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Review Article

Nurse-Led Physical Health Interventions for People with Mental Illness: A Scoping Review of International Literature

, RN, Cert Psych. Nurs., BA (Hons), DipEd, BEd, MEd, PhD, , PhD, , LLB, BA, MHP, , BSc (Hons), BN, , MBBS, PhD, FRANZCP, , BN, RN, MN, NP, , BA (Hons), , BHSci (Hons), PhDORCID Icon & , BHMSc (Hons), PhD show all
Pages 458-473 | Published online: 09 Jun 2023
 

Abstract

People with mental illness have a higher prevalence of co-occurring physical health conditions and poor health behaviors, leading a mortality gap of up to 16 years, compared with the general population. Nurses working in mental health settings play an important role in addressing factors influencing sub-optimal physical health. Therefore, this scoping review aimed to identify nurse-led physical health interventions and align interventions to eight recognized physical healthcare priority areas (i.e. Equally Well in Victoria Framework). A systematic search strategy was used to identify relevant literature. Data extraction included alignment to the Equally Well priority areas, research design, and indication of co-design (meaningful and collaborative involvement of consumers and significant others) and recovery-oriented practice (focusing on needs and goals of a consumer’s recovery journey). All included papers (n = 74) were aligned to at least one of eight Equally Well priority areas. Papers were predominately quantitative (n = 64, 86%), with the remainder mixed methods (n = 9, 9%) or qualitative (n = 4, 5%). Most papers were aligned to improving metabolic health and support to quit smoking. One study focused on nurse-led intervention designed to reduce falls. Recovery-oriented practice was evident in six papers. No paper described evidence of co-design. A research gap was identified for nurse-led intervention to reduce falls and improve dental/oral care. Relative to mental healthcare policy, there is a need for future nurse-led physical health research to be co-designed and include recovery-oriented practice. Evaluation and description of future nurse-led physical interventions should seek to report perspectives of key stakeholders as these remain relatively unknown.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

Additional information

Funding

This research was funded through a National Health and Medical Research Council project grant.

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