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Reply to Drs Hubberling and Bertram’s Letter to the Editor.

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 June 2018

Benjamin O’Keeffe
Affiliation:
Finglas Community Mental Health Services, Dublin 9, Ireland
Vincent Russell
Affiliation:
Department of Psychiatry, Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland, RCSI Education and Research Centre, Beaumont, Dublin 9, Ireland
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Abstract

Type
Correspondence
Copyright
© College of Psychiatrists of Ireland 2018 

Author’s Reply

We thank Drs Hubberling and Bertram for their positive comments on the findings of our study, especially with regard to the importance of home treatment services and socio-cultural context in which home treatment services are planned, delivered and evaluated. A case in point is a study of home treatment in a predominantly rural context (Iqbal et al. Reference Iqbal, Nkire, Nwachukwu, Young and Russell2012). From an Irish perspective, we wished to highlight the dangers in planning and implementing services based solely on research extrapolated from other jurisdictions.

The evaluation and comparison of outcomes between hospital care and home-based care is complex (Murphy et al. Reference Murphy, Irving, Adams and Waqar2015; Paton et al. Reference Paton2016). Interventions, patient characteristics and service setting need to be determined and specified in order to facilitate comparison, as context is often not adequately captured in research methodology.

We would respectively demur from Hubberling and Bertram’s suggestion that if somebody needs antipsychotic medication, it probably does not matter so much whether this is done at home or on a ward. Surely, any intervention, including pharmacological treatment, cannot be isolated from the setting in which it is delivered? Offering antipsychotic medication at home, we suggest, is experienced quite differently from the same pharmacological management in the hospital, from the perspective of patients and families. Medication management, as one intervention, inevitably interacts with other factors that powerfully influence outcome.

With regard to borderline personality disorder, our experience suggests that this patient group can be served better by other interventions and that the short-term nature of acute home treatment is often problematic. We note Turhan & Taylor’s (Reference Turhan and Taylor2006) recent study which found that home treatment can be beneficial but also found that most patients with a diagnosis of borderline personality disorder admitted to home treatment were frequent users of the service.

We share Hubberling and Bertram’s view that diagnosis matters when evaluating who benefits most and least from acute home treatment and that admission criteria based on vague clinical descriptors and unproven crisis theory principles are unreliable (Hubbeling & Bertram, Reference Hubbeling and Bertram2012).

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare that there are no conflicts of interest.

References

Hubbeling, D, Bertram, R (2012). Crisis Resolution Teams in the UK and elsewhere. Journal of Mental Health 21, 285295.Google Scholar
Iqbal, N, Nkire, N, Nwachukwu, I, Young, C, Russell, V (2012). Home-based treatment and psychiatric admission rates: experience of an adult community mental health service in Ireland. International Journal of Psychiatry in Clinical Practice 16, 300306.Google Scholar
Murphy, SM, Irving, CB, Adams, CE, Waqar, M (2015). Crisis intervention for people with severe mental illnesses. Cochrane Database Systematic Reviews 3, CD001087.Google Scholar
Paton, F, Wright K, Ayre N, Dare C, Johnson S, Lloyd-Evans B, Simpson A, Webber M, Meader N (2016). Improving outcomes for people in mental health crisis: a rapid synthesis of the evidence for available models of care. Health Technology Assessment 20, 1162.Google Scholar
Turhan, S, Taylor, M (2016). The outcomes of home treatment for borderline personality disorder. BJPsych Bulletin 40, 306309.Google Scholar