Author:
Glover Gyles,Arts Gerda,Babu Kannan Suresh
Abstract
BackgroundIntroduction of crisis resolution/home treatment teams has been
associated with a reduction in hospital admissions in trials. Between
2001 and 2004 there was a rapid expansion in the numbers of these teams
in England.AimsTo examine whether national implementation of these teams was associated
with comparable reductions in admissions.MethodObservational study using routine data covering working age adult
patients in 229 of the 303 local health areas in England from 1998/9 to
2003/4.ResultsAdmissions fell generally throughout the period, particularly for younger
working age adults. Introduction of crisis resolution teams was
associated with greater reductions for older working age women (35–64
years); teams always on call were associated with additional reductions
for older men and younger women. By the end of the study admissions had
fallen by 10% more in the 34 areas with crisis resolution teams in place
since 2001, and by 23% more in the 12 of these on call around the clock
than in the 130 areas without such teams by 2003/4. Reductions in bed use
were smaller. Introduction of assertive outreach teams was not associated
with overall reductions in admissions.ConclusionsIntroduction of crisis resolution teams has been associated with
reductions in admissions.
Publisher
Royal College of Psychiatrists
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health
Cited by
156 articles.
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