81 results on '"Kallert, Tw"'
Search Results
2. Randomisierte kontrollierte Studien in der psychiatrischen Versorgungsforschung: Probleme der Durchführungspraxis
- Author
-
Kallert Tw and M. Schützwohl
- Subjects
Random allocation ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Treatment Setting ,medicine.disease ,Mental health ,Clinical Practice ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Important research ,Neurology ,Informed consent ,medicine ,Quality (business) ,Neurology (clinical) ,Medical emergency ,business ,Social psychology ,Performance quality ,media_common - Abstract
This article outlines problems of implementation and clinical practice of randomised controlled trials in mental health services. Furthermore, it offers practical solutions taking into account the experiences with a randomisation process in a multi-site EC-funded (EDEN-) study on the evaluation of acute treatment in psychiatric day hospitals. Identification of the problems follows the time-course of a research project: 1. Problems to be solved prior to the study's commencement: Definition of the eligibility criteria, information of clinically working colleagues. 2. Problems referring to the process of randomisation: Influence of clinical experience of the research fellows, precise time-point of implementing the randomisation into the process of admission, assessment of the patient's ability to give informed consent, patient's refusal of randomisation but agreement to study participation, availability of treatment places. 3. Problems which might occur after randomisation: Early break-off of treatment, transfer from one treatment setting to another. General conclusion: Detailed definitions of the randomisation procedure do not guarantee high performance quality and randomisation rates. Continuous precise assessment of the implementation into the clinical routines of every study centre, adaptation according to specific conditions and personal discussions with all participants are obligatory to establish and maintain a high quality of this important research procedure.
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Deinstitutionalisierung, Wohnsituation und subjektive Zufriedenheit schizophrener Patienten1
- Author
-
Kallert Tw and Leisse M
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Activities of daily living ,Cross-sectional study ,Restructuring ,media_common.quotation_subject ,language.human_language ,German ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Patient satisfaction ,Schizophrenic Psychology ,language ,medicine ,Psychiatry ,Psychology ,Autonomy ,media_common ,Psychopathology - Abstract
OBJECTIVE: After the German reunification the deinstitutionalisation of long-term hospitalised psychiatric patients and the restructuring of the complementary psychiatric care has become necessary in the "new" German states. Hereby it became possible to offer alternative residential settings and new community-oriented care programmes for the mentally disabled. METHODS: Ten years after the beginning of this process we analysed the impact of the housing conditions and the subjective satisfaction of 245 chronic schizophrenic patients living in different residential care-settings or with family resp. on their own in the Dresden region. Additionally we asked for the satisfaction with the organisation of the deinstitutionalisation process. RESULTS: The subgroups--defined by the residential setting--differ in sociodemographic variables and in the levels of psychopathology (PANSS) and social disabilities (DAS-M). It is shown how deficiencies and restrictions of the living situation and the deinstitutionalisation process are reflected in the respective judgments of the patients especially referring to autonomy and self-determination. CONCLUSIONS: Requirements for the further development of the complementary psychiatric care system are deduced.
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Rehabilitationsvorstellungen gemeindepsychiatrisch betreuter schizophrener Patienten1
- Author
-
Kallert Tw and Leisse M
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Rehabilitation ,medicine.medical_treatment ,media_common.quotation_subject ,medicine.disease ,Content analysis ,Schizophrenia ,Vocational education ,Cohort ,medicine ,Normative ,Psychiatry ,Psychology ,Normality ,Clinical psychology ,Psychopathology ,media_common - Abstract
In a cohort of patients with chronic schizophrenic disorders (n = 115) characterized by many social deficits and a high level of psychopathology, suggestions concerning rehabilitation were examined in an exploratory way and analysed referring to their relevance for community psychiatric care. The schizophrenic patients were followed up 1 and 12 months after discharge from hospital using an extensive array of instruments (among others: Needs for Care Assessment, Berlin Inventory of Care Needs). Included was a guided interview focusing on patients' subjective views relevant for the course of the disorder and for therapeutical procedures. Using a content analysis of the verbal material received at both points of study, the following main defining elements of the term rehabilitation (or reintegration, resp.) could be identified from the patients' perspective: vocational reintegration, independent residential setting, recovery of normality, and acceptance of responsibility. The rate of individualized confirmation in each category established after the first interview was between 75% and 93% 1 year after discharge from hospital.--Results from multiple and logistic regression analyses demonstrate that a higher degree of differentiation concerning individual rehabilitation suggestions exerts influence on the extent of subjective and normative needs for (psychiatric) care at the first point of study and moreover can be identified as a predictor of the decrease in the normative needs for care during the study period. To differentiate schizophrenic patients' suggestions referring to this subject can therefore be declared a therapeutical task. Furthermore it is a must to adjust individualized expert-based and subjective suggestions concentrating especially on the patients' main point of emphasis, i.e. vocational rehabilitation.
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Gemeindepsychiatrischer Versorgungsbedarf schizophren Erkrankter: Ein brauchbares Konzept für die regionale Psychiatrieplanung?
- Author
-
Kallert Tw and Leisse M
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Coping (psychology) ,business.industry ,Public health ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Neurology ,Health care ,medicine ,Normative ,Social competence ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,Social sector ,Psychology ,Psychiatry ,Recreation ,Psychopathology - Abstract
One step in a public health research project focuses on the analysis of the individual (expert-based) normative needs for mental health care of chronic schizophrenic patients (n = 115) in the Dresden Region during the first year post hospital release and the extent to which this can be met by the current established level of complementary care. It is an exemplary contribution to the evaluation of community psychiatry as restructured in the Free State of Saxony following German reunification. The results of the study can be condensed to the following interpreting essential statements. Schizophrenics' normative needs for care are not a statistical issue. The single case analysis corroborates a high rate of relevant fluctuations, above all within the clinical sector (e.g. concerning "dyskinesias and other side effects"), that pose a particular challenge to the flexibility of a system of community psychiatry. This includes that the consequence for the practice of care implies then that when diagnosing course, attention must be paid to shifts in the content of the needs for mental health care (e.g. increasing importance of factors, which contain impairments of basic social competences) in order to orient to them any health care measures already initiated.--With the aid of the used research instrument (Needs for Care Assessment) deficits in meeting the needs for care can be identified. In the Dresden Region considerable deficits persist apparently in the subsections recreational activities and occupational and communication skills, which can be ascribed to the lack of appropriate institutions of care in the area.--The normative needs for care of schizophrenic patients cannot be determined simply on the basis of a few, quickly identifiable markers. Rather it demands individualized analysis incorporating variables pertaining to psychopathology, subjective coping, social competence and the course of the disorder. The development of the needs for care over the period of one year can apparently be predicted by trends in the social sector that are already visible within the first months. With regard to aspects of care planning this finding illustrates the limited ability of cross-section surveys to make definitive statements, as well as the predominance of social disabilities over the entire spectrum of the normative needs for psychiatric care.
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Relatives’ views on involuntary hospital admission in eight European countries
- Author
-
FIORILLO, Andrea, DE ROSA C, AVINO C, FIGLIOLIA G, ROSSANO F, MAGLIANO, Lorenza, MAJ, Mario, KALLERT TW, ONCHEV G, RABOCH J, KARASTERGIOU A, KIEJNA A, NAWKA P, KJELLIN L., Fiorillo, Andrea, DE ROSA, C, Avino, C, Figliolia, G, Rossano, F, Magliano, Lorenza, Maj, Mario, Kallert, Tw, Onchev, G, Raboch, J, Karastergiou, A, Kiejna, A, Nawka, P, and Kjellin, L.
- Published
- 2006
7. Comparison of the clinical use of individual coercitive measures during hospitalisation across the eunomia study sites
- Author
-
RABOCH J, KALLERT TW, ONCHEV G, SOLOMON Z, KARASTERGIOU A, DEMBINSKAS A, KIEJNA A, PRIBE S, NAWKA P., MAJ, Mario, Raboch, J, Kallert, Tw, Onchev, G, Solomon, Z, Karastergiou, A, Maj, Mario, Dembinskas, A, Kiejna, A, Pribe, S, and Nawka, P.
- Published
- 2006
8. Erwartungen an Versorgungsleistungen Sozialpsychiatrischer Dienste im Freistaat Sachsen
- Author
-
Kallert Tw, Leisse M, Bach O, and Kreiner B
- Subjects
Service (business) ,medicine.medical_specialty ,media_common.quotation_subject ,education ,Staffing ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Polyclinic ,Neurology ,Social psychiatry ,Occupational rehabilitation ,Economic security ,medicine ,Neurology (clinical) ,Psychiatry ,Psychology ,Psychosocial ,Welfare ,media_common - Abstract
After the "Polyclinic system" that had predominated in the GDR had been dismantled, a far-reaching restructuring of the complementary psychiatric care sector became necessary. In the State of Saxony, comprehensive establishment of a homogeneous home-visit outpatient service is the first building block in an interlinked system of regionalized community psychiatry. Based on about 20 years of experience in the Federal States of the FRG, this function is fulfilled by social psychiatry services (SPS). The present study investigates the expectations of free-practising psychiatrists (n = 165), doctors in psychiatric hospitals (n = 95) and staff of social psychiatry services (n = 138) throughout the State of Saxony in respect of available care and the way these new care structures work. The results are approximately representative owing to the high rate of responses in an anonymous postal survey of three specified groups (48.5%, 67.4%, 84.0%). All the groups surveyed expected that the clientel to be looked after by SPS will chiefly consist of the group of chronically mentally ill persons. Moreover, the consistently expressed expectations as to the central care/therapy to be provided by SPS can be summarised as the core of directly client-oriented SPS work. This consists of the elements "welfare work", "individual and institutionalised social therapy", and "help in administrative measures". The main differences between the two groups of doctors is that free-practising psychiatrists more often expect a large SPS involvement with regard to social therapy provided at an institutional level, whereas hospital doctors expect this with regard to medical therapies in the strict sense. Hospital doctors have greater expectations that SPS will also fulfil further functions: work with relatives, public relations, establishment of a crisis service and running self-help groups. The expectations of SPS staff with regard to the therapy they should provide themselves exceed what has already been currently achieved in all sectors. A detailed analysis of contents is also presented in this article. Besides improved staffing, SPS employees state that eliminating internal organisational and postgraduate training deficits are two major requirements for stabilization of their work. Appraisals of the quality of care for the chronically mentally ill in the outpatient complementary sector requested by hospital doctors and SPS staff in comparison with former provision structures in the GDR, show deterioration in the economic security of patients as well as of possibilities available in occupational rehabilitation. On the other hand, there are some improvements in the training of specialist staff whereas protection of the personality rights of patients as well as care measures are now free from ideological bias. These are crucial prerequisites for an update individualised, need-orientated therapeutic procedure. To counteract overburdening of the SPS with expectations of care and to enable a more unequivocal positioning of its structure in a complex system of psychosocial care, further need-orientated development and establishment of psychiatric facilities close to the community concerned, are urgently required, a least as far as the State of Saxony is concerned.
- Published
- 1997
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Patient characteristics predicting better treatment outcomes in day hospitals compared with inpatient wards.
- Author
-
Priebe S, McCabe R, Schützwohl M, Kiejna A, Nawka P, Raboch J, Reininghaus U, Wang D, Kallert TW, Priebe, Stefan, McCabe, Rosemarie, Schützwohl, Matthias, Kiejna, Andrzej, Nawka, Petr, Raboch, Jirí, Reininghaus, Ulrich, Wang, Duolao, and Kallert, Thomas W
- Abstract
Objective: The study aimed to identify patient characteristics associated with differences in outcomes of acute treatment in day hospitals and conventional hospital wards.Methods: Data were from the European Day Hospital Evaluation (EDEN) (2000-2003), a multicenter randomized controlled trial comparing acute treatment in day hospitals and conventional wards in five European countries. All 880 adult patients in the EDEN study who had a diagnosis of schizophrenia, mood disorders, neurotic disorders, and behavioral syndromes (ICD-10 codes F20-F59) and complete data on baseline variables were included. Outcomes were symptom levels (Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale), subjective quality of life (Manchester Short Assessment of Quality of Life), and social disability (Groningen Social Disabilities Schedule) assessed at discharge and at three and 12 months postdischarge. Mixed- and main-effects models of interaction effects between patient characteristics and outcomes were generated.Results: Patients' age, diagnostic category, and living status (alone or not) did not predict differences in outcomes between the two settings. However, patients with higher symptom levels at baseline experienced greater symptom improvements after treatment on a ward, and those with more years of education had greater symptom improvements after day hospital treatment. Female patients had more favorable social disability outcomes after day hospital treatment, but no difference between the two settings was found for male patients.Conclusions: More severe symptoms may be a reason for admission to acute treatment on a conventional ward rather than a day hospital. Female patients and those with more education may benefit more from acute treatment in day hospitals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Coercion in psychiatry.
- Author
-
Kallert TW
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Schizophrenic patients' suggestions concerning rehabilitation in community oriented psychiatric care.
- Author
-
Kallert TW and Leiße M
- Published
- 2000
12. Acute psychopathology as a predictor of global functioning in patients with ICD-10 non-affective psychosis: A prospective study in 11 European countries
- Author
-
Alexander Nawka, Ana M. Salazar-Montes, Lars Kjellin, Georgi Onchev, Anastasia Karastergiou, Andrzej Kiejna, Stefan Priebe, Andrea Fiorillo, Thomas W. Kallert, Jiří Raboch, Eleni Petkari, Jorge A. Cervilla, Francisco Torres-González, Algirdas Dembinskas, Petkari, E, SALAZAR MONTES, Am, Kallert, Tw, Priebe, S, Fiorillo, Andrea, Raboch, J, Onchev, G, Karastergiou, A, Nawka, A, Dembinskas, A, Kiejna, A, Kjellin, L, TORRES GONZALEZ, F, and Cervilla, Ja
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Psychosis ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Schizoaffective disorder ,Young Adult ,International Classification of Diseases ,Predictive Value of Tests ,medicine ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Prospective cohort study ,Psychiatry ,Biological Psychiatry ,Retrospective Studies ,Psychiatric Status Rating Scales ,Principal Component Analysis ,Psychopathology ,ICD-10 ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Patient Discharge ,Europe ,Hospitalization ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Psychotic Disorders ,Schizophrenia ,Cohort ,Female ,Psychology ,Cohort study ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
This prospective analysis aimed to study the influence of psychopathological dimensions on the global functioning of persons suffering from psychotic disorders, taking into account the role of a broad range of potential confounders. A large international cohort (n = 1888) with ICD-10 non-affective psychosis was evaluated both at baseline during a hospital admission and three months after discharge. Trained interviewers administered a global functioning scale (GAF) and a psychopathological scale (BPRS) at baseline and follow-up). Baseline BPRS psychopathological dimensions were extracted using Principal Component Analysis. Results of multiple linear regression analyses demonstrated that affective symptoms (depressive or manic) prospectively predict a better global functioning, whilst agitation/cognitive symptoms determined poorer global functioning. Other predictors showing an independent effect on better global functioning were medication compliance, country of residence, female gender, married or coupled status, younger age and having a diagnosis of schizoaffective disorder rather than schizophrenia or other ICD-10 psychosis. A predicting model for global functioning in patients with psychosis is provided, showing that assessment of affective and agitation/cognitive symptoms should be emphasised during admission as they can be more informative than positive/negative symptoms in prospectively planning follow-up care that is geared towards a better functional recovery.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Use of coercive measures during involuntary hospitalization: findings from ten European countries
- Author
-
Georgi Onchev, Stefan Priebe, Lucie Kališová, Andrzej Kiejna, Alexander Nawka, Eva Kitzlerová, Francisco Torres-Gonzales, Lorenza Magliano, Anastasia Karastergiou, Algirdas Dembinskas, Lars Kjellin, Thomas W. Kallert, Jiri Raboch, Raboch, J, Kalisová, L, Nawka, A, Kitzlerová, E, Onchev, G, Karastergiou, A, Magliano, Lorenza, Dembinskas, A, Kiejna, A, TORRES GONZALES, F, Kjellin, L, Priebe, S, and Kallert, Tw
- Subjects
Adult ,Hospitals, Psychiatric ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,coercion, psychiatric patients ,Coercion ,Severity of illness ,medicine ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Psychiatry ,Aggression ,business.industry ,Public health ,Social environment ,Middle Aged ,Mental health ,Europe ,Hospitalization ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Involuntary treatment ,Commitment of Mentally Ill ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Seclusion ,Diagnosis of schizophrenia - Abstract
Objective: Involuntary treatment in mental health care is a sensitive but rarely studied issue. This study was part of the European Evaluation of Coercion in Psychiatry and Harmonization of Best Clinical Practice (EUNOMIA) project. It assessed and compared the use of coercive measures in psychiatric inpatient facilities in ten European countries. Methods: The sample included 2,030 involuntarily admitted patients. Data were obtained on coercive measures (physical restraint, seclusion, and forced medication). Results: In total, 1,462 coercive measures were used with 770 patients (38%). The percentage of patients receiving coercive measures in each country varied between 21% and 59%. The most frequent reason for prescribing coercive measures was patient aggression against others. In eight of the countries, the most frequent measure used was forced medication, and in two of the countries mechanical restraint was the most frequent measure used. Seclusion was rarely administered and was reported in only six countries. A diagnosis of schizophrenia and more severe symptoms were associated with a higher probability of receiving coercive measures. Conclusions: Coercive measures were used in a substantial group of involuntarily admitted patients across Europe. Their use appeared to depend on diagnosis and the severity of illness, but use was also heavily influenced by the individual country. Variation across countries may reflect differences in societal attitudes and clinical traditions. (Psychiatric Services 61: 1012-1017, 2010)
- Published
- 2010
14. Coerced Hospital Admission and Symptom Change—A Prospective Observational Multi-Centre Study
- Author
-
Thomas W. Kallert, Zahava Solomon, Anastasia Mastrogianni, Tomasz Adamowski, Georgi Onchev, Christina Katsakou, Andrea Fiorillo, Jiri Raboch, Algirdas Dembinskas, P. Nawka, Francisco Torres-González, Lars Kjellin, Stefan Priebe, Matthias Schützwohl, Stephen Bremner, Kallert, Tw, Katsakou, C, Adamowski, T, Dembinskas, A, Fiorillo, Andrea, Kjellin, L, Mastrogianni, A, Nawka, P, Onchev, G, Raboch, J, Schützwohl, M, Solomon, Z, TORRES GONZÁLEZ, F, Bremner, S, and Priebe, S.
- Subjects
Male ,Multivariate analysis ,Non-Clinical Medicine ,Psychometrics ,Coercion ,Medical ethics ,Social and Behavioral Sciences ,Patient Admission ,Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale ,Law and legal sciences ,Psychology ,Prospective Studies ,Multi centre ,Prospective cohort study ,Psychiatry ,Multidisciplinary ,Anxiety Disorders ,Hospitals ,Hospitalization ,Mental Health ,Hospital admission ,Medicine ,Female ,Research Article ,Employment ,Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Science ,Legislation ,MEDLINE ,Models, Biological ,medicine ,Humans ,Psychological and Psychosocial Issues ,Health Care Policy ,business.industry ,Patient Selection ,Diagnostic medicine ,Psychotherapy ,Therapies ,Multivariate Analysis ,Emergency medicine ,Schizophrenia ,Linear Models ,Observational study ,business ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
[Introduction] Coerced admission to psychiatric hospitals, defined by legal status or patient's subjective experience, is common. Evidence on clinical outcomes however is limited. This study aimed to assess symptom change over a three month period following coerced admission and identify patient characteristics associated with outcomes. [Method] At study sites in 11 European countries consecutive legally involuntary patients and patients with a legally voluntary admission who however felt coerced, were recruited and assessed by independent researchers within the first week after admission. Symptoms were assessed on the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale. Patients were re-assessed after one and three months. [Results] The total sample consisted of 2326 legally coerced patients and 764 patients with a legally voluntary admission who felt coerced. Symptom levels significantly improved over time. In a multivariable analysis, higher baseline symptoms, being unemployed, living alone, repeated hospitalisation, being legally a voluntary patient but feeling coerced, and being initially less satisfied with treatment were all associated with less symptom improvement after one month and, other than initial treatment satisfaction, also after three months. The diagnostic group was not linked with outcomes. [Discussion] On average patients show significant but limited symptom improvements after coerced hospital admission, possibly reflecting the severity of the underlying illnesses. Social factors, but not the psychiatric diagnosis, appear important predictors of outcomes. Legally voluntary patients who feel coerced may have a poorer prognosis than legally involuntary patients and deserve attention in research and clinical practice., he multi-site research project (Acronym: EUNOMIA) “European Evaluation of Coercion in Psychiatry and Harmonisation of Best Clinical Practise” was funded by the European Commission (Quality of Life and Management of Living Resources Programme, contract no. QLG4-CT-2002-01036).
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Investigating the Dynamics of Suicidal Ideation.
- Author
-
Hallensleben N, Spangenberg L, Forkmann T, Rath D, Hegerl U, Kersting A, Kallert TW, and Glaesmer H
- Subjects
- Adult, Depressive Disorder psychology, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Smartphone, Young Adult, Depressive Disorder, Major psychology, Dysthymic Disorder psychology, Ecological Momentary Assessment, Suicidal Ideation
- Abstract
Background: Although the fluctuating nature of suicidal ideation (SI) has been described previously, longitudinal studies investigating the dynamics of SI are scarce., Aim: To demonstrate the fluctuation of SI across 6 days and up to 60 measurement points using smartphone-based ecological momentary assessments (EMA)., Method: Twenty inpatients with unipolar depression and current and/or lifetime suicidal ideation rated their momentary SI 10 times per day over a 6-day period. Mean squared successive difference (MSSD) was calculated as a measure of variability. Correlations of MSSD with severity of depression, number of previous depressive episodes, and history of suicidal behavior were examined., Results: Individual trajectories of SI are shown to illustrate fluctuation. MSSD values ranged from 0.2 to 21.7. No significant correlations of MSSD with several clinical parameters were found, but there are hints of associations between fluctuation of SI and severity of depression and suicidality., Limitations: Main limitation of this study is the small sample size leading to low power and probably missing potential effects. Further research with larger samples is necessary to shed light on the dynamics of SI., Conclusion: The results illustrate the dynamic nature and the diversity of trajectories of SI across 6 days in psychiatric inpatients with unipolar depression. Prediction of the fluctuation of SI might be of high clinical relevance. Further research using EMA and sophisticated analyses with larger samples is necessary to shed light on the dynamics of SI.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Is employment-focused case management effective for patients with substance use disorders? Results from a controlled multi-site trial in Germany covering a 2-years-period after inpatient rehabilitation.
- Author
-
Saal S, Forschner L, Kemmann D, Zlatosch J, and Kallert TW
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Outcome Assessment, Health Care, Young Adult, Case Management, Employment psychology, Inpatients psychology, Return to Work statistics & numerical data, Substance-Related Disorders psychology, Substance-Related Disorders rehabilitation, Unemployment psychology
- Abstract
Background: Substance use disorders are associated with unemployment. An employment-focused case management (CMRE) has been conceptualised as a specific intervention to help substance use disorder patients return to competitive employment immediately after inpatient rehabilitation. This study investigated the effect of the intervention on return to work of persons with substance use disorders., Method: The study was conducted in four German inpatient rehabilitation departments, and included unemployed patients (aged between 18 and 63 years) with a main clinical diagnosis of ICD-10 F10-19 disorders. Six weeks before discharge, patients were randomly allocated to CMRE or standard care (SC) using a quasi-randomised approach. The primary outcome measure was integration into competitive employment 24 months after discharge from rehabilitation. Secondary outcome domains were abstinence, duration of employment, proportion of publicly funded employment, satisfaction with life, precarious housing situation and precarious financial situation, and use of follow-up services. Outcome measures were assessed 6 weeks and 1-2 days prior to discharge, and 12 and 24 months after discharge from rehabilitation., Results: One hundred sixty patients were allocated into the CMRE group and 160 patients into the control group. 267 resp. 179 participants could be included in the analyses performed for the 12-, and the 24-months follow-up assessments. At the study endpoint the rate of integration into the primary labour market was 35.6 % in the CMRE group and 41.2 % in the control group, respectively (Relative Risk 0.92, 95 % CI, 0.47; 1.79). There was a significantly higher proportion in the CMRE group, however, which immediately after discharge linked with services of the Federal Employment Agency or Job Centres. There were no statistically significant differences in other outcomes between the groups., Conclusions: Compared to SC, the additional specific CMRE intervention did not result in superior effects on return to work rates, abstinence, satisfaction with life, and housing and precarious financial situation. But CMRE was more effective on linking substance use disorder patients with services of the Federal Employment Agency or Job Centres. Reasons for the finding that such close linking does not have an impact on return to work rates are discussed in detail., Trial Registration: Identifier: DRKS00003574 ; March 12, 2012. The trial was retrospectively registered.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Gender differences in coerced patients with schizophrenia.
- Author
-
Nawka A, Kalisova L, Raboch J, Giacco D, Cihal L, Onchev G, Karastergiou A, Solomon Z, Fiorillo A, Del Vecchio V, Dembinskas A, Kiejna A, Nawka P, Torres-Gonzales F, Priebe S, Kjellin L, and Kallert TW
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Hospitals, Psychiatric, Humans, Inpatients psychology, Male, Middle Aged, Prospective Studies, Severity of Illness Index, Aggression psychology, Commitment of Persons with Psychiatric Disorders, Schizophrenia therapy, Schizophrenic Psychology, Sex Characteristics
- Abstract
Background: Despite the recent increase of research interest in involuntary treatment and the use of coercive measures, gender differences among coerced schizophrenia patients still remain understudied. It is well recognized that there are gender differences both in biological correlates and clinical presentations in schizophrenia, which is one of the most common diagnoses among patients who are treated against their will. The extent to which these differences may result in a difference in the use of coercive measures for men and women during the acute phase of the disease has not been studied., Methods: 291 male and 231 female coerced patients with schizophrenia were included in this study, which utilized data gathered by the EUNOMIA project (European Evaluation of Coercion in Psychiatry and Harmonization of Best Clinical Practice) and was carried out as a multi-centre prospective cohort study at 13 centers in 12 European countries. Sociodemographic and clinical characteristics, social functioning and aggressive behavior in patients who received any form of coercive measure (seclusion and/or forced medication and/or physical restraint) during their hospital stay were assessed., Results: When compared to the non-coerced inpatient population, there was no difference in sociodemographic or clinical characteristics across either gender. However coerced female patients did show a worse social functioning than their coerced male counterparts, a finding which contrasts with the non-coerced inpatient population. Moreover, patterns of aggressive behavior were different between men and women, such that women exhibited aggressive behavior more frequently, but men committed severe aggressive acts more frequently. Staff used forced medication in women more frequently and physical restraint and seclusion more frequently with men., Conclusions: Results of this study point towards a higher threshold of aggressive behavior the treatment of women with coercive measures. This may be because less serious aggressive actions trigger the application of coercive measures in men. Moreover coerced women showed diminished social functioning, and more importantly more severe symptoms from the "excitement/hostile" cluster in contrast to coerced men. National and international recommendation on coercive treatment practices should include appropriate consideration of the evidence of gender differences in clinical presentation and aggressive behaviors found in inpatient populations.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Involuntary psychiatric hospitalization: current status and future prospects.
- Author
-
Kallert TW
- Subjects
- Adult, Coercion, Female, Humans, Male, Commitment of Persons with Psychiatric Disorders legislation & jurisprudence, Commitment of Persons with Psychiatric Disorders trends, Hospitals, Psychiatric, Psychotic Disorders therapy
- Abstract
The general aims of this article are: a) to cover the current status of research on the important clinical and human rights issue of involuntary psychiatric hospitalization, and b) to discuss some factors which might influence future developments in this area of mental health care provision. Firstly, the article will outline main results from two literature reviews on outcomes of involuntary hospital admission. Secondly, selected results from the clinical part of a recent European multi-site research project on coercion in psychiatry (Acronym: EUNOMIA) will be presented in detail on the following issues: the association of patients' views of involuntary hospital admission and differences in legislation, patient characteristics associated with more or less positive outcomes of coerced hospital admission, coercive measures (e.g. mechanical restraint, seclusion and forced medication) used during these hospitalizations. Thirdly and finally, the article will shed some light on future prospects of this topic. Thus, some recommendations for best clinical practice in the use of involuntary hospital admission will be discussed, and arguments for two future scenarios, increase vs. decrease of involuntary psychiatric hospitalizations, will be contrasted and analyzed.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Use of coercive measures during involuntary hospitalization: findings from ten European countries.
- Author
-
Raboch J, Kalisová L, Nawka A, Kitzlerová E, Onchev G, Karastergiou A, Magliano L, Dembinskas A, Kiejna A, Torres-Gonzales F, Kjellin L, Priebe S, and Kallert TW
- Subjects
- Adult, Europe, Female, Hospitals, Psychiatric, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Prospective Studies, Coercion, Commitment of Persons with Psychiatric Disorders, Hospitalization
- Abstract
Objective: Involuntary treatment in mental health care is a sensitive but rarely studied issue. This study was part of the European Evaluation of Coercion in Psychiatry and Harmonization of Best Clinical Practice (EUNOMIA) project. It assessed and compared the use of coercive measures in psychiatric inpatient facilities in ten European countries., Methods: The sample included 2,030 involuntarily admitted patients. Data were obtained on coercive measures (physical restraint, seclusion, and forced medication)., Results: In total, 1,462 coercive measures were used with 770 patients (38%). The percentage of patients receiving coercive measures in each country varied between 21% and 59%. The most frequent reason for prescribing coercive measures was patient aggression against others. In eight of the countries, the most frequent measure used was forced medication, and in two of the countries mechanical restraint was the most frequent measure used. Seclusion was rarely administered and was reported in only six countries. A diagnosis of schizophrenia and more severe symptoms were associated with a higher probability of receiving coercive measures., Conclusions: Coercive measures were used in a substantial group of involuntarily admitted patients across Europe. Their use appeared to depend on diagnosis and the severity of illness, but use was also heavily influenced by the individual country. Variation across countries may reflect differences in societal attitudes and clinical traditions.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. [The prevalence of depressive symptomatology in the german elderly population and the impact of methodical aspects on the identified prevalence].
- Author
-
Glaesmer H, Kallert TW, Brähler E, Hofmeister D, and Gunzelmann T
- Subjects
- Age Factors, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Anxiety Disorders diagnosis, Anxiety Disorders epidemiology, Anxiety Disorders psychology, Comorbidity, Cross-Sectional Studies, Depressive Disorder diagnosis, Depressive Disorder psychology, Female, Health Surveys, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Personality Inventory statistics & numerical data, Psychometrics statistics & numerical data, Reproducibility of Results, Depressive Disorder epidemiology
- Abstract
Objectives: The issue of whether depression increases or decreases with age remains unclear. Methodical aspects play an important role in the research on depression in the elderly., Methods: In a representative survey of the German general population aged 50 years and older (n = 1.156) depressive symptomatology was assessed using the CES-D and the PHQ-2, generalized anxiety (GA) was assessed using the GAD-7., Results: According the CES-D 15.9 % and according to the PHQ-2 9.6 % of the population under study are classified as depressed. Prevalence rates increase with increasing age, but only few age groups show significant differences. The CES-D reveals higher prevalence rates than the PHQ-2. Nevertheless depending on the age group 3.6-7.8 % of the sample exclusively identified by the PHQ-2, and 9.0-14.9 % of the sample are exclusively identified by the CES-D. 4.8 (50-59 yrs.) to 10.3 % (80+ yrs.) report a moderate symptomatology of GA. GA is highly comorbid with depressive symptomatology., Conclusions: The prevalence rates in our study are consistent with previous findings of other studies. Moreover our study underpins the importance of methodical aspects for the prevalence rates identified.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. [Direct health-related costs of severely mentally ill patients and their informal carers in community care].
- Author
-
Kallert TW and Nitsche I
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Bipolar Disorder diagnosis, Bipolar Disorder psychology, Bipolar Disorder therapy, Chronic Disease, Costs and Cost Analysis, Depressive Disorder, Major diagnosis, Depressive Disorder, Major psychology, Depressive Disorder, Major therapy, Female, Germany, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Psychiatric Status Rating Scales, Schizophrenia diagnosis, Schizophrenia therapy, Schizophrenic Psychology, Bipolar Disorder economics, Caregivers economics, Community Mental Health Services economics, Cost of Illness, Depressive Disorder, Major economics, Health Expenditures statistics & numerical data, Schizophrenia economics
- Abstract
Objective: Within the last few years, a small number of German cost analyses of patients treated in community mental health care settings was presented. None of these studies, however, examined direct health care costs of the patients' close reference persons focusing on costs associated with providing informal care. Therefore, our study aimed to analyse health-related direct costs of severely ill patients suffering from affective or schizophrenic disorders, and of their informal carers during community mental health care; further, we examined if these costs differed between the diagnostic groups., Methods: 69 patients currently treated by community mental health services of the Dresden region and their closest reference person providing informal care were assessed twice within an interval of 3 months by use of the CSSRI- D. Thus, direct health care costs of patients and their informal carers covering a 6-months-period could be calculated., Results: 25.35% and 38.24%, respectively, of the closest reference persons' direct health care costs were caused by the situation of acting as informal carer. This was 9.12% and 22.74%, respectively, of the patients' direct health care costs assessed at the same time-points. Patients' costs did not differ between the diagnostic categories, but were influenced by the current severity of psychopathological symptoms. Reference persons' costs were influenced by the severity of the patient's psychopathological symptoms, but also by the social control behaviour of the reference persons themselves as well as by their sense of coherence., Conclusions: While a replication of our findings is urgently needed, they point at the economic significance of direct health-related costs caused by acting as informal carers. Further, therapeutic approaches adequate for minimizing these costs could be suggested, like emphasizing protective factors of mental well-being in psycho-educational programmes for relatives.
- Published
- 2010
22. A systematic review of the international published literature relating to quality of institutional care for people with longer term mental health problems.
- Author
-
Taylor TL, Killaspy H, Wright C, Turton P, White S, Kallert TW, Schuster M, Cervilla JA, Brangier P, Raboch J, Kalisová L, Onchev G, Dimitrov H, Mezzina R, Wolf K, Wiersma D, Visser E, Kiejna A, Piotrowski P, Ploumpidis D, Gonidakis F, Caldas-de-Almeida J, Cardoso G, and King MB
- Subjects
- Clinical Governance, Community Mental Health Services organization & administration, Community Mental Health Services standards, Guideline Adherence, Health Care Surveys, Humans, Long-Term Care standards, Mental Disorders rehabilitation, Meta-Analysis as Topic, Outcome Assessment, Health Care, Quality Assurance, Health Care, Rehabilitation, Vocational, Schizophrenia rehabilitation, Schizophrenia therapy, Social Work, Psychiatric, Institutionalization standards, Mental Disorders therapy, Quality of Health Care statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Background: A proportion of people with mental health problems require longer term care in a psychiatric or social care institution. However, there are no internationally agreed quality standards for institutional care and no method to assess common care standards across countries. We aimed to identify the key components of institutional care for people with longer term mental health problems and the effectiveness of these components., Methods: We undertook a systematic review of the literature using comprehensive search terms in 11 electronic databases and identified 12,182 titles. We viewed 550 abstracts, reviewed 223 papers and included 110 of these. A "critical interpretative synthesis" of the evidence was used to identify domains of institutional care that are key to service users' recovery., Results: We identified eight domains of institutional care that were key to service users' recovery: living conditions; interventions for schizophrenia; physical health; restraint and seclusion; staff training and support; therapeutic relationship; autonomy and service user involvement; and clinical governance. Evidence was strongest for specific interventions for the treatment of schizophrenia (family psychoeducation, cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) and vocational rehabilitation)., Conclusion: Institutions should, ideally, be community based, operate a flexible regime, maintain a low density of residents and maximise residents' privacy. For service users with a diagnosis of schizophrenia, specific interventions (CBT, family interventions involving psychoeducation, and supported employment) should be provided through integrated programmes. Restraint and seclusion should be avoided wherever possible and staff should have adequate training in de-escalation techniques. Regular staff supervision should be provided and this should support service user involvement in decision making and positive therapeutic relationships between staff and service users. There should be clear lines of clinical governance that ensure adherence to evidence-based guidelines and attention should be paid to service users' physical health through regular screening.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Involuntary vs. voluntary hospital admission. A systematic literature review on outcome diversity.
- Author
-
Kallert TW, Glöckner M, and Schützwohl M
- Subjects
- Humans, Mental Disorders epidemiology, Hospitalization statistics & numerical data, Mental Disorders therapy, Outcome Assessment, Health Care, Patient Admission statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
This article systematically reviews the literature on the outcome of acute hospitalization for adult general psychiatric patients admitted involuntarily as compared to patients admitted voluntarily. Inclusion and exclusion criteria qualified 41 out of 3,227 references found in Medline and PSYNDEXplus literature searches for this review. The authors independently rated these articles on six pre-defined indicators of research quality, carried out statistical comparisons ex-post facto where not reported, and computed for each adequate result the effect size index d for the comparison of means, and the Phi- or contingency coefficient for cross-tabulated data. Methodological quality of the studies, coming mostly from North American and European countries, showed significant variation and was higher concerning service-related than clinical or subjective outcomes. Main deficits appeared in sample size estimation, lack of clear follow-up time-points, and the absence of standardized instruments used to assess clinical outcomes. Length of stay, readmission risk, and risk of involuntary readmission were at least equal or greater for involuntary patients. Involuntary patients showed no increased mortality, but did have higher suicide rates than voluntary patients. Further, involuntary patients demonstrated lower levels of social functioning, and equal levels of general psychopathology and treatment compliance; they were more dissatisfied with treatment and more frequently felt that hospitalization was not justified. Future methodologically-sound studies exploring this topic should focus on patient populations not represented here. Further research should also clarify if the legal admission status is sufficiently valid for differentiating the outcome of acute hospitalization.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Assessing the opinions of relatives on the causes and social consequences of different mental disorders: are instruments cross-culturally valid?
- Author
-
Kallert TW and Nitsche I
- Subjects
- Bipolar Disorder etiology, Bipolar Disorder psychology, Chronic Disease, Depressive Disorder etiology, Depressive Disorder psychology, Expressed Emotion, Family Health, Female, Germany, Humans, Italy, Male, Mental Disorders etiology, Mental Disorders therapy, Middle Aged, Recurrence, Reproducibility of Results, Schizophrenia etiology, Schizophrenic Psychology, Surveys and Questionnaires, Attitude to Health, Cross-Cultural Comparison, Family psychology, Mental Disorders psychology, Psychometrics statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Obtaining valid information about the opinions of relatives on the causes and social consequences of mental disorders should be an important component in specifically tailoring therapeutic interventions for relatives according to their needs. The available range of instruments is small, however, the most prominent being the Italian Questionnaire on the Opinions of the Family (QOF), developed specifically for schizophrenic disorders. The German validation study of this instrument sought to determine whether the subscale structure of the QOF can be replicated in a group of relatives (N=161) of patients with schizophrenic disorders as well as recurrent depressive and bipolar disorders. Results demonstrate that the original QOF subscales cannot be transferred to groups of relatives of patients with affective disorders, nor to a German group of relatives of patients with only schizophrenic disorders. Therefore, a German version of the QOF was created. Using this modified version of the instrument, researchers established a three-factor solution differentiating the opinions of relatives on chronic mental disorders into three components, reflecting orientation towards pathology, towards normality and towards optimising resources for treatment. None of these factors showed significant relationships with the relatives' causal attributions about mental disorders. Further research is needed to establish cross-nationally valid versions of such instruments.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Loss to follow-up in longitudinal psychiatric research.
- Author
-
Eichler T, Schützwohl M, Priebe S, Wright D, Adamowski T, Rymaszewska J, Nawka P, Ocvár L, Kitzlerova E, Raboch J, and Kallert TW
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Male, Research, Mental Disorders therapy, Patient Dropouts, Psychiatry
- Abstract
Aims: To analyse factors that differentiate patients who attend follow-up assessments versus those who do not, and to identify predictors for drop-out within the context of the European Day Hospital Evaluation Study (EDEN-Study)., Methods: The EDEN-Study, a multi-center RCT comparing acute psychiatric day care with inpatient care, required re-assessment of patients at discharge, 3 and 12 months after discharge. Follow-up rates varied between 54.0% and 99.5%. Socio-demographic and clinical characteristics of patients who did and did not attend follow-up were analysed using uni- and multivariate statistical methods., Results: Univariate analyses showed differences between patients regarding study site, treatment setting, living situation, employment, age, psychopathological symptoms and treatment satisfaction. They were not confirmed in multivariate analyses thus meaningful predictors of drop-out could not be identified., Conclusions: Results emphasize the general need to compare patients re-assessed and not re-assessed in terms of their most relevant socio-demographic and clinical variables to assess the generalizability of results.
- Published
- 2008
26. [Day hospitals neglect schizophrenia].
- Author
-
Engfer R and Kallert TW
- Subjects
- Cross-Sectional Studies, Germany, Health Services Accessibility statistics & numerical data, Health Services Needs and Demand statistics & numerical data, Humans, Schizophrenia diagnosis, Schizophrenia epidemiology, Day Care, Medical statistics & numerical data, Schizophrenia rehabilitation, Schizophrenic Psychology
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. [Comparing individual costs for treatment in acute day and inpatient care--results from a randomised controlled trial].
- Author
-
Kallert TW, Schönherr R, Fröhling D, and Schützwohl M
- Subjects
- Acute Disease, Adult, Combined Modality Therapy economics, Cost-Benefit Analysis statistics & numerical data, Drug Costs statistics & numerical data, Female, Germany, Hospital Costs statistics & numerical data, Hospitals, University economics, Humans, Length of Stay economics, Male, Mental Disorders therapy, Middle Aged, Patient Care Team economics, Psychotropic Drugs economics, Psychotropic Drugs therapeutic use, Day Care, Medical economics, Hospitalization economics, Mental Disorders economics, National Health Programs economics
- Abstract
Objective: Individual costs of non-pharmacological treatments in acute day and inpatient care were assessed within a randomised controlled trial., Methods: For 37 modes of treatment used by 191 patients during their index-hospitalization (92 in day, and 99 in inpatient care) personnel costs were calculated. Data were analysed with non-parametric Mann-Whitney-U-tests and regression-analytic models for cost prediction., Results: Day care patients caused mean costs of 1559.41 euro per person and received a mean of 198.8 treatments, whereas inpatients caused 947.22 euro and received 138.0 treatments. As concerns inpatient treatment, length of stay, the diagnosis of an ICD-10 F4-disorder, and the level of positive symptoms at admission could be identified as predictors of individual costs. For day hospital treatment, length of stay and illness chronicity contributed significantly to the prediction of individual costs., Conclusion: The direct health care cost advantage of acute day care--found in several trials which had performed unit-cost analyses--did not appear if personnel costs of the individually received non-pharmacological treatments were used as calculation basis.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. [Practice recommendation for administering mechanical restraint during acute psychiatric hospitalization].
- Author
-
Kallert TW, Jurjanz L, Schnall K, Glöckner M, Gerdjikov I, Raboch J, Georgiadou E, Solomon Z, Rosa Cd, Dembinskas A, Adamowski T, Nawka P, Hernandez C, and Björkdahl A
- Subjects
- Europe, Humans, Coercion, Commitment of Persons with Psychiatric Disorders legislation & jurisprudence, Mental Disorders therapy, Practice Guidelines as Topic, Restraint, Physical legislation & jurisprudence
- Abstract
Objective: One aim of the multi-site EUNOMIA-project was to establish a European recommendation for the best clinical practice of administering coercive measures. This article reports the results on mechanical restraint., Methods: Local expert groups in 11 countries worked out their recommendations mostly in semi-structured group discussions. By use of a system of categories developed with a content-analytical method, these national documents were comparatively assessed, and integrated into a common clinical recommendation., Results: Legal and clinical pre-conditions for the use of mechanical restraint, specific instructions for the clinical behaviour of different professional groups, ethical issues, and procedural aspects of quality assurance are reported in detail., Conclusions: Compared with established clinical guidelines, similarities concerning basic principles of clinical use appear to be higher than similarities concerning practical details. Future development of guidelines for the best practice of coercive measures urgently needs the use of advanced methodology.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. [The clinical practice of coercive measures in psychiatric hospital care--and the culture of dealing (scientifically) with this topic].
- Author
-
Kallert TW
- Subjects
- Commitment of Persons with Psychiatric Disorders, Ethics, Medical, Germany, Humans, Mental Disorders rehabilitation, Substance-Related Disorders rehabilitation, Coercion, Hospitalization, Hospitals, Psychiatric ethics, Mental Disorders therapy
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. [On the outcome of the treatment of mentally disordered criminal offenders (according to section 64 German Penal Code) suffering from addictive disorders].
- Author
-
Gericke B and Kallert TW
- Subjects
- Adult, Alcoholism epidemiology, Comorbidity, Female, Germany, Humans, Male, Patient Readmission, Prisoners legislation & jurisprudence, Recurrence, Socialization, Socioeconomic Factors, Substance Abuse Treatment Centers, Alcoholism rehabilitation, Commitment of Persons with Psychiatric Disorders legislation & jurisprudence, Crime legislation & jurisprudence, Illicit Drugs, Outcome Assessment, Health Care, Prisoners psychology, Substance-Related Disorders rehabilitation
- Abstract
Objective: To provide an overview on the increase of forensic psychiatric hospitalizations in Saxony, and present findings on criminal conviction and recidivism rates of 277 criminal offenders ordered to a forensic psychiatric facility caring for addictive disorders between 1996 and 2001., Methods: Cluster- and regression-analytic procedures identified predictive variables for declaring the forensic psychiatric hospitalization as useless, and for relevant criminal offences after discharge., Results: About 85 % of the study sample showed more than four offences and more than 1.5 years of imprisonment before admission to the index-treatment episode. About half of the patients was successfully treated as indicated by being released on licence. Socialization in institutions, social disintegration before admission, and absconding during the index-treatment episode are important factors increasing the probability of declaring the hospitalization as useless. In the 2-year observation period, the criminal recidivism rate was 40.0 %., Conclusions: Social reintegration of this group of mentally disordered criminal offenders is as difficult as important. Findings on recidivism rates indicate a need for extending the number of specialized forensic outpatient departments and a need to focus on primary prevention.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Are day hospitals effective for acutely ill psychiatric patients? A European multicenter randomized controlled trial.
- Author
-
Kallert TW, Priebe S, McCabe R, Kiejna A, Rymaszewska J, Nawka P, Ocvár L, Raboch J, Stárková-Kalisová L, Koch R, and Schützwohl M
- Subjects
- Acute Disease, Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Europe, Female, Humans, Inpatients, Male, Middle Aged, Patient Satisfaction, Quality of Life, Day Care, Medical, Mental Disorders therapy
- Abstract
Objective: Acute psychiatric day care has been proposed as an alternative to conventional inpatient care, yet the evidence of its effectiveness is inconsistent and based only on single-site studies in 3 countries. The aim of this multicenter randomized controlled trial was to establish the effectiveness of acute day hospital care in a large sample across a range of mental health care systems., Method: The trial was conducted from December 2000 to September 2003 in 5 European countries, with a sample of 1117 voluntarily admitted patients. Immediately before or very shortly after admission to the participating psychiatric facilities, patients were randomly allocated to treatment in a day hospital or an inpatient ward. Psychopathology, treatment satisfaction, subjective quality of life, and social disabilities were assessed at admission, at discharge, and 3 and 12 months after discharge. An intention-to-treat analysis was conducted using fixed-effects linear models with structured error covariance matrices and covariates., Results: Day hospital care was as effective as conventional inpatient care with respect to psychopathologic symptoms, treatment satisfaction, and quality of life. It was more effective on social functioning at discharge and at the 3- and 12-month follow-up assessments., Conclusion: This study, which has more than doubled the existing evidence base, has shown that day hospital care is as effective on clinical outcomes as conventional inpatient care and more effective on social outcomes., Clinical Trials Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov identifier NCT00153959.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. [On the efficacy of acute psychiatric day-care treatment in a one-year-follow-up. A comparison to inpatient treatment within a randomised controlled trial].
- Author
-
Schützwohl M, Koch R, and Kallert TW
- Subjects
- Acute Disease, Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale, Caregivers psychology, Cohort Studies, Cost of Illness, Follow-Up Studies, Germany, Humans, Patient Discharge, Psychotic Disorders psychology, Treatment Outcome, Crisis Intervention, Day Care, Medical, Hospitalization, Psychotic Disorders therapy
- Abstract
Objective: To compare the effectiveness of acute psychiatric day-hospital treatment and inpatient treatment with respect to a one-year follow-up., Method: Within a randomised controlled trial, patients and relatives were assessed at different levels of outcome three months and 12 months after patients' discharge using the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (24-Item-Version), the Manchester Assessment of Quality of Life (MANSA), the Groningen Social Disabilities Schedule (GSDS), the Berlin Inventory for the Assessment of Needs (BeBI), and the Involvement Evaluation Questionnaire (IEQ). Using estimation and test of contrasts in linear models of analysis of variance with structured covariance matrix, analyses conducted included data of all n = 191 patients having been included into the German centre of the study., Results: With respect to all measures, day-hospital treatment proved to be at least as effective as inpatient care., Conclusion: The study supports earlier findings that showed no differences in long-term effectiveness of acute psychiatric day-hospital treatment as compared to inpatient treatment.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Standardized assessment of psychopathology by relatives of mentally disordered patients. Preliminary results of using the positive and negative syndrome scale to compare schizophrenic and affective disorders.
- Author
-
Nitsche I and Kallert TW
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Ambulatory Care, Bipolar Disorder psychology, Chronic Disease, Depressive Disorder psychology, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Personality Assessment statistics & numerical data, Psychiatric Status Rating Scales statistics & numerical data, Psychometrics standards, Psychometrics statistics & numerical data, Psychopathology, Recurrence, Reference Standards, Reproducibility of Results, Bipolar Disorder diagnosis, Caregivers psychology, Depressive Disorder diagnosis, Personality Assessment standards, Psychiatric Status Rating Scales standards, Schizophrenia diagnosis, Schizophrenic Psychology
- Abstract
Background: For optimizing the validity of diagnoses of mental disorders, several sources of information should be used to assess psychopathological symptoms. Among these are relatives of patients with mental illness. The very low number of empirical studies examining the assessment of psychopathology by relatives of adult, nondemented mentally ill patients stands in significant contrast to the clinical importance of this source of information, however., Sampling and Methods: Using the Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale (PANSS), researchers asked 163 relatives of patients with the main clinical ICD-10 diagnosis of schizophrenic, recurrent depressive or bipolar disorders to rate the current symptoms of the patients at the time of outpatient community-oriented treatment., Results: On average, severity of symptoms was rated as absent or minimal, although anxiety, depression and passive/apathetic social as well as emotional withdrawal, motor retardation, poor attention, and disturbance of volition were clearly rated above the PANSS mean total score for all patients. A six-factor structure identified by factor analysis better illustrates the significant differences in the assessments of the three main diagnostic groups than the three established PANSS scales. With the exception of 'problematic social behavior', differences among the diagnostic groups appeared in all factors and were particularly pronounced for 'delusional beliefs' and 'motor impairments'., Conclusions: The results of this study showed that the use of standardized instruments such as PANSS for the assessment of psychopathology by relatives is not only practical, but produces adequately reliable results. The use of PANSS for this purpose, however, requires interviewing of relatives by trained experts able to explain technical terms. Because this study did not sufficiently explore the validity of this approach, further research on this specific issue is urgently needed and should, for example, assess the concordance of ratings between professionals and relatives as well as correlation with suitable external criteria., ((c) 2007 S. Karger AG, Basel.)
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. [Impact of structure and context on utilization of socio-psychiatric services in Saxony--a multi-level-analysis].
- Author
-
Kluge H, Becker T, Kallert TW, Matschinger H, and Angermeyer MC
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Analysis of Variance, Catchment Area, Health statistics & numerical data, Diagnosis, Dual (Psychiatry), Female, Germany, Health Services Accessibility statistics & numerical data, Humans, Male, Mental Disorders rehabilitation, Middle Aged, Multivariate Analysis, Resource Allocation statistics & numerical data, Risk Factors, Schizophrenia rehabilitation, Social Work, Psychiatric organization & administration, Statistics as Topic, Substance-Related Disorders rehabilitation, Utilization Review statistics & numerical data, Mental Disorders epidemiology, Schizophrenia epidemiology, Social Work, Psychiatric statistics & numerical data, Substance-Related Disorders epidemiology
- Abstract
Objective: To analyse the influence of structural (service) aspects and context (catchment area) variables on the individual use of socio-psychiatric services in Saxony., Method: Data collected in 34 services were used. For the analysis of the variance components a multi-level model with random effects was computed using data at two levels ([1] client, and [2] service/catchment area)., Results: Service use was substantially influenced by structural/context factors which accounted for a proportion of 10 to 50 % of the variance depending on the (sub-)group of users included in the analysis. The impact of service structure and context on service use was particularly strong in the subgroup of service users with very high service utilisation.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. [Do relatives of patients with different mental disorders also differ in their attitudes towards these disorders?].
- Author
-
Nitsche I and Kallert TW
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Germany epidemiology, Humans, Mental Disorders epidemiology, Middle Aged, Surveys and Questionnaires, Attitude to Health, Caregivers psychology, Family psychology, Mental Disorders psychology
- Abstract
Background: Studies on the attitudes of relatives of psychiatric patients have usually focused on views of causes and treatment options for schizophrenic disorders. Comparative surveys, especially those dealing with attitudes on social distance and restrictions, have to date been rather an exception., Methods: In the present study, 161 relatives and other close reference persons of patients with schizophrenic, recurrent depressive, or bipolar affective disorder were interviewed with the German version of the Questionnaire on the Opinions of the Family between February and July 2003., Results: Relatives of patients with schizophrenic disorder differ from the other two groups especially in attitudes displaying greater social distance toward mental disorders and less hope for social reintegration of these patients. Independently of the form of disorder, natural relatives exhibit the greatest social distance toward mental disorders. Differences in attitudes on the basis of patients' and relatives' socio-demographic and clinical characteristics are rather scarce., Conclusions: Attitude toward mental disorders is an important trait of relatives supporting mentally ill persons. Differences in the effects of disorder-specific attitudes on relatives' well-being and their perception of burden have to be investigated further to enable the development of supportive strategies suited to the various groups of psychiatric patient relatives.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. [Predictors of the discharge status in acute day-hospital and inpatient care - a comparison between the two settings within a randomised controlled trial].
- Author
-
Schützwohl M, Koch R, and Kallert TW
- Subjects
- Adult, Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale statistics & numerical data, Female, Humans, Male, Mental Disorders diagnosis, Mental Disorders epidemiology, Middle Aged, Mood Disorders diagnosis, Mood Disorders epidemiology, Neurotic Disorders diagnosis, Neurotic Disorders epidemiology, Outcome and Process Assessment, Health Care statistics & numerical data, Patient Satisfaction statistics & numerical data, Personality Disorders diagnosis, Personality Disorders epidemiology, Psychometrics, Psychotic Disorders diagnosis, Psychotic Disorders epidemiology, Quality of Life psychology, Schizophrenia diagnosis, Schizophrenia epidemiology, Day Care, Medical statistics & numerical data, Hospitalization statistics & numerical data, Mental Disorders therapy, Mood Disorders therapy, Neurotic Disorders therapy, Patient Discharge statistics & numerical data, Personality Disorders therapy, Psychotic Disorders therapy, Schizophrenia therapy
- Abstract
Objective: To search for predictors of the discharge status in day-hospital patients and inpatients, within a randomized controlled trial on the effectiveness of acute psychiatric day hospital treatment as compared to inpatient treatment., Method: The study was conducted at the Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, Dresden University of Technology. Regression analyses assessing the relationship between theoretically chosen predictor variables and the discharge status as measured using the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS 4.0) were conducted on a sample of 69 day-hospital patients and a sample of 76 inpatients., Results: In both settings, admission status was the strongest predictor of discharge status. As concerns day-hospital patients, those suffering from a personality disorder as well as those showing a higher degree of social disability were discharged with a higher level of psychopathological symptoms. Among inpatients, those suffering from an anxiety, obsessive-compulsive, or adjustment disorder as well as those being retired or unemployed benefited less from treatment., Conclusions: Given the explorative character of the present study, further prospective studies are needed in order to cross-validate findings on the potential criteria for allocating acute mentally ill either to day-hospital or inpatient treatment.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. [Patients' assessments of acute psychiatric day hospital and inpatient care. Analyses of open questions within the context of a randomised controlled trial].
- Author
-
Eichler T, Schützwohl M, Glöckner M, Matthes C, and Kallert TW
- Subjects
- Acute Disease, Adult, Female, Germany, Humans, Male, Mental Disorders psychology, Middle Aged, Quality Assurance, Health Care, Surveys and Questionnaires, Day Care, Medical psychology, Mental Disorders therapy, Patient Admission, Patient Satisfaction
- Abstract
Objective: Within the context of the EDEN-study, a multi-centre randomised controlled trial comparing acute psychiatric day hospital with inpatient care, patients' assessments of treatment as well as their setting-preferences for future treatment have been studied., Method: Patients' assessments were collected using the Clients' Scale for Assessment of Treatment (CAT). The quantitative content analysis refers to the answers to the open questions of the CAT by all day hospital patients and inpatients in the Dresden project centre who completed the questionnaire one week after admission and again at discharge., Results: Day hospital patients as well as inpatients assessed their treatment altogether as pleasant and effective. Interpersonal contact to the staff and other patients was evaluated as sound and helpful. Differences between the settings appeared primarily with regard to criticisms: Day hospital patients were mainly dissatisfied with their daily routine, inpatients criticized particularly structural conditions such as premises and food. In case of a hospital readmission, the majority of the patients would prefer that setting they had been randomised to within the EDEN-study. However, a tendency to prefer treatment in the day hospital was found., Conclusions: Acute mentally ill patients provide a substantially favourable assessment of both day hospital and inpatient care. Particularly the criticism of the day hospital patients contains important information for improving the quality of psychiatric care.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. [Involuntary medication in psychiatry].
- Author
-
Steinert T and Kallert TW
- Subjects
- Commitment of Persons with Psychiatric Disorders legislation & jurisprudence, Cross-Sectional Studies, Drug-Related Side Effects and Adverse Reactions, Ethics, Medical, Europe, Humans, Incidence, Practice Guidelines as Topic, Antipsychotic Agents administration & dosage, Informed Consent legislation & jurisprudence, Psychotic Disorders drug therapy, Treatment Refusal legislation & jurisprudence
- Abstract
Objective: A systematic review should take into account epidemiological, clinical, ethical, and legal aspects., Method: Search for literature was performed by Medline and Medpilot, guidelines were obtained via the internet or from own ongoing research projects., Results: Epidemiological data on the frequency of involuntary medication is only scarcely available. The incidence on psychiatric wards seems to be between 2 % and 8 % of patients, predominantly with schizophrenic or bipolar disorder. In general, the efficacy of involuntary medication has been poorly evaluated in inpatients, two randomised controlled trials from the U. S. are available regarding involuntary outpatient commitment including involuntary medication. Therefore, the empirical database on aspects of clinical safety of involuntary medication is quite small. However, a considerable body of literature exists with respect to patients' opinions on involuntary medication, mostly demonstrating a highly critical attitude. Some European countries already have guidelines, but the overall situation suggests the need for further improvement. In 2004, the EU Council ratified a guideline for future European legislation on involuntary treatment of people with serious mental illness (white paper)., Discussion: A very controversial discussion of former years has become more reasonable, ideological anti-psychiatric criticism being increasingly replaced by search for evidence, development of guidelines, clearer legislation, and a tendency of European harmonization.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. [Is mental health services research in need of randomised controlled trials?].
- Author
-
Kallert TW
- Subjects
- Bias, Humans, Outcome and Process Assessment, Health Care standards, Residence Characteristics, Evidence-Based Medicine, Health Services Research trends, Mental Health Services standards, Quality Assurance, Health Care standards, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic standards
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. The EUNOMIA project on coercion in psychiatry: study design and preliminary data.
- Author
-
Kallert TW, Glöckner M, Onchev G, Raboch J, Karastergiou A, Solomon Z, Magliano L, Dembinskas A, Kiejna A, Nawka P, Torres-González F, Priebe S, and Kjellin L
- Abstract
Previous national research has shown significant variation in several aspects of coercive treatment measures in psychiatry. The EUNOMIA project, an international study funded by the European Commission, aims to assess the clinical practice of these measures and their outcomes. Its naturalistic and epidemiological design is being implemented at 13 centres in 12 European countries. This article describes the design of the study and provides preliminary data on the catchment areas, staff, available facilities and modalities of care at the participating centres.
- Published
- 2005
41. [Evidence based community psychiatric community health care services in Germany: taking inventory].
- Author
-
Kallert TW, Leisse M, Kulke C, and Kluge H
- Subjects
- Germany epidemiology, Clinical Trials as Topic methods, Community Mental Health Services statistics & numerical data, Outcome Assessment, Health Care methods, Quality Assurance, Health Care methods, Research Design
- Abstract
Purpose and Methods: One of the outcomes of reforming mental health care in Germany has been the establishment of a range of community mental health services. However, current evidence for the effectiveness of these services is slight. Based on a literature search this article provides a systematic overview of empirical research in this sphere. In detail, social psychiatric services, crisis centres, psychosocial contact points, day care centres, and various models of supported housing and work/employment are assessed. Available results on effectiveness are classified according to their level of scientific evidence., Results: The current state of research is characterised by the situation that effectiveness of the care approach provided by social psychiatric services and some types of supported housing and work/employment has been demonstrated at a medium level of scientific evidence. In contrast, the evidence level of mental health care provided in crisis centres, psychosocial contact points, and day care centres is poor., Conclusion: The major reasons for this lack of research are: heterogeneity of care models and staffing levels in the different community mental health services, lack of standardised documentation and reporting system in these services, and lack of research culture to utilise routine outcome data. The consequences of aiming at increasing the level of scientific evidence in this sphere would be to intensify funding of research projects and to implement high quality research designs such as randomised controlled trials.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. [Direct costs of acute day hospital care: results from a randomized controlled trial].
- Author
-
Kallert TW, Schönherr R, Schnippa S, Matthes C, Glöckner M, and Schützwohl M
- Subjects
- Acute Disease, Adjustment Disorders economics, Adjustment Disorders epidemiology, Adjustment Disorders therapy, Adult, Costs and Cost Analysis, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Formaldehyde, Hospitals, University economics, Hospitals, University statistics & numerical data, Humans, Length of Stay economics, Male, Mental Disorders epidemiology, Mental Disorders therapy, Mental Health Services statistics & numerical data, Mood Disorders economics, Mood Disorders epidemiology, Mood Disorders therapy, National Health Programs statistics & numerical data, Psychiatric Department, Hospital economics, Psychiatric Department, Hospital statistics & numerical data, Quaternary Ammonium Compounds, Schizophrenia economics, Schizophrenia epidemiology, Schizophrenia therapy, Utilization Review statistics & numerical data, Day Care, Medical economics, Health Care Costs statistics & numerical data, Health Expenditures statistics & numerical data, Mental Disorders economics, Mental Health Services economics, National Health Programs economics, Patient Admission economics
- Abstract
Objective: So far only five randomized controlled trials on acute day hospital care have assessed direct health care costs and compared these with costs of conventional inpatient treatment. This paper aims to close this research gap for German speaking countries., Method: Another trial was conducted at the Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, Dresden University of Technology. Using the Client Service Receipt Inventory interviews with patients at three time-points (admission, discharge, three months after discharge) assessed their utilization of health care services. Based on the results of a separate regional cost-calculation project, costs of individual care packages could be calculated. 144 patients (day care: n = 75, inpatient care: n = 69) with complete data sets for all time-points of assessment were included in the intention-to-treat-analysis. Means of direct costs (given in Euro and referred to Deutsche Mark prices in 2000) were computed, and t-tests and bootstrap-procedures were used for group comparison. Furthermore, missing and sensitivity analyses were conducted., Results: Patients in the acute day hospital caused mean direct health care costs of 12 401 per person within the entire period assessed. Thus, their cost level falls below the mean costs of inpatient care (15,924 euro per person) by 22.1 %. Missing analyses showed no selection effects on cost results caused by patients who could not be assessed at all defined time-points. Costs for inpatient and day care services were the most sensitive parameters for maintaining the statistically significant differences of cost means demonstrated between the two study groups., Conclusion: For German-speaking countries, this study shows for the first time that acute day care -- which has been demonstrated to be clinically at least as effective as inpatient care - is the less expensive option if these two settings are comparatively assessed.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. [Acute psychiatric day hospital treatment: is the effectiveness of this treatment approach still questionable?].
- Author
-
Kallert TW, Matthes C, Glöckner M, Eichler T, Koch R, and Schützwohl M
- Subjects
- Acute Disease, Adult, Female, Germany, Hospitals, Psychiatric, Hospitals, University, Humans, Length of Stay statistics & numerical data, Male, Middle Aged, Outcome and Process Assessment, Health Care, Patient Admission standards, Patient Satisfaction statistics & numerical data, Psychiatric Department, Hospital standards, Day Care, Medical standards, Emergency Service, Hospital standards, Mental Disorders therapy
- Abstract
Objective: Currently, there is still a severe lack of methodologically sound empirical studies on acute psychiatric day hospital treatment in German-speaking countries that analyse the effectiveness of this increasingly important mode of service provision., Methods: Within a randomised controlled study design implemented at the Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, Dresden University of Technology, 99 general psychiatric patients received conventional inpatient treatment and 92 patients received acute day hospital treatment. At up to four time-points during the index-treatment episode patients were assessed at different levels of outcome: Psychopathology was rated by researchers using the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (24-Item-Version), and patients evaluated their satisfaction with treatment (Patientenbogen zur Behandlungszufriedenheit); at admission and discharge patients also assessed their subjective quality of life (Manchester Assessment of Quality of Life). Mean scale scores of these instruments are used for the intention-to-treat-analysis. Discharge status on these scales as well as mean ratings on these scales within the index-treatment episode serve as measures of effectiveness. For statistically identifying differences between the two settings five linear (co-)variance-analytical models were calculated for each target variable. Four models were adjusted to baseline-rating or to the individual period spent in treatment., Results: Initially, both groups did not differ in their relevant socio-demographic and illness-related features. Day hospital treatment (87,7 days) lasted significantly longer than inpatient treatment (67,8 days). Only results from an unadjusted statistical model as well as from a model adjusted to the individual period of index-hospitalisation demonstrated superior effectiveness of day hospital treatment on the discharge status of psychopathological symptomatology. However, in all statistical models there were no systematic differences of treatment-effectiveness related to satisfaction with treatment and subjective quality of life., Conclusion: For the first time in German-speaking countries, this study provides evidence for the effectiveness of acute day hospital treatment as compared to conventional inpatient treatment. If detailed eligibility criteria for patients are used as defined here, approximately 30 % of the general psychiatric patients in need of acute hospital-based treatment may be cared for in this special mode of day hospital service provision.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. A comparison of psychiatric day hospitals in five European countries: implications of their diversity for day hospital research.
- Author
-
Kallert TW, Glöckner M, Priebe S, Briscoe J, Rymaszewska J, Adamowski T, Nawka P, Reguliova H, Raboch J, Howardova A, and Schützwohl M
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Analysis of Variance, Cluster Analysis, Day Care, Medical statistics & numerical data, Europe, Health Care Surveys, Hospitals, Psychiatric statistics & numerical data, Humans, Mental Health Services statistics & numerical data, Middle Aged, Organizational Policy, Personnel Staffing and Scheduling, Surveys and Questionnaires, Utilization Review, Day Care, Medical organization & administration, Hospitals, Psychiatric organization & administration, Mental Health Services organization & administration
- Abstract
Objective: As the use of "day hospitals" increases, conceptual models of these services are changing dramatically across Europe. Therefore, the need arises for mental health services research to assess this process cross-nationally in a standardised and systematic way. Such research approaches should seek to maximise the generalisability of results from high-quality (e.g. randomised controlled) single- or multi-site trials assessing specific models of day hospital care., Method: Using a self-developed structured questionnaire, the European Day Hospital Evaluation (EDEN) study group carried out national surveys of the characteristics of day hospitals for general psychiatric patients in Germany, England, Poland, the Slovak Republic and the Czech Republic, during the period 2001--2002., Results: Response rates varied from 52 to 91 %. Findings show that day hospitals have no consistent profile of structural and procedural features. Similarities across countries focus on three main issues: on average, consideration of concepts oriented toward providing acute treatment are equivalent; disorders associated with disabled functioning in everyday life, high risk of somatic complications, and need for behaviour control are excluded to a comparable degree; and some core therapeutic activities are consistent with the main approaches of social psychiatry. Identified according to self-rated conceptions and extended with data from individual hospital's statistics on the clientele in 2000, three clusters of limited selectivity subdivide the services. One category focuses mainly on rehabilitative tasks; two categories are oriented toward providing acute treatment as an alternative to inpatient care, but combine this either with rehabilitative tasks or with equal additional functions of shortening inpatient treatment and providing psychotherapy. The distribution of services across these three clusters varies significantly in the five European countries., Conclusion: Future day hospital studies should always clarify the type of services being assessed. To fully consider the impact of their results, the current national and international health policy environment of these services should be taken into account. Such surveys require enhanced methodology, however, in order to identify clear, distinct categories of services characterised by overlapping programme functions, and to increase the generalisability of valid results from single- or multi-site trials.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. [Assessing deinstitutionalization of the nursing home area of a large state mental hospital from the point of view of patients and staff].
- Author
-
Kallert TW, Stoll A, Leisse M, and Winiecki P
- Subjects
- Chronic Disease, Cohort Studies, Germany, Halfway Houses, Humans, Job Satisfaction, Nurses, Patient Satisfaction, Patients, Personnel, Hospital, Psychiatric Status Rating Scales, Quality of Life, Schizophrenia therapy, Schizophrenic Psychology, Social Environment, Deinstitutionalization standards, Hospitals, Psychiatric standards, Hospitals, State standards, Nursing Homes organization & administration
- Abstract
Objective: Within the deinstitutionalization process of a large psychiatric hospital, the development of two cohorts of patients with chronic schizophrenia is compared over a two-year period: patients living in the hospital's nursing-home area (n = 50) vs. patients already released to two social therapeutic hostels (n = 51). Results of the cohort study were compared with assessments of nurses working in the nursing home (n = 55), focusing on their subjective views of the deinstitutionalization process and its impact on their working conditions., Methods: Patients are assessed through yearly home-visits in their place of residence. The instruments used measure several outcome parameters: psychopathology, social disabilities, subjective quality of life, and normative needs for care. Concurrent staff assessments were conducted using standardized survey instruments focusing on current working conditions and quality of teamwork. Nineteen nurses participated in qualitative interviews evaluating the deinstitutionalization process., Results: For all measures, patients living in the nursing home show significantly worse outcomes. Furthermore, during the study period 34 % experienced a change in their living situation with which they were dissatisfied. Needs for care and the number of areas of "unmet" need increased significantly for this subgroup. Patients living in social therapeutic hostels demonstrate stable levels of psychopathological symptoms, social disabilities, and needs for care. Assessments indicating a deterioration in patients' subjective quality of life focus mainly on areas important for social contacts. Regarding "personal concerns" and "insecurity at work", ratings from nursing home staff were significantly worse than those of a reference group from several other health care institutions (n = 224). Staff showed a tendency to give higher ratings for their opportunities to participate in decisions, in contrast with the low ratings for chances to improve their knowledge in the workplace, a result which may indicate a lack of prospects. In general, staff faces the conundrum of being asked to adopt a new mental health care paradigm while organisational structures are being eliminated and insecurity about career opportunities is increasing., Conclusion: To adequately manage deinstitutionalization of care, all participating parties must be involved in the process as early as possible to clarify expectations and to demonstrate commitment to future opportunities in the new system.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Needs for care of chronic schizophrenic patients in long-term community treatment.
- Author
-
Kallert TW, Leisse M, and Winiecki P
- Subjects
- Adult, Aftercare psychology, Chronic Disease psychology, Community Mental Health Services statistics & numerical data, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Germany, Humans, Logistic Models, Male, Middle Aged, Treatment Outcome, Aftercare organization & administration, Community Mental Health Services organization & administration, Needs Assessment, Schizophrenia therapy, Schizophrenic Psychology
- Abstract
Background: Specific problems of long-term community care of chronic schizophrenic patients are an under-researched area interesting for the provision of regional mental health care., Methods: This study focuses on a 4 1/2-year prospective assessment of normative needs for care in a cohort (initially N = 115) living in the Dresden care region (Germany). At six time-points, normative needs for care were assessed with the Needs for Care Assessment (NFCAS)., Results: The total number of problems did not change significantly over the study period. The average number of met needs was lower at the longer-term follow-up assessments,due particularly to a decrease in the social section. This trend is also demonstrated for the average number of unmet needs. In contrast, the mean number of "unmeetable needs" increased. Consistently, 70-80% of the patients exhibit problems in positive psychotic and negative symptoms, household affairs and recreational activities. Communication, occupation and recreational activities constitute a trio of social needs not met for nearly one-third of the patients disabled in these respects. Logistic analyses of regression could not identify a predictive model for the total needs development within the 4 1/2-year community treatment., Conclusion: The rather stable pattern of needs for care seems to define clear long-lasting tasks for community mental health services. For chronic schizophrenic patients, services should especially focus on social skills training and psychoeducational approaches. Due to a wide range of possible factors of influence, however, planning long-term context-dependent processes of care in the community lacks a clear evidence base.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Suicidality of chronic schizophrenic patients in long-term community care.
- Author
-
Kallert TW, Leisse M, and Winiecki P
- Subjects
- Adult, Chronic Disease, Dangerous Behavior, Female, Humans, Male, Community Mental Health Services statistics & numerical data, Long-Term Care, Schizophrenia epidemiology, Suicide statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
In the provision of mental health care for chronic schizophrenic patients, the specific problems and requirements of long-term community care of suicidal behavior is an area of research not yet fully explored. This study focuses on a 4 1/2-year prospective assessment of normative and subjective needs for care related to this specific area for a cohort living in the Dresden region (Germany). One significant result of this study shows the constant high level of needs for care in the area of suicidal behavior imposed on community services by 30-40% of this diagnostic group. Furthermore, the study identified a special high-risk subgroup for suicides as well as specific needs for care. This subgroup is characterized by clinical reasons for the index hospitalization (suicidal risk or attempt) as well as by psychopathological features (suicidal thoughts and higher levels of anxiety/depression) 1 month after release from index hospitalization. Four items of care were rated as potentially effective for addressing suicidality in the community setting: clinical assessment, increased supervision or systematic recording of (suicidal) behavior, medication, and a sheltered environment. Because these care measures are provided, the percentage of unmet normative needs for the area of suicidal behavior was rather low. Due to limitations of the instrument used for assessment of normative needs, the Needs for Care Assessment (NFCAS), the care measures most frequently provided do not define a quality standard of community care for this problem. A subjective needs assessment differing from the normative approach has to be integrated in establishing guidelines for effective community care.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. [Individual needs and allocation of home-based community psychiatric services. Analysis of an example for ambulatory care living].
- Author
-
Leisse M and Kallert TW
- Subjects
- Community Mental Health Services methods, Female, Germany, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Patient Satisfaction, Schizophrenia diagnosis, Severity of Illness Index, Treatment Outcome, Community Mental Health Services organization & administration, Home Care Services, Hospital-Based, Needs Assessment, Quality of Life psychology, Resource Allocation methods, Schizophrenia rehabilitation, Schizophrenic Psychology
- Abstract
In the Federal Republic of Germany, rebuilding the structures of complementary care in the newly formed eastern states created the opportunity to provide at-home care in the community as a low-threshold flanking measure for chronically mentally ill individuals generally capable of living independently. For a group of patients with chronic schizophrenic disorders (ICD-10: F20) living on their own in the community with at-home mental health care ( n=83), a study of data focusing on psychopathology, social disability, need for psychiatric care, and (subjective) quality of life demonstrates that the principle of need-oriented care has not yet been realized consistently. This applies especially to the provision of community services of varying treatment intensity based on the differing severities of psychopathological symptoms and social disabilities of individual clients. Furthermore, the results of the study show that the severity of psychosocial impairments is associated with a rather negative assessment of the subjective quality of life, whereas the living arrangement has no influence on satisfaction with life. The conclusion for organizing community mental health care is to establish flexible provision of services oriented to standardized individual analyses of needs for care.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Normative needs for community-based psychiatric care of patients with schizophrenia in different residential settings.
- Author
-
Leisse M and Kallert TW
- Subjects
- Chronic Disease, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Quality of Health Care, Community Mental Health Services standards, Health Services Needs and Demand, Residential Treatment methods, Schizophrenia therapy
- Abstract
This study aims to assess the extent of needs for mental health care of patients with schizophrenia living in different residential settings and to evaluate the quality of care in these types of complementary services recently established in the East German region of Dresden. Survey data from the first wave of a longitudinal study of five patient subgroups (N=244) living in (1) a psychiatric nursing home, (2) social therapeutic hostels, (3) sheltered community residential care, (4) at home in the family and (5) alone in one's own home are reported. Normative individual needs for care were assessed using the needs for care assessment (NCA). The patient groups show clear differences in the extent of needs for care, especially in the social NCA section. Patients in the psychiatric nursing home and in the social therapeutic hostels exhibit the highest numbers of areas of need. Positive psychotic symptoms, negative symptoms and neuroleptic side effects are the most prominent clinical areas of need in all subgroups. Patients are most frequently socially disabled in terms of managing household affairs, recreational activities and household chores. Deficits in the need status could be found in the NCA areas of 'negative symptoms,' 'recreational activities,' and 'communication.' The basic needs for mental health care of patients with schizophrenia are met in the established sheltered residential settings. Current deficiencies in providing psychological and educational interventions focusing on coping strategies and social skills training should be minimised in order to decrease the identified deficits in the need status.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. [Current structural and procedural quality markers of psychiatric day hospitals in Germany].
- Author
-
Kallert TW, Schützwohl M, and Matthes C
- Subjects
- Combined Modality Therapy methods, Germany, Health Services Research organization & administration, Humans, Psychotherapy organization & administration, Community Mental Health Services organization & administration, Day Care, Medical organization & administration, Mental Disorders rehabilitation, Quality Assurance, Health Care organization & administration, Quality Indicators, Health Care organization & administration, Social Change, Social Environment
- Abstract
Background: Particularly in the last 10 years the conceptual models of partial hospitalization are subjected to major changes, reflecting to the integration of day hospitals in regional mental health service systems and especially to the provision of an alternative to acute inpatient treatment. Systematic nation-wide surveys assessing these changes are missing., Method: After developing a structured questionnaire integrating differences in European mental health care systems, a German national survey of current structural and procedural quality markers of psychiatric day hospitals was carried out in 2001. 51.4 % of the addressed psychiatric hospitals (N = 191) returned the questionnaire. Analysis is based on descriptive and correlational methods, compares the situation in the Eastern and Western German Federal States, and uses cluster analysis to differentiate the day hospitals according to their main program function., Results: In general, establishment of day hospitals in Germany has not yet reached the evidence-based capacity level. This statement especially applies to the situation in rural areas. 56 % of the day hospitals currently assess themselves as an alternative to inpatient treatment simultaneously providing differentiated psychotherapeutic treatment. Comparing clinical institutions in the Eastern and Western parts of Germany demonstrates the clearer orientation towards acute psychiatric treatment in the recently (mostly after 1995) established East-German hospitals. This is reflected in the spectrum of main clinical diagnoses, in the average length of treatment episodes, in the definitions of contraindications, and in the provided diagnostic measures. While administrative circumstances are homogeneous for day hospitals, there is a considerable variation in staff numbers related to the core professions., Conclusions: Guidelines for professional training and continuous qualification as well as staffing have to be modified according to requirements resulting from the change of clinical functions. Each day hospital has to clarify and define its main program function(s), and has to better communicate the consequences for the regional mental health service system.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.