Author:
Weaver T.,Madden P.,Charles V.,Stimson G.,Renton A.,Tyrer P.,Barnes T.,Bench C.,Middleton H.,Wright N.,Paterson S.,Shanahan W.,Seivewright N.,Ford C.,
Abstract
BackgroundImproved management of mental illness and substance misuse comorbidity is a National Health Service priority, but little is known about its prevalence and current management.AimsTo measure the prevalence of comorbidity among patients of community mental health teams (CMHTs) and substance misuse services, and to assess the potential for joint management.MethodCross-sectional prevalence survey in four urban UK centres.ResultsOf CMHT patients, 44% (95% CI 38.1-49.9) reported past-year problem drug use and/or harmful alcohol use; 75% (95% CI 68.2-80.2) of drug service and 85% of alcohol service patients (95% CI 74.2-931) had a past-year psychiatric disorder. Most comorbidity patients appear ineligible for cross-referral between services. Large proportions are not identified by services and receive no specialist intervention.ConclusionsComorbidity is highly prevalent in CMHT, drug and alcohol treatment populations, but may be difficult to manage by cross-referral psychiatric and substance misuse services as currently configured and resourced.
Publisher
Royal College of Psychiatrists
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health
Cited by
295 articles.
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