The Association between the Police, Ambulance, Clinician Early Response (PACER) Model and Involuntary Detentions of People Living with Mental Illness: A Protocol for a Retrospective Observational Study

Author:

Heffernan Julia1ORCID,Pennay Amy2,Hughes Elizabeth3,Gray Richard1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Nursing and Midwifery, La Trobe University, Bundoora, Melbourne, VIC 3086, Australia

2. Centre for Alcohol Policy Research, La Trobe University, Bundoora, Melbourne, VIC 3068, Australia

3. School of Health and Social Care, Edinburgh Napier University, Edinburgh EH11 4BN, UK

Abstract

Emergency services are frequently called to attend mental health incidents and are looking for innovative ways to improve their responses and reduce the burden on services. Involuntary detention of people living with mental illness is considered more frequent than necessary, leading to increased pressure on emergency departments, and is often a traumatic experience for patients. The Police, Ambulance, Clinician Early Response (PACER) model was developed in 2019 in Canberra, Australia, and seeks to reduce involuntary detentions by embedding a mental health clinician into emergency services as a mobile mental health crisis response intervention. This protocol details a retrospective cohort study that will examine the association between PACER and involuntary detentions using medical and police records and compare the results to standard ambulance and police responses. We will use relative risk and odds ratio calculations to determine the probability of being involuntarily detained or diverted from hospital; and we will describe the patient characteristics and outcomes in the PACER cohort. Results will be reported using the STROBE checklist for reporting cohort studies. This study was not registered on a publicly accessible registry.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Nursing

Reference62 articles.

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3. Australian Institute of Health and Welfare (2022, January 01). Emergency Department Care 2017–2018: Australian Hospital Statistics, Available online: https://www.aihw.gov.au/getmedia/9ca4c770-3c3b-42fe-b071-3d758711c23a/aihw-hse-216.pdf.aspx?inline=true.

4. Epidemiology of emergency ambulance service calls related to mental health problems and self harm: A national record linkage study;Duncan;Scand. J. Trauma Resusc. Emerg. Med.,2019

5. Emergency Department Use by Children and Youth with Mental Health Conditions: A Health Equity Agenda;Hoge;Community Ment. Health J.,2022

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