Shared guidelines and protocols to achieve better health outcomes for people living with serious mental illness
Author:
Affiliation:
1. Bond University Gold Coast QLD
2. University of Melbourne Melbourne VIC
3. Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Psychiatrists Melbourne VIC
4. Deakin University Warrnambool VIC
Publisher
Wiley
Subject
General Medicine
Link
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.5694/mja2.51711
Reference12 articles.
1. MorganM PetersD HopwoodM et al. Being Equally Well: a national policy roadmap to better physical health care and longer lives for people living with serious mental illness. Melbourne: Mitchell Institute Victoria University 2021.https://www.vu.edu.au/sites/default/files/being‐equally‐well‐policy‐roadmap‐mitchell‐institute.pdf(viewed June 2022).
2. System-level intersectoral linkages between the mental health and non-clinical support sectors: a qualitative systematic review
3. Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Psychiatrists clinical practice guidelines for the management of schizophrenia and related disorders
4. Royal Australian College of General Practitioners. Clinical guidelines.https://www.racgp.org.au/clinical‐resources/clinical‐guidelines(viewed June2022).
5. Systematic review of integrated models of health care delivered at the primary–secondary interface: how effective is it and what determines effectiveness?
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2. Barriers and facilitators to the participation and engagement of primary care in shared-care arrangements with community mental health services for preventive care of people with serious mental illness: a scoping review;BMC Health Services Research;2023-09-11
3. The Being Equally Well national policy roadmap: providing better physical health care and supporting longer lives for people living with serious mental illness;Medical Journal of Australia;2022-10-02
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