Communication pathways from the emergency department to community mental health services: A systematic review.
Heather McIntyreVerity ReevesMark LoughheadLaura HayesNicholas Gerard ProcterPublished in: International journal of mental health nursing (2022)
This systematic review synthesizes existing peer reviewed evidence reporting on evaluated strategies used for enhancing communication pathways for continuity of care between the emergency department and mental health community supports. Following the PRISMA guidelines and the PICO framework, this review was conducted between January and July 2021. Included articles needed to evaluate communication pathway interventions for continuity of care between the emergency department and mental health community services which support service users with mental health and/or suicidal crisis. The seven included studies identified three support coordination interventions, two motivational interviewing interventions, an electronic record enhanced strategy and results from a phone follow-up study. This review demonstrates that support coordination, motivational interviewing, education, or an enhanced electronic record strategy can improve continuity of care, and in some cases, reduce the need for people to re-present to ED when they are experiencing mental health concerns or suicidal crisis. Results of this review reveal that a multipronged approach of communication pathways for continuity of care would enable more effective connections with mental health community supports and enable better outcomes for people requiring services.
Keyphrases
- mental health
- emergency department
- healthcare
- mental illness
- quality improvement
- palliative care
- systematic review
- physical activity
- affordable care act
- public health
- adverse drug
- type diabetes
- primary care
- randomized controlled trial
- gene expression
- pain management
- metabolic syndrome
- genome wide
- adipose tissue
- dna methylation
- health insurance