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Role of general practitioners in care of long term mentally ill patients

Role of general practitioners in care of long term mentally ill patients
Role of general practitioners in care of long term mentally ill patients
OBJECTIVE--To assess general practitioners' involvement with long term mentally ill patients and attitudes towards their care.
DESIGN--Postal questionnaire survey.
SETTING--General practices in South West Thames region.
SUBJECTS--507 general practitioners, 369 (73%) of whom returned the questionnaire.
MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES--The number of adult long term mentally ill patients whom general practitioners estimate they have on their lists and general practitioners' willingness to take responsibility for them.
RESULTS--110 respondents had noticed an effect of the discharge of adult long term mentally ill patients on their practices. Most (225) respondents estimated that they had 10 or fewer such patients each on their lists. Having higher numbers was significantly associated with practising in Greater London or within three miles of a large mental hospital and having contact with a psychiatrist visiting the practice. 333 general practitioners would agree to share the care of long term mentally ill patients with the psychiatrist by taking responsibility for the patients' physical problems. Only 59 would agree to act as a key worker, 308 preferring the community psychiatric nurse to do it. Only nine had specific practice policies for looking after long term mentally ill patients and 287 agreed that such patients often come to their general practitioner's attention only when there is a crisis.
CONCLUSIONS--The uneven distribution of long term mentally ill patients suggests that community psychiatric resources might be better targeted at those practices with higher numbers of such patients. Most general practitioners seem to be receptive to a shared care plan when the consultant takes responsibility for monitoring psychiatric health with the community nurse as key worker. The lack of practice policies for reviewing the care of long term mentally ill patients must limit general practitioners' ability to prevent crises developing in their care
community, statistics & numerical data, research support, family practice, research, attitude, humans, shared care, therapy, practitioners, care, attitudes, london, role, general-practice, physician's role, questionnaires, long-term care, physicians, outcome, policy, adult, attitude of health personnel, organization & administration, mental disorders, england, abilities, questionnaire, community psychiatric nurse, community mental health services, general practice, patients, mentally ill, time factors, attention, family, problems, psychology, health
0959-8138
508-510
Kendrick, Tony
c697a72c-c698-469d-8ac2-f00df40583e5
Sibbald, Bonnie
2881fc16-c6dd-4f21-aef7-05345bde469b
Burns, Tom
e9e49214-6bbb-43ce-b39f-0d814abbc83e
Freeling, Paul
8ec3537b-d110-428d-906c-fd966ad5ff3e
Kendrick, Tony
c697a72c-c698-469d-8ac2-f00df40583e5
Sibbald, Bonnie
2881fc16-c6dd-4f21-aef7-05345bde469b
Burns, Tom
e9e49214-6bbb-43ce-b39f-0d814abbc83e
Freeling, Paul
8ec3537b-d110-428d-906c-fd966ad5ff3e

Kendrick, Tony, Sibbald, Bonnie, Burns, Tom and Freeling, Paul (1991) Role of general practitioners in care of long term mentally ill patients. BMJ, 302 (6775), 508-510.

Record type: Article

Abstract

OBJECTIVE--To assess general practitioners' involvement with long term mentally ill patients and attitudes towards their care.
DESIGN--Postal questionnaire survey.
SETTING--General practices in South West Thames region.
SUBJECTS--507 general practitioners, 369 (73%) of whom returned the questionnaire.
MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES--The number of adult long term mentally ill patients whom general practitioners estimate they have on their lists and general practitioners' willingness to take responsibility for them.
RESULTS--110 respondents had noticed an effect of the discharge of adult long term mentally ill patients on their practices. Most (225) respondents estimated that they had 10 or fewer such patients each on their lists. Having higher numbers was significantly associated with practising in Greater London or within three miles of a large mental hospital and having contact with a psychiatrist visiting the practice. 333 general practitioners would agree to share the care of long term mentally ill patients with the psychiatrist by taking responsibility for the patients' physical problems. Only 59 would agree to act as a key worker, 308 preferring the community psychiatric nurse to do it. Only nine had specific practice policies for looking after long term mentally ill patients and 287 agreed that such patients often come to their general practitioner's attention only when there is a crisis.
CONCLUSIONS--The uneven distribution of long term mentally ill patients suggests that community psychiatric resources might be better targeted at those practices with higher numbers of such patients. Most general practitioners seem to be receptive to a shared care plan when the consultant takes responsibility for monitoring psychiatric health with the community nurse as key worker. The lack of practice policies for reviewing the care of long term mentally ill patients must limit general practitioners' ability to prevent crises developing in their care

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More information

Published date: 2 March 1991
Keywords: community, statistics & numerical data, research support, family practice, research, attitude, humans, shared care, therapy, practitioners, care, attitudes, london, role, general-practice, physician's role, questionnaires, long-term care, physicians, outcome, policy, adult, attitude of health personnel, organization & administration, mental disorders, england, abilities, questionnaire, community psychiatric nurse, community mental health services, general practice, patients, mentally ill, time factors, attention, family, problems, psychology, health

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 61845
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/61845
ISSN: 0959-8138
PURE UUID: 9c911ab5-a2ae-49c6-9502-ee47919d9234
ORCID for Tony Kendrick: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-1618-9381

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Date deposited: 10 Sep 2008
Last modified: 23 Jul 2022 01:43

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Contributors

Author: Tony Kendrick ORCID iD
Author: Bonnie Sibbald
Author: Tom Burns
Author: Paul Freeling

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