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Sexual and reproductive health needs assessment & interventions in a female psychiatric intensive care unit

AIMS: To assess the sexual and reproductive health (SRH) needs of women admitted to a psychiatric intensive care unit (PICU), and acceptability of delivering specialist SRH assessments/interventions in this setting. Secondary aims were to explore the barriers to access and the feasibility of providi...

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Autores principales: Rose, Elizabeth, Covshoff, Elana, Blake, Lucy, Bolade, Adenike, Rathouse, Robert, Wilson, Aleshia, Cotterell, Arthur, Pittrof, Rudiger, Sethi, Faisil
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cambridge University Press 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8771441/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/bjo.2021.175
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author Rose, Elizabeth
Covshoff, Elana
Blake, Lucy
Bolade, Adenike
Rathouse, Robert
Wilson, Aleshia
Cotterell, Arthur
Pittrof, Rudiger
Sethi, Faisil
author_facet Rose, Elizabeth
Covshoff, Elana
Blake, Lucy
Bolade, Adenike
Rathouse, Robert
Wilson, Aleshia
Cotterell, Arthur
Pittrof, Rudiger
Sethi, Faisil
author_sort Rose, Elizabeth
collection PubMed
description AIMS: To assess the sexual and reproductive health (SRH) needs of women admitted to a psychiatric intensive care unit (PICU), and acceptability of delivering specialist SRH assessments/interventions in this setting. Secondary aims were to explore the barriers to access and the feasibility of providing SRH assessments and interventions in the PICU. METHOD: A retrospective analysis of fifteen months’ activity data found that only 25 SRH referrals had been made across 205 PICU admissions. This low referral rate of 12% likely reflected pathway barriers and was unlikely to represent the actual clinical need in female PICU patients. A bi-monthly SRH in-reach clinic and a nurse led SRH referral pathway were implemented on the PICU over a seven-month period. Within a quality improvement framework, a staff training needs assessment was performed, training delivered, a protocol developed, staff attitudes explored, and patient and carer engagement sought. RESULT: A quality improvement approach streamlined SRH assessments on the PICU and resulted in 42% of women being assessed and a 3.5-fold increase in uptake. At least 30% of the women in the PICU had unmet SRH needs identified and proceeded to a specialist appointment. This amounts to a minimum 2.5-fold increase in SRH unmet need detection. The most common SRH needs were complex gynaecological issues (such as period problems, pelvic pain, vaginal discharge), STI advice/testing and contraception advice/options. 21% of women initiated SRH interventions, and 14% completed all the interventions required for their needs. The most common interventions were in the areas of contraception advice/family planning and STI advice/testing. Staff confidence on assessing SRH topics was identified as a barrier to access with a positive shift noted after bespoke SRH training was implemented and a protocol introduced: on a scale of 0-10 (with 10 being high), 81.3% of staff rated their confidence 8 or above in relation to discussing contraception/sexually transmitted infections (pre-training: 25.0%), and 93.8% in relation to discussing risky behaviours (pre-training: 18.8%). All 11 patient and carer participants felt it was important to have a forum to talk about SRH and 8 (72.7%) agreed it was important in the PICU. CONCLUSION: Results identify that SRH needs for PICU admissions are greater than previously realised. Staff highlighted the acceptability and importance of SRH care, if interventions are appropriately timed and the patient's individual risk profile considered. Providing a nurse led referral pathway for an SRH in-reach clinic is acceptable, feasible and beneficial for PICU patients.
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spelling pubmed-87714412022-01-31 Sexual and reproductive health needs assessment & interventions in a female psychiatric intensive care unit Rose, Elizabeth Covshoff, Elana Blake, Lucy Bolade, Adenike Rathouse, Robert Wilson, Aleshia Cotterell, Arthur Pittrof, Rudiger Sethi, Faisil BJPsych Open Rapid-Fire Poster Presentations AIMS: To assess the sexual and reproductive health (SRH) needs of women admitted to a psychiatric intensive care unit (PICU), and acceptability of delivering specialist SRH assessments/interventions in this setting. Secondary aims were to explore the barriers to access and the feasibility of providing SRH assessments and interventions in the PICU. METHOD: A retrospective analysis of fifteen months’ activity data found that only 25 SRH referrals had been made across 205 PICU admissions. This low referral rate of 12% likely reflected pathway barriers and was unlikely to represent the actual clinical need in female PICU patients. A bi-monthly SRH in-reach clinic and a nurse led SRH referral pathway were implemented on the PICU over a seven-month period. Within a quality improvement framework, a staff training needs assessment was performed, training delivered, a protocol developed, staff attitudes explored, and patient and carer engagement sought. RESULT: A quality improvement approach streamlined SRH assessments on the PICU and resulted in 42% of women being assessed and a 3.5-fold increase in uptake. At least 30% of the women in the PICU had unmet SRH needs identified and proceeded to a specialist appointment. This amounts to a minimum 2.5-fold increase in SRH unmet need detection. The most common SRH needs were complex gynaecological issues (such as period problems, pelvic pain, vaginal discharge), STI advice/testing and contraception advice/options. 21% of women initiated SRH interventions, and 14% completed all the interventions required for their needs. The most common interventions were in the areas of contraception advice/family planning and STI advice/testing. Staff confidence on assessing SRH topics was identified as a barrier to access with a positive shift noted after bespoke SRH training was implemented and a protocol introduced: on a scale of 0-10 (with 10 being high), 81.3% of staff rated their confidence 8 or above in relation to discussing contraception/sexually transmitted infections (pre-training: 25.0%), and 93.8% in relation to discussing risky behaviours (pre-training: 18.8%). All 11 patient and carer participants felt it was important to have a forum to talk about SRH and 8 (72.7%) agreed it was important in the PICU. CONCLUSION: Results identify that SRH needs for PICU admissions are greater than previously realised. Staff highlighted the acceptability and importance of SRH care, if interventions are appropriately timed and the patient's individual risk profile considered. Providing a nurse led referral pathway for an SRH in-reach clinic is acceptable, feasible and beneficial for PICU patients. Cambridge University Press 2021-06-18 /pmc/articles/PMC8771441/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/bjo.2021.175 Text en © The Author(s) 2021 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 in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Rapid-Fire Poster Presentations
Rose, Elizabeth
Covshoff, Elana
Blake, Lucy
Bolade, Adenike
Rathouse, Robert
Wilson, Aleshia
Cotterell, Arthur
Pittrof, Rudiger
Sethi, Faisil
Sexual and reproductive health needs assessment & interventions in a female psychiatric intensive care unit
title Sexual and reproductive health needs assessment & interventions in a female psychiatric intensive care unit
title_full Sexual and reproductive health needs assessment & interventions in a female psychiatric intensive care unit
title_fullStr Sexual and reproductive health needs assessment & interventions in a female psychiatric intensive care unit
title_full_unstemmed Sexual and reproductive health needs assessment & interventions in a female psychiatric intensive care unit
title_short Sexual and reproductive health needs assessment & interventions in a female psychiatric intensive care unit
title_sort sexual and reproductive health needs assessment & interventions in a female psychiatric intensive care unit
topic Rapid-Fire Poster Presentations
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8771441/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/bjo.2021.175
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