Advances and challenges of the Back Home Program as a deinstitutionalization strategy: an integrative review.
Helder de Pádua LimaDebora Barbosa da SilvaNathan ArataniGuilherme Oliveira de ArrudaSoraia Geraldo Rozza LopesPriscielly Souza de PalhanoKaely Virgínia de Oliveira SaraivaEysler Gonçalves Maia BrasilPublished in: Ciencia & saude coletiva (2021)
The aim of the current article is to identify scientific evidence about advances, possibilities, and challenges of using the Back Home Program (BHP) to deinstitutionalize former psychiatric hospitalization patients. This study is an integrative review based on the scientific literature available in the Virtual Health Library and the PubMed portal, as well as in the Cinahl, ScienceDirect, Web of Science, Scopus, and PsycINFO databases. The analysis of all nine selected studies was based on the interpretation of discursive practices observed in public domain materials. Results have shown that the investigated program is an undeniable social achievement and civilizing advance, and that it contributes to deinstitutionalization, as it helps to change beneficiaries' lives, with emphasis on their new consolidated place in society and on the dispensability of psychiatric hospitals. However, the program needs to overcome some challenges, such as access and equitable distribution in the national territory, professional training, and the involvement of individuals in the appropriation of benefits. It is crucial to emphasize the need to develop strategies to promote autonomy, citizenship, access to a broad mental health network of assistance and care resources, patients' return to family life, and insertion in the labor market.
Keyphrases
- mental health
- healthcare
- quality improvement
- end stage renal disease
- ejection fraction
- newly diagnosed
- public health
- chronic kidney disease
- primary care
- systematic review
- emergency department
- prognostic factors
- mental illness
- risk assessment
- patient reported outcomes
- health insurance
- climate change
- big data
- case control