehabilitation services or through publicly funded employment programs. No set frameworks or processes are in place to guide clinicians in providing vocational rehabilitation to adults with ABI, and the extent to which services address clients’ vocational goals and/or provide vocational rehabilitation is unknown.
Method:
This qualitative study investigated the clinical practice and experiences of allied health rehabilitation clinicians (n = 34) to identify current practice in providing vocational rehabilitation to adults with ABI, including pathways and services; models, frameworks and tools; and recommendations for ideal services. Focus groups and online surveys were conducted, with data analysed via content analysis.
Results:
ABI vocational rehabilitation was inconsistently delivered within and across services in Queensland, with differences in access to services, aspects of vocational rehabilitation provided and timeframes for rehabilitation. Five key themes were identified regarding ABI vocational rehabilitation and service delivery in Queensland: Factors influencing ABI and return to work; Service provision; ABI vocational rehabilitation processes (including assessment tools and interventions); Service gaps; and Ideal ABI vocational rehabilitation services.
Discussion:
These findings can inform clinical practice and development, and current and future service delivery models for ABI vocational rehabilitation.
Within the first 30 years since independence, Malaysia successfully eradicated or drastically reduced the occurrence of several serious communicable disease. During the second 30 years, Malaysia had some success as well as limited or no progress in dealing with non-communicable diseases, re-emerging diseases such as dengue, and other new and emerging diseases such as influenza H1N1. This chapter analyses the development and evolution in order to identify key features that contributed to the success or limited the progress of control efforts. The discussion covers issues such as design of surveillance and control programmes, the role of ‘vertical’ and integrated approaches, and the limitations faced by the health system in trying to adapt from controlling communicable to non-communicable diseases. The influence of interactions between components of the healthcare system such as the workforce, primary and secondary care, environmental health services, medical products and vaccines is illustrated.
Clozapine is generally considered as the treatment of choice for patients with treatment-resistant schizophrenia (TRS). However, its superiority has recently been questioned because olanzapine has been suggested as non-inferior to clozapine in its effectiveness.
Aims
We aimed to investigate the current status of clozapine prescriptions to identify any disparity between clinical guidelines and real-world practices.
Method
In this study, we utilised the Health Insurance Review Agency database in the Republic of Korea to investigate the real-world effectiveness of clozapine for patients with TRS. We compared differences in patient variables before and after clozapine administration, and we also performed survival analyses for both psychiatric admissions and emergency room visits among patients who used clozapine or olanzapine.
Results
This study investigated an incident cohort of 64 442 patients, and 2338 patients have been prescribed clozapine. Of these, 998 patients had TRS. In survival analysis, clozapine showed a worse survival rate for psychiatric admissions than olanzapine (hazard ratio 0.615). We also identified that clinicians tended to try a number of antipsychotics, as recommended, before starting patients on clozapine.
Conclusions
In conclusion, we found that olanzapine led to higher survival rates for psychiatric admissions than clozapine. Thus, considering the risk of serious adverse effects, clozapine may be used conservatively. Considering several studies advocating superior efficacy of clozapine, further studies with extensive data are recommended.
Deaths by suicide have been increasing in recent years in Ireland, many of whom have co-morbid mental health difficulties and/or have attended primary care services 1 month before death.
Aims
To profile how ‘Access to Psychological Services Ireland’ (APSI) provides stepped-care therapies for mild-to-moderate adult mental health presentations and the potential effectiveness of this model based on comparison to a review of evidence-based strategies in suicide prevention. A secondary aim is to highlight how APSI has the potential to target those at risk of suicide and provide an integrative after-care service to complement secondary care mental health services.
Findings
In a context of inter-agency working, APSI provides an integrated continuum of suicide prevention interventions that map onto or intervene across the continuum of suicide behaviour. Hence, APSI appears to implement what the literature suggests will work in preventing suicide. However, outcome research is needed to establish APSI’s impact in preventing suicide.
Recommendations
It is recommended that Irish-based research is conducted to establish APSI’s impact in preventing suicide with a view to rolling out APSI as a national mental health clinical care programme.
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