Author:
Fleury M.-J.,Grenier G.,Gentil L.,Roberge P.
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Little information exists on the perceptions of psychiatrists regarding the implementation and various impacts of the consultation-liaison model. This model has been used in Quebec (Canada) through the function of specialist respondent-psychiatrists (SRP) since 2009. This study assessed the main activities, barriers or facilitators, and impact of SRP in adult and child-adolescent psychiatry on the capacity of service providers in primary care and youth centers to treat patients with mental health disorders (MHD).
Methods
Data included 126 self-administered questionnaires from SRP and semi-structured interviews from 48 SRP managers. Mixed methods were used, with qualitative findings from managers complementing the SRP survey. Comparative analyses of SRP responses in adult versus child-adolescent psychiatry were also conducted.
Results
Psychiatrists dedicated a median 24.12 h/month to the SRP function, mainly involving case discussions with primary care teams or youth centers. They were confident about the level of support they provided and satisfied with their influence in clinical decision-making, but less satisfied with the support provided by their organizations. SRP evaluated their impacts on clinical practice as moderate, particularly among general practitioners (GP). SRP working in child-adolescent psychiatry were more comfortable, motivated, and positive about their overall performance and impact than in adult psychiatry. Organizational barriers (e.g. team instability) were most prevalent, followed by system-level factors (e.g. network size and complexity, lack of resources, model inflexibility) and individual factors (e.g. GP reluctance to treat patients with MHD). Organizational facilitators included support from family medicine group directors, collaboration with university family medicine groups and coordination by liaison nurses; at the system level, pre-existing relationships and working in the same institution; while individual-level facilitators included SRP personality and strong organizational support.
Conclusion
Quebec SRP were implemented sparingly in family medicine groups and youth centers, while SRP viewed their overall impact as moderate. Results were more positive in child-adolescent psychiatry than in adult psychiatry. Increased support for the SRP function, adapting the model to GP in need of more direct support, and resolving key system issues may improve SRP effectiveness in terms of team stability, coordination among providers, access to MH services and readiness to implement innovations.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Reference106 articles.
1. Eghaneyan BH, Sanchez K, Mitschke DB. Implementation of a collaborative care model for the treatment of depression and anxiety in a community health center: results from a qualitative case study. J Multidiscip Healthc. 2014;7:503–13. https://doi.org/10.2147/JMDH.S69821.
2. Sved-Williams A, Poulton J. Primary care mental health consultation-liaison: a connecting system for private psychiatrists and general practitioners. Australas Psychiatry. 2010;18:125–9. https://doi.org/10.3109/10398560903469783.
3. Lesage A, Vasiliadis H-M, Gagné M-A, Dudgeon S, Kasman N, Hay C. Prevalence of mental illness and related service utilization in Canada: an analysis of the Canadian Community Health Survey. Mississauga: Canadian Collaborative Mental Health Initiative; 2006.
4. Ouadahi Y, Lesage A, Rodrigue J, Fleury M-J. [Can mental health problems be diagnosed by general physicians? Perpectives of family physicians according to administrative standards]. Sante Ment Que. 2009;34:161–72.
5. Fleury MJ, Farand L, Aube D, Imboua A. Management of mental health problems by general practitioners in Quebec. Can Fam Physician. 2012;58(e732–738):e725-731.
Cited by
8 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献