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Clinician perspectives on what constitutes good practice in community services for people with complex emotional needs: A qualitative thematic meta-synthesis

INTRODUCTION: The need to improve the quality of community mental health services for people with Complex Emotional Needs (CEN) (who may have a diagnosis of ‘personality disorder’) is recognised internationally and has become a renewed policy priority in England. Such improvement requires positive e...

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Autores principales: Troup, Jordan, Lever Taylor, Billie, Sheridan Rains, Luke, Broeckelmann, Eva, Russell, Jessica, Jeynes, Tamar, Cooper, Chris, Steare, Thomas, Dedat, Zainab, McNicholas, Shirley, Oram, Sian, Dale, Oliver, Johnson, Sonia
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9070883/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35511900
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0267787
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author Troup, Jordan
Lever Taylor, Billie
Sheridan Rains, Luke
Broeckelmann, Eva
Russell, Jessica
Jeynes, Tamar
Cooper, Chris
Steare, Thomas
Dedat, Zainab
McNicholas, Shirley
Oram, Sian
Dale, Oliver
Johnson, Sonia
author_facet Troup, Jordan
Lever Taylor, Billie
Sheridan Rains, Luke
Broeckelmann, Eva
Russell, Jessica
Jeynes, Tamar
Cooper, Chris
Steare, Thomas
Dedat, Zainab
McNicholas, Shirley
Oram, Sian
Dale, Oliver
Johnson, Sonia
author_sort Troup, Jordan
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: The need to improve the quality of community mental health services for people with Complex Emotional Needs (CEN) (who may have a diagnosis of ‘personality disorder’) is recognised internationally and has become a renewed policy priority in England. Such improvement requires positive engagement from clinicians across the service system, and their perspectives on achieving good practice need to be understood. AIM: To synthesise qualitative evidence on clinician perspectives on what constitutes good practice, and what helps or prevents it being achieved, in community mental health services for people with CEN. METHODS: Six bibliographic databases were searched for studies published since 2003 and supplementary citation tracking was conducted. Studies that used any recognised qualitative method and reported clinician experiences and perspectives on community-based mental health services for adults with CEN were eligible for this review, including generic and specialist settings. Meta-synthesis was used to generate and synthesise over-arching themes across included studies. RESULTS: Twenty-nine papers were eligible for inclusion, most with samples given a ‘personality disorder’ diagnosis. Six over-arching themes were identified: 1. The use and misuse of diagnosis; 2. The patient journey into services: nowhere to go; 3. Therapeutic relationships: connection and distance; 4. The nature of treatment: not doing too much or too little; 5. Managing safety issues and crises: being measured and proactive; 6. Clinician and wider service needs: whose needs are they anyway? The overall quality of the evidence was moderate. DISCUSSION: Through summarising the literature on clinician perspectives on good practice for people with CEN, over-arching priorities were identified on which there appears to be substantial consensus. In their focus on needs such as for a long-term perspective on treatment journeys, high quality and consistent therapeutic relationships, and a balanced approach to safety, clinician priorities are mainly congruent with those found in studies on service user views. They also identify clinician needs that should be met for good care to be provided, including for supervision, joint working and organisational support.
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spelling pubmed-90708832022-05-06 Clinician perspectives on what constitutes good practice in community services for people with complex emotional needs: A qualitative thematic meta-synthesis Troup, Jordan Lever Taylor, Billie Sheridan Rains, Luke Broeckelmann, Eva Russell, Jessica Jeynes, Tamar Cooper, Chris Steare, Thomas Dedat, Zainab McNicholas, Shirley Oram, Sian Dale, Oliver Johnson, Sonia PLoS One Research Article INTRODUCTION: The need to improve the quality of community mental health services for people with Complex Emotional Needs (CEN) (who may have a diagnosis of ‘personality disorder’) is recognised internationally and has become a renewed policy priority in England. Such improvement requires positive engagement from clinicians across the service system, and their perspectives on achieving good practice need to be understood. AIM: To synthesise qualitative evidence on clinician perspectives on what constitutes good practice, and what helps or prevents it being achieved, in community mental health services for people with CEN. METHODS: Six bibliographic databases were searched for studies published since 2003 and supplementary citation tracking was conducted. Studies that used any recognised qualitative method and reported clinician experiences and perspectives on community-based mental health services for adults with CEN were eligible for this review, including generic and specialist settings. Meta-synthesis was used to generate and synthesise over-arching themes across included studies. RESULTS: Twenty-nine papers were eligible for inclusion, most with samples given a ‘personality disorder’ diagnosis. Six over-arching themes were identified: 1. The use and misuse of diagnosis; 2. The patient journey into services: nowhere to go; 3. Therapeutic relationships: connection and distance; 4. The nature of treatment: not doing too much or too little; 5. Managing safety issues and crises: being measured and proactive; 6. Clinician and wider service needs: whose needs are they anyway? The overall quality of the evidence was moderate. DISCUSSION: Through summarising the literature on clinician perspectives on good practice for people with CEN, over-arching priorities were identified on which there appears to be substantial consensus. In their focus on needs such as for a long-term perspective on treatment journeys, high quality and consistent therapeutic relationships, and a balanced approach to safety, clinician priorities are mainly congruent with those found in studies on service user views. They also identify clinician needs that should be met for good care to be provided, including for supervision, joint working and organisational support. Public Library of Science 2022-05-05 /pmc/articles/PMC9070883/ /pubmed/35511900 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0267787 Text en © 2022 Troup et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Troup, Jordan
Lever Taylor, Billie
Sheridan Rains, Luke
Broeckelmann, Eva
Russell, Jessica
Jeynes, Tamar
Cooper, Chris
Steare, Thomas
Dedat, Zainab
McNicholas, Shirley
Oram, Sian
Dale, Oliver
Johnson, Sonia
Clinician perspectives on what constitutes good practice in community services for people with complex emotional needs: A qualitative thematic meta-synthesis
title Clinician perspectives on what constitutes good practice in community services for people with complex emotional needs: A qualitative thematic meta-synthesis
title_full Clinician perspectives on what constitutes good practice in community services for people with complex emotional needs: A qualitative thematic meta-synthesis
title_fullStr Clinician perspectives on what constitutes good practice in community services for people with complex emotional needs: A qualitative thematic meta-synthesis
title_full_unstemmed Clinician perspectives on what constitutes good practice in community services for people with complex emotional needs: A qualitative thematic meta-synthesis
title_short Clinician perspectives on what constitutes good practice in community services for people with complex emotional needs: A qualitative thematic meta-synthesis
title_sort clinician perspectives on what constitutes good practice in community services for people with complex emotional needs: a qualitative thematic meta-synthesis
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9070883/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35511900
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0267787
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