Experiences of barriers to trans-sectoral treatment of patients with severe mental illness: A qualitative study

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Experiences of barriers to trans-sectoral treatment of patients with severe mental illness : A qualitative study. / Davidsen, Annette Sofie; Davidsen, Johan; Jønsson, Alexandra Brandt Ryborg; Nielsen, Maria Haahr; Kjellberg, Pia Kürstein; Reventlow, Susanne.

In: International Journal of Mental Health Systems, Vol. 14, No. 1, 87, 2020.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Davidsen, AS, Davidsen, J, Jønsson, ABR, Nielsen, MH, Kjellberg, PK & Reventlow, S 2020, 'Experiences of barriers to trans-sectoral treatment of patients with severe mental illness: A qualitative study', International Journal of Mental Health Systems, vol. 14, no. 1, 87. https://doi.org/10.1186/s13033-020-00419-x

APA

Davidsen, A. S., Davidsen, J., Jønsson, A. B. R., Nielsen, M. H., Kjellberg, P. K., & Reventlow, S. (2020). Experiences of barriers to trans-sectoral treatment of patients with severe mental illness: A qualitative study. International Journal of Mental Health Systems, 14(1), [87]. https://doi.org/10.1186/s13033-020-00419-x

Vancouver

Davidsen AS, Davidsen J, Jønsson ABR, Nielsen MH, Kjellberg PK, Reventlow S. Experiences of barriers to trans-sectoral treatment of patients with severe mental illness: A qualitative study. International Journal of Mental Health Systems. 2020;14(1). 87. https://doi.org/10.1186/s13033-020-00419-x

Author

Davidsen, Annette Sofie ; Davidsen, Johan ; Jønsson, Alexandra Brandt Ryborg ; Nielsen, Maria Haahr ; Kjellberg, Pia Kürstein ; Reventlow, Susanne. / Experiences of barriers to trans-sectoral treatment of patients with severe mental illness : A qualitative study. In: International Journal of Mental Health Systems. 2020 ; Vol. 14, No. 1.

Bibtex

@article{6f796aadd9ea408ab6cc8c837bb09419,
title = "Experiences of barriers to trans-sectoral treatment of patients with severe mental illness: A qualitative study",
abstract = "Background: Patients with severe mental illness (SMI) have shorter life expectancy than people without SMI, mainly due to overmortality from physical diseases. They are treated by professionals in three different health and social care sectors with sparse collaboration between them, hampering coherent treatment. Previous studies have shown difficulties involved in establishing such collaboration. As the preparatory phase of an intervention to improve physical health of people with SMI and increase collaboration across sector borders, we explored different actors{\textquoteright} experiences of barriers for collaboration. Method: We collected qualitative data from patients, professionals in general practice, psychiatry and social psychiatry involved in the treatment of these patients. Data consisted of notes from meetings and observations, interviews, focus groups and workshops. Analysis was by Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis. Results: The study revealed many obstacles to collaboration and coherent treatment, including the consultation structures in general practice, sectors being subject to different legislation, and incompatible IT systems. Professionals in general practice and social psychiatry felt that they were left with the responsibility for actions taken by hospital psychiatry without opportunity to discuss their concerns with psychiatrists. There were also cultural differences between health care and social psychiatry, expressed in ideology and language. Social psychiatry had an existential approach to recovery, whereas the views of health professionals were linked to symptom control and based on outcomes. Meanwhile, patients were left in limbo between these separate ideologies with no leadership in place to promote dialogue and integrate treatments between the sectors. Conclusion: Many obstacles to integrated trans-sectoral treatment of patients with SMI seem related to a lack of an overriding leadership and organizational support to establish collaboration and remove barriers related to legislation and IT. However, professional and ideological barriers also contribute. Psychiatry does not consider general practice to be part of the treatment team although general practitioners are left with responsibility for decisions taken in psychiatry; and different ideologies and treatment principles in psychiatry and municipal social psychiatry hamper the dialogue between them. There is a need to rethink the organization to avoid that the three sectors live autonomous lives with different cultures and lack of collaboration.",
keywords = "General practice, Integrated care, Psychiatry, Recovery, Severe mental illness, Social psychiatry",
author = "Davidsen, {Annette Sofie} and Johan Davidsen and J{\o}nsson, {Alexandra Brandt Ryborg} and Nielsen, {Maria Haahr} and Kjellberg, {Pia K{\"u}rstein} and Susanne Reventlow",
year = "2020",
doi = "10.1186/s13033-020-00419-x",
language = "English",
volume = "14",
journal = "International Journal of Mental Health Systems",
issn = "1752-4458",
publisher = "BioMed Central Ltd.",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Experiences of barriers to trans-sectoral treatment of patients with severe mental illness

T2 - A qualitative study

AU - Davidsen, Annette Sofie

AU - Davidsen, Johan

AU - Jønsson, Alexandra Brandt Ryborg

AU - Nielsen, Maria Haahr

AU - Kjellberg, Pia Kürstein

AU - Reventlow, Susanne

PY - 2020

Y1 - 2020

N2 - Background: Patients with severe mental illness (SMI) have shorter life expectancy than people without SMI, mainly due to overmortality from physical diseases. They are treated by professionals in three different health and social care sectors with sparse collaboration between them, hampering coherent treatment. Previous studies have shown difficulties involved in establishing such collaboration. As the preparatory phase of an intervention to improve physical health of people with SMI and increase collaboration across sector borders, we explored different actors’ experiences of barriers for collaboration. Method: We collected qualitative data from patients, professionals in general practice, psychiatry and social psychiatry involved in the treatment of these patients. Data consisted of notes from meetings and observations, interviews, focus groups and workshops. Analysis was by Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis. Results: The study revealed many obstacles to collaboration and coherent treatment, including the consultation structures in general practice, sectors being subject to different legislation, and incompatible IT systems. Professionals in general practice and social psychiatry felt that they were left with the responsibility for actions taken by hospital psychiatry without opportunity to discuss their concerns with psychiatrists. There were also cultural differences between health care and social psychiatry, expressed in ideology and language. Social psychiatry had an existential approach to recovery, whereas the views of health professionals were linked to symptom control and based on outcomes. Meanwhile, patients were left in limbo between these separate ideologies with no leadership in place to promote dialogue and integrate treatments between the sectors. Conclusion: Many obstacles to integrated trans-sectoral treatment of patients with SMI seem related to a lack of an overriding leadership and organizational support to establish collaboration and remove barriers related to legislation and IT. However, professional and ideological barriers also contribute. Psychiatry does not consider general practice to be part of the treatment team although general practitioners are left with responsibility for decisions taken in psychiatry; and different ideologies and treatment principles in psychiatry and municipal social psychiatry hamper the dialogue between them. There is a need to rethink the organization to avoid that the three sectors live autonomous lives with different cultures and lack of collaboration.

AB - Background: Patients with severe mental illness (SMI) have shorter life expectancy than people without SMI, mainly due to overmortality from physical diseases. They are treated by professionals in three different health and social care sectors with sparse collaboration between them, hampering coherent treatment. Previous studies have shown difficulties involved in establishing such collaboration. As the preparatory phase of an intervention to improve physical health of people with SMI and increase collaboration across sector borders, we explored different actors’ experiences of barriers for collaboration. Method: We collected qualitative data from patients, professionals in general practice, psychiatry and social psychiatry involved in the treatment of these patients. Data consisted of notes from meetings and observations, interviews, focus groups and workshops. Analysis was by Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis. Results: The study revealed many obstacles to collaboration and coherent treatment, including the consultation structures in general practice, sectors being subject to different legislation, and incompatible IT systems. Professionals in general practice and social psychiatry felt that they were left with the responsibility for actions taken by hospital psychiatry without opportunity to discuss their concerns with psychiatrists. There were also cultural differences between health care and social psychiatry, expressed in ideology and language. Social psychiatry had an existential approach to recovery, whereas the views of health professionals were linked to symptom control and based on outcomes. Meanwhile, patients were left in limbo between these separate ideologies with no leadership in place to promote dialogue and integrate treatments between the sectors. Conclusion: Many obstacles to integrated trans-sectoral treatment of patients with SMI seem related to a lack of an overriding leadership and organizational support to establish collaboration and remove barriers related to legislation and IT. However, professional and ideological barriers also contribute. Psychiatry does not consider general practice to be part of the treatment team although general practitioners are left with responsibility for decisions taken in psychiatry; and different ideologies and treatment principles in psychiatry and municipal social psychiatry hamper the dialogue between them. There is a need to rethink the organization to avoid that the three sectors live autonomous lives with different cultures and lack of collaboration.

KW - General practice

KW - Integrated care

KW - Psychiatry

KW - Recovery

KW - Severe mental illness

KW - Social psychiatry

U2 - 10.1186/s13033-020-00419-x

DO - 10.1186/s13033-020-00419-x

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 33292415

AN - SCOPUS:85096927084

VL - 14

JO - International Journal of Mental Health Systems

JF - International Journal of Mental Health Systems

SN - 1752-4458

IS - 1

M1 - 87

ER -

ID: 253232113