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Informing the development of services supporting self-care for severe, long term mental health conditions: a mixed method study of community based mental health initiatives in England

BACKGROUND: Supporting self-care is being explored across health care systems internationally as an approach to improving care for long term conditions in the context of ageing populations and economic constraint. UK health policy advocates a range of approaches to supporting self-care, including th...

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Autores principales: Steve, Gillard, Katie, Adams, Christine, Edwards, Mike, Lucock, Stephen, Miller, Lucy, Simons, Kati, Turner, Rachel, White, Sarah, White
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3468356/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22769593
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1472-6963-12-189
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author Steve, Gillard
Katie, Adams
Christine, Edwards
Mike, Lucock
Stephen, Miller
Lucy, Simons
Kati, Turner
Rachel, White
Sarah, White
author_facet Steve, Gillard
Katie, Adams
Christine, Edwards
Mike, Lucock
Stephen, Miller
Lucy, Simons
Kati, Turner
Rachel, White
Sarah, White
author_sort Steve, Gillard
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Supporting self-care is being explored across health care systems internationally as an approach to improving care for long term conditions in the context of ageing populations and economic constraint. UK health policy advocates a range of approaches to supporting self-care, including the application of generic self-management type programmes across conditions. Within mental health, the scope of self-care remains poorly conceptualised and the existing evidence base for supporting self-care is correspondingly disparate. This paper aims to inform the development of support for self-care in mental health by considering how generic self-care policy guidance is implemented in the context of services supporting people with severe, long term mental health problems. METHODS: A mixed method study was undertaken comprising standardised psychosocial measures, questionnaires about health service use and qualitative interviews with 120 new referrals to three contrasting community based initiatives supporting self-care for severe, long term mental health problems, repeated nine months later. A framework approach was taken to qualitative analysis, an exploratory statistical analysis sought to identify possible associations between a range of independent variables and self-care outcomes, and a narrative synthesis brought these analyses together. RESULTS: Participants reported improvement in self-care outcomes (e.g. greater empowerment; less use of Accident and Emergency services). These changes were not associated with level of engagement with self-care support. Level of engagement was associated with positive collaboration with support staff. Qualitative data described the value of different models of supporting self-care and considered challenges. Synthesis of analyses suggested that timing support for self-care, giving service users control over when and how they accessed support, quality of service user-staff relationships and decision making around medication are important issues in supporting self-care in mental health. CONCLUSIONS: Service delivery components – e.g. peer support groups, personal planning – advocated in generic self-care policy have value when implemented in a mental health context. Support for self-care in mental health should focus on core, mental health specific qualities; issues of control, enabling staff-service user relationships and shared decision making. The broad empirical basis of our research indicates the wider relevance of our findings across mental health settings.
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spelling pubmed-34683562012-10-11 Informing the development of services supporting self-care for severe, long term mental health conditions: a mixed method study of community based mental health initiatives in England Steve, Gillard Katie, Adams Christine, Edwards Mike, Lucock Stephen, Miller Lucy, Simons Kati, Turner Rachel, White Sarah, White BMC Health Serv Res Research Article BACKGROUND: Supporting self-care is being explored across health care systems internationally as an approach to improving care for long term conditions in the context of ageing populations and economic constraint. UK health policy advocates a range of approaches to supporting self-care, including the application of generic self-management type programmes across conditions. Within mental health, the scope of self-care remains poorly conceptualised and the existing evidence base for supporting self-care is correspondingly disparate. This paper aims to inform the development of support for self-care in mental health by considering how generic self-care policy guidance is implemented in the context of services supporting people with severe, long term mental health problems. METHODS: A mixed method study was undertaken comprising standardised psychosocial measures, questionnaires about health service use and qualitative interviews with 120 new referrals to three contrasting community based initiatives supporting self-care for severe, long term mental health problems, repeated nine months later. A framework approach was taken to qualitative analysis, an exploratory statistical analysis sought to identify possible associations between a range of independent variables and self-care outcomes, and a narrative synthesis brought these analyses together. RESULTS: Participants reported improvement in self-care outcomes (e.g. greater empowerment; less use of Accident and Emergency services). These changes were not associated with level of engagement with self-care support. Level of engagement was associated with positive collaboration with support staff. Qualitative data described the value of different models of supporting self-care and considered challenges. Synthesis of analyses suggested that timing support for self-care, giving service users control over when and how they accessed support, quality of service user-staff relationships and decision making around medication are important issues in supporting self-care in mental health. CONCLUSIONS: Service delivery components – e.g. peer support groups, personal planning – advocated in generic self-care policy have value when implemented in a mental health context. Support for self-care in mental health should focus on core, mental health specific qualities; issues of control, enabling staff-service user relationships and shared decision making. The broad empirical basis of our research indicates the wider relevance of our findings across mental health settings. BioMed Central 2012-07-07 /pmc/articles/PMC3468356/ /pubmed/22769593 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1472-6963-12-189 Text en Copyright ©2012 Steve et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Steve, Gillard
Katie, Adams
Christine, Edwards
Mike, Lucock
Stephen, Miller
Lucy, Simons
Kati, Turner
Rachel, White
Sarah, White
Informing the development of services supporting self-care for severe, long term mental health conditions: a mixed method study of community based mental health initiatives in England
title Informing the development of services supporting self-care for severe, long term mental health conditions: a mixed method study of community based mental health initiatives in England
title_full Informing the development of services supporting self-care for severe, long term mental health conditions: a mixed method study of community based mental health initiatives in England
title_fullStr Informing the development of services supporting self-care for severe, long term mental health conditions: a mixed method study of community based mental health initiatives in England
title_full_unstemmed Informing the development of services supporting self-care for severe, long term mental health conditions: a mixed method study of community based mental health initiatives in England
title_short Informing the development of services supporting self-care for severe, long term mental health conditions: a mixed method study of community based mental health initiatives in England
title_sort informing the development of services supporting self-care for severe, long term mental health conditions: a mixed method study of community based mental health initiatives in england
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3468356/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22769593
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1472-6963-12-189
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