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Quality Improvement in Ambulatory Mental Health Settings
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 April 2020
Abstract
Eight ambulatory Mental Health Settings have been commited in a national pilot intervention aiming at improving the quality of the service they deliver from April 2006 to december 2007. This twenty months intervention allowed teams to set operational bjectives, to describe their organization, to implement an actions’plan and to evaluate their results.
The main operational objectives they chose were the following:
• Delay for an initial appointment.
• Delay for an appointment following a discharge from hospitalization.
• Rate of non attendance.
The main findings were awide variations in performance from a setting to one another (median delay for a first appointment with a psychiatrist ranging from one to seven weeks, paid psychiatrist working time for a single appointment ranging from 0.6 to 2.5 hours...), lack of formalisation of processes (including major processes as intake, discharge from hospital...), the absence of objectives set by the managemers.
Actions’plans included very basical actions as setting dashboards and objectives, setting strategy to decrease non attendance, sharing diaries, reorganising meetings, mapping patient’ pathway.
Finally, some results were obtained as:
• reduction of delays for first appointments (4 settings amongs 8);
• reduction of delays for a appointment after hospital discharge (1 amongst 8).
- Type
- P02-180
- Information
- European Psychiatry , Volume 24 , Issue S1: 17th EPA Congress - Lisbon, Portugal, January 2009, Abstract book , January 2009 , 24-E870
- Copyright
- Copyright © European Psychiatric Association 2009
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