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Emergency care to 'persons with confused behavior': Lived experiences of, and collaboration between, police and members of a mobile crisis team - A hermeneutic-phenomenological study.

Thea H DaggenvoordeMiranda van EerdenSilvio Cgh van den HeuvelHarm J GijsmanHester VermeulenPeter Jj Goossens
Published in: The International journal of social psychiatry (2021)
It turns out that it is extremely important for police officers that members of the MCT explain to them why a crisis assessment has a certain outcome. The exposed frictions and stagnation in the collaboration should be discussed openly as part of the process in order to acknowledge this and resolve it together. A recently started project called 'street triage', in which the police and MCT work together as one team and give a joint response, seems to remove a lot of the friction and stagnation. Further studies are needed to explore the effects of street triage by testing the validity of the hypothesis that street triage can close the gap between the two professions.
Keyphrases
  • emergency department
  • quality improvement
  • public health
  • palliative care
  • healthcare
  • mental health
  • chronic pain
  • pain management
  • case control
  • affordable care act