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Excellence in forensic psychiatry services: international survey of qualities and correlates

BACKGROUND: Excellence is that quality that drives continuously improving outcomes for patients. Excellence must be measurable. We set out to measure excellence in forensic mental health services according to four levels of organisation and complexity (basic, standard, progressive and excellent) acr...

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Autores principales: McLaughlin, Patrick, Brady, Philip, Carabellese, Felice, Carabellese, Fulvio, Parente, Lia, Uhrskov Sorensen, Lisbeth, Jeandarme, Ingeborg, Habets, Petra, Simpson, Alexander I. F., Davoren, Mary, Kennedy, Harry G.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cambridge University Press 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10594163/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37828908
http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/bjo.2023.578
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author McLaughlin, Patrick
Brady, Philip
Carabellese, Felice
Carabellese, Fulvio
Parente, Lia
Uhrskov Sorensen, Lisbeth
Jeandarme, Ingeborg
Habets, Petra
Simpson, Alexander I. F.
Davoren, Mary
Kennedy, Harry G.
author_facet McLaughlin, Patrick
Brady, Philip
Carabellese, Felice
Carabellese, Fulvio
Parente, Lia
Uhrskov Sorensen, Lisbeth
Jeandarme, Ingeborg
Habets, Petra
Simpson, Alexander I. F.
Davoren, Mary
Kennedy, Harry G.
author_sort McLaughlin, Patrick
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Excellence is that quality that drives continuously improving outcomes for patients. Excellence must be measurable. We set out to measure excellence in forensic mental health services according to four levels of organisation and complexity (basic, standard, progressive and excellent) across seven domains: values and rights; clinical organisation; consistency; timescale; specialisation; routine outcome measures; research and development. AIMS: To validate the psychometric properties of a measurement scale to test which objective features of forensic services might relate to excellence: for example, university linkages, service size and integrated patient pathways across levels of therapeutic security. METHOD: A survey instrument was devised by a modified Delphi process. Forensic leads, either clinical or academic, in 48 forensic services across 5 jurisdictions completed the questionnaire. RESULTS: Regression analysis found that the number of security levels, linked patient pathways, number of in-patient teams and joint university appointments predicted total excellence score. CONCLUSIONS: Larger services organised according to stratified therapeutic security and with strong university and research links scored higher on this measure of excellence. A weakness is that these were self-ratings. Reliability could be improved with peer review and with objective measures such as quality and quantity of research output. For the future, studies are needed of the determinants of other objective measures of better outcomes for patients, including shorter lengths of stay, reduced recidivism and readmission, and improved physical and mental health and quality of life.
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spelling pubmed-105941632023-10-25 Excellence in forensic psychiatry services: international survey of qualities and correlates McLaughlin, Patrick Brady, Philip Carabellese, Felice Carabellese, Fulvio Parente, Lia Uhrskov Sorensen, Lisbeth Jeandarme, Ingeborg Habets, Petra Simpson, Alexander I. F. Davoren, Mary Kennedy, Harry G. BJPsych Open Paper BACKGROUND: Excellence is that quality that drives continuously improving outcomes for patients. Excellence must be measurable. We set out to measure excellence in forensic mental health services according to four levels of organisation and complexity (basic, standard, progressive and excellent) across seven domains: values and rights; clinical organisation; consistency; timescale; specialisation; routine outcome measures; research and development. AIMS: To validate the psychometric properties of a measurement scale to test which objective features of forensic services might relate to excellence: for example, university linkages, service size and integrated patient pathways across levels of therapeutic security. METHOD: A survey instrument was devised by a modified Delphi process. Forensic leads, either clinical or academic, in 48 forensic services across 5 jurisdictions completed the questionnaire. RESULTS: Regression analysis found that the number of security levels, linked patient pathways, number of in-patient teams and joint university appointments predicted total excellence score. CONCLUSIONS: Larger services organised according to stratified therapeutic security and with strong university and research links scored higher on this measure of excellence. A weakness is that these were self-ratings. Reliability could be improved with peer review and with objective measures such as quality and quantity of research output. For the future, studies are needed of the determinants of other objective measures of better outcomes for patients, including shorter lengths of stay, reduced recidivism and readmission, and improved physical and mental health and quality of life. Cambridge University Press 2023-10-13 /pmc/articles/PMC10594163/ /pubmed/37828908 http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/bjo.2023.578 Text en © The Author(s) 2023 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
spellingShingle Paper
McLaughlin, Patrick
Brady, Philip
Carabellese, Felice
Carabellese, Fulvio
Parente, Lia
Uhrskov Sorensen, Lisbeth
Jeandarme, Ingeborg
Habets, Petra
Simpson, Alexander I. F.
Davoren, Mary
Kennedy, Harry G.
Excellence in forensic psychiatry services: international survey of qualities and correlates
title Excellence in forensic psychiatry services: international survey of qualities and correlates
title_full Excellence in forensic psychiatry services: international survey of qualities and correlates
title_fullStr Excellence in forensic psychiatry services: international survey of qualities and correlates
title_full_unstemmed Excellence in forensic psychiatry services: international survey of qualities and correlates
title_short Excellence in forensic psychiatry services: international survey of qualities and correlates
title_sort excellence in forensic psychiatry services: international survey of qualities and correlates
topic Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10594163/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37828908
http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/bjo.2023.578
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