Crisis stabilisation services for people with intellectual disabilities: A systematic review

Author:

McCombe Lindsay HA1ORCID,Martin Toby L2,Curtis Hannah1,Ediger James3,Temple Beverley3

Affiliation:

1. St.Amant Research Centre, Canada

2. St.Amant Research Centre, Canada; University of Manitoba, Canada

3. University of Manitoba, Canada

Abstract

People with intellectual and developmental disabilities sometimes engage in challenging behaviours. When behaviours escalate to the point where they pose imminent risk to the safety of people and environments, a crisis occurs that jeopardises community living and participation. In these situations, timely access to crisis stabilisation services is required. We conducted a systematic review of the literature to synthesise evidence on effective crisis stabilisation service models for challenging behaviours. A total of 46 publications met the inclusion criteria. The literature describes a spectrum of crisis stabilisation services of varying intensities including: outreach, outpatient, inpatient, respite, and capacity building through education and training. However, there is limited guidance on how to best structure service models. This review highlights the need for comprehensive and person-centred programme evaluations.

Funder

The Winnipeg Foundation

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,Health Professions (miscellaneous)

Reference69 articles.

1. Crisis Reliability Indicators Supporting Emergency Services (CRISES): A Framework for Developing Performance Measures for Behavioral Health Crisis and Psychiatric Emergency Programs

2. *Baron ST (2015) Review of crisis services. Report of the Independent Reviewer, submitted 12 September 2015. State of Georgia: Georgia Department of Behavioral Health and Developmental Disabilities. Available at: https://dbhdd.georgia.gov/document/document/review-crisis-services/download (accessed 22 August 2016).

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