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Original Article

Improving access to acute mental health services in a general hospital

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Pages 5-14 | Published online: 28 Sep 2010
 

Abstract

Background: There is a paucity of service research on the effectiveness of short-term mental health clinics.

Aims: To outline the development of the Urgent Consultation Clinic (UCC), an inter-professional, short-term, mental health program in a general hospital, and to evaluate the effectiveness of the UCC from a quality improvement perspective.

Method: Participants (n = 143) completed a battery of validated measures assessing psychological and physical symptoms, quality of life, life satisfaction, and satisfaction with services at three time-points. Inter-professional team members rated participants' overall functioning and severity of mental health problems at intake and termination.

Results: The median time from referral to initial UCC visit was 12 days. A significant decline in the severity of mental health symptoms was observed, with 87% of participants reporting clinically elevated symptoms at intake compared to 71% at termination. Significant improvements were observed in life satisfaction, overall functioning, and mental quality of life. Sixty-nine percent of participants rated the quality of services as good or excellent.

Conclusions: The UCC model of care contributed to improved access to psychiatric evaluation and short-term treatment. This inter-professional model could be applied to other health care settings to meet the needs of patients requiring acute psychiatric services.

Acknowledgments

This research was supported, in part, by the Primary Health Care Transition Fund through the Federal and Ontario Ministry of Health. The authors thank Dr. Mary-Clare Royle and Ms. Laura Nichols for their help with this project. The authors also thank staff members from the Urgent Consultation Clinic at the Ottawa Hospital-General Campus for their involvement in this research.

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