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Integrating care for people with mental illness: the Care Programme Approach in England and its implications for long-term conditions management

INTRODUCTION: This policy paper considers what the long-term conditions policies in England and other countries could learn from the experience of the Care Programme Approach (CPA). The CPA was introduced in England in April 1991 as the statutory framework for people requiring support in the communi...

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Autores principales: Goodwin, Nick, Lawton-Smith, Simon
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Igitur, Utrecht Publishing & Archiving 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4098094/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25035692
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author Goodwin, Nick
Lawton-Smith, Simon
author_facet Goodwin, Nick
Lawton-Smith, Simon
author_sort Goodwin, Nick
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: This policy paper considers what the long-term conditions policies in England and other countries could learn from the experience of the Care Programme Approach (CPA). The CPA was introduced in England in April 1991 as the statutory framework for people requiring support in the community for more severe and enduring mental health problems. The CPA approach is an example of a long-standing ‘care co-ordination’ model that seeks to develop individualised care plans and then attempt to integrate care for patients from a range of providers. POLICY DESCRIPTION: The CPA experience is highly relevant to both the English and international debates on the future of long-term conditions management where the agenda has focused on developing co-ordinated care planning and delivery between health and social care; to prioritise upstream interventions that promote health and wellbeing; and to provide for a more personalised service. CONCLUSION: This review of the CPA experience suggests that there is the potential for better care integration for those patients with multiple or complex needs where a strategy of personalised care planning and pro-active care co-ordination is provided. However, such models will not reach their full potential unless a number of preconditions are met including: clear eligibility criteria; standardised measures of service quality; a mix of governance and incentives to hold providers accountable for such quality; and genuine patient involvement in their own care plans. IMPLICATIONS: Investment and professional support to the role of the care co-ordinator is particularly crucial. Care co-ordinators require the requisite skills and competencies to act as a care professional to the patient as well as to have the power to exert authority among other care professionals to ensure multidisciplinary care plans are implemented successfully. Attention to inter-professional practice, culture, leadership and organisational development can also help crowd-in behaviours that promote integrated care.
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spelling pubmed-40980942014-07-17 Integrating care for people with mental illness: the Care Programme Approach in England and its implications for long-term conditions management Goodwin, Nick Lawton-Smith, Simon Int J Integr Care Policy INTRODUCTION: This policy paper considers what the long-term conditions policies in England and other countries could learn from the experience of the Care Programme Approach (CPA). The CPA was introduced in England in April 1991 as the statutory framework for people requiring support in the community for more severe and enduring mental health problems. The CPA approach is an example of a long-standing ‘care co-ordination’ model that seeks to develop individualised care plans and then attempt to integrate care for patients from a range of providers. POLICY DESCRIPTION: The CPA experience is highly relevant to both the English and international debates on the future of long-term conditions management where the agenda has focused on developing co-ordinated care planning and delivery between health and social care; to prioritise upstream interventions that promote health and wellbeing; and to provide for a more personalised service. CONCLUSION: This review of the CPA experience suggests that there is the potential for better care integration for those patients with multiple or complex needs where a strategy of personalised care planning and pro-active care co-ordination is provided. However, such models will not reach their full potential unless a number of preconditions are met including: clear eligibility criteria; standardised measures of service quality; a mix of governance and incentives to hold providers accountable for such quality; and genuine patient involvement in their own care plans. IMPLICATIONS: Investment and professional support to the role of the care co-ordinator is particularly crucial. Care co-ordinators require the requisite skills and competencies to act as a care professional to the patient as well as to have the power to exert authority among other care professionals to ensure multidisciplinary care plans are implemented successfully. Attention to inter-professional practice, culture, leadership and organisational development can also help crowd-in behaviours that promote integrated care. Igitur, Utrecht Publishing & Archiving 2010-03-31 /pmc/articles/PMC4098094/ /pubmed/25035692 Text en Copyright 2010, International Journal of Integrated Care (IJIC) http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ This work is licensed under a (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0) Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License
spellingShingle Policy
Goodwin, Nick
Lawton-Smith, Simon
Integrating care for people with mental illness: the Care Programme Approach in England and its implications for long-term conditions management
title Integrating care for people with mental illness: the Care Programme Approach in England and its implications for long-term conditions management
title_full Integrating care for people with mental illness: the Care Programme Approach in England and its implications for long-term conditions management
title_fullStr Integrating care for people with mental illness: the Care Programme Approach in England and its implications for long-term conditions management
title_full_unstemmed Integrating care for people with mental illness: the Care Programme Approach in England and its implications for long-term conditions management
title_short Integrating care for people with mental illness: the Care Programme Approach in England and its implications for long-term conditions management
title_sort integrating care for people with mental illness: the care programme approach in england and its implications for long-term conditions management
topic Policy
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4098094/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25035692
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