Recovery-focused mental health care planning and co-ordination in acute inpatient mental health settings: a cross national comparative mixed methods study.
Michael CoffeyBen HanniganSally BarlowMartin CartwrightRachel CohenAlison FaulknerAled JonesAlan SimpsonPublished in: BMC psychiatry (2019)
There is positive practice within acute inpatient wards, with evidence of commitment to safe, respectful, compassionate care. Recovery ideas were evident but there remained ambivalence on their relevance to inpatient care. Service users were aware of efforts taken to keep them safe, but despite measures described by staff, they did not feel routinely involved in care planning or risk management decisions. Research on increasing therapeutic contact time, shared decision making in risk assessment and using recovery focused tools could further promote personalised and recovery-focused care planning. This paper arises from a larger study published by National Institute for Health Research (Simpson A, et al, Health Serv Deliv Res 5(26), 2017).
Keyphrases
- mental health
- quality improvement
- healthcare
- palliative care
- risk assessment
- liver failure
- respiratory failure
- pain management
- primary care
- public health
- affordable care act
- drug induced
- randomized controlled trial
- intensive care unit
- human health
- chronic pain
- hepatitis b virus
- health information
- aortic dissection
- long term care
- health insurance
- acute respiratory distress syndrome