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A systematic review of the predictors of health service utilisation by adults with mental disorders in the UK

A systematic review of the predictors of health service utilisation by adults with mental disorders in the UK
A systematic review of the predictors of health service utilisation by adults with mental disorders in the UK
Objectives: to identify variables which predict health service utilisation (HSU) by adults with mental disorders in the UK, and to determine the evidence level for these predictors.

Design: a narrative synthesis of peer-reviewed studies published after the year 2000. The search was conducted using four databases (i.e. PsycINFO, CINAHL Plus with full text, MEDLINE, and EMBASE) and completed on March 25th, 2014.

Setting: the majority of included studies were set in health services across primary, secondary, specialist, and inpatient care. Some studies used data from household and postal surveys.

Participants: included were UK-based studies that predicted HSU by adults with mental disorders, Participants had a range of mental disorders including psychotic disorders, personality disorders, depression, anxiety disorders, eating disorders, and dementia.

Primary outcome: a wide range of HSU outcomes were examined, including GP contacts, medication usage, psychiatrist contacts, psychotherapy attendances, inpatient days, accident and emergency admissions, and ‘total HSU’

Results: taking into account study quality, 28 studies identified a range of variables with good preliminary evidence supporting their ability to predict HSU. Of these variables, comorbidity, personality disorder, age (heterogeneous age ranges), neurotic symptoms, female gender, a marital status of divorced, separated or widowed, non-white ethnicity, medication, high previous HSU, and activities of daily living were associated with increased HSU. Moreover, good preliminary evidence was found for associations of accessing a primary care psychological treatment service and medication use with decreased HSU.

Conclusions: the findings can inform decisions about which variables might be used to derive mental health clusters in ‘payment by results’ systems in the UK. The findings also support the need to investigate whether combining broad diagnoses with care pathways is an effective method for mental health clustering, and the need for research to further examine the association between mental health clusters and HSU.

e007575
Twomey, Conal
b9c5a2e5-332a-4664-b592-4b1363f983ad
Baldwin, David S.
1beaa192-0ef1-4914-897a-3a49fc2ed15e
Hopfe, Maren
3efb5c49-3114-4fd7-b4b8-82f0eabc4a99
Cieza, Alarcos
a0df25c5-ee2c-4580-82b3-d0a75591580e
Twomey, Conal
b9c5a2e5-332a-4664-b592-4b1363f983ad
Baldwin, David S.
1beaa192-0ef1-4914-897a-3a49fc2ed15e
Hopfe, Maren
3efb5c49-3114-4fd7-b4b8-82f0eabc4a99
Cieza, Alarcos
a0df25c5-ee2c-4580-82b3-d0a75591580e

Twomey, Conal, Baldwin, David S., Hopfe, Maren and Cieza, Alarcos (2015) A systematic review of the predictors of health service utilisation by adults with mental disorders in the UK. BMJ Open, e007575. (doi:10.1136/bmjopen-2015-007575).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objectives: to identify variables which predict health service utilisation (HSU) by adults with mental disorders in the UK, and to determine the evidence level for these predictors.

Design: a narrative synthesis of peer-reviewed studies published after the year 2000. The search was conducted using four databases (i.e. PsycINFO, CINAHL Plus with full text, MEDLINE, and EMBASE) and completed on March 25th, 2014.

Setting: the majority of included studies were set in health services across primary, secondary, specialist, and inpatient care. Some studies used data from household and postal surveys.

Participants: included were UK-based studies that predicted HSU by adults with mental disorders, Participants had a range of mental disorders including psychotic disorders, personality disorders, depression, anxiety disorders, eating disorders, and dementia.

Primary outcome: a wide range of HSU outcomes were examined, including GP contacts, medication usage, psychiatrist contacts, psychotherapy attendances, inpatient days, accident and emergency admissions, and ‘total HSU’

Results: taking into account study quality, 28 studies identified a range of variables with good preliminary evidence supporting their ability to predict HSU. Of these variables, comorbidity, personality disorder, age (heterogeneous age ranges), neurotic symptoms, female gender, a marital status of divorced, separated or widowed, non-white ethnicity, medication, high previous HSU, and activities of daily living were associated with increased HSU. Moreover, good preliminary evidence was found for associations of accessing a primary care psychological treatment service and medication use with decreased HSU.

Conclusions: the findings can inform decisions about which variables might be used to derive mental health clusters in ‘payment by results’ systems in the UK. The findings also support the need to investigate whether combining broad diagnoses with care pathways is an effective method for mental health clustering, and the need for research to further examine the association between mental health clusters and HSU.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 14 May 2015
e-pub ahead of print date: 6 July 2015
Published date: 6 July 2015
Organisations: Psychology

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 378502
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/378502
PURE UUID: 1387d7c3-ac61-4efc-8e9d-e8c41d93ca40
ORCID for David S. Baldwin: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-3343-0907

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Date deposited: 06 Jul 2015 10:44
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 02:49

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Contributors

Author: Conal Twomey
Author: Maren Hopfe
Author: Alarcos Cieza

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