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Pros and cons of specialised care in bipolar disorder: an international perspective

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2018

Eduard Vieta*
Affiliation:
Hospital Clinic, University of Barcelona, IDIBAPS, CIBERSAM, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain
*
Eduard Vieta, Hospital Clinic, 170 Villarroel St, 08036 Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain. Email: [email protected]
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Summary

Highly specialised care may have both pros and cons. Centralised expert treatment may be more effective than standard community care for bipolar disorder. Rather than trying to solve the false dichotomy between specialised v. community care, the rational integration of both approaches may enhance quality of care and cost-effectiveness.

Type
Editorials
Copyright
Copyright © Royal College of Psychiatrists, 2013 

Specialisation in psychiatry

Specialisation is inherent to the progress of medicine. A century ago, the amount of knowledge and skills that were required to work as a physician was small enough to cover practically all medical conditions. Nowadays, there are specialists within specialties (do not ask a neurologist who works in the field of Alzheimer's disease to decide on the treatment of a patient with epilepsy). Obviously, general practitioners are necessary because they have the broader view of most common and non-severe conditions, and because they appropriately act as the gatekeepers for specialised care. A system based on specialists only would go nowhere. Psychiatry is not an exception, and there is a need for both generalists and specialists. Patients with the most common conditions and who are mild-to-moderately ill may well be diagnosed and treated by general psychiatrists, but for severe, complex and unusual cases, more specialised experts are and will be necessary. The current state of affairs makes it impossible for one doctor to be truly knowledgeable about the management of, for example, a severe case of anorexia nervosa, an old man with alcoholism and pathological gambling, a complex case of schizophrenia with obsessive–compulsive features, and a patient with rapid-cycling bipolar disorder. Child psychiatry and addiction psychiatry are now accepted in many countries as subspecialties within psychiatry, and several others may be in the near future.

One of the barriers to specialised care is cost. Specialised care is generally more expensive than community care and is not always more effective. In the context of public healthcare, specialisation has emerged in tertiary hospitals as a way to deal with complex conditions and technological progress; in the private sector, there may be specific facilities that have evolved into specialised-care settings for a given condition or technique. Specialisation may be cost-effective in the public sector as long as the most appropriate level of care (i.e. tertiary v. community) is provided for a given case. Psychiatry may be especially vulnerable to some policies that downgrade the importance of medical skills, including diagnosis, treatment and monitoring. In many instances, this has resulted in services that are better suited to delivering non-specific, psychosocial support rather than a process of thorough, broad-based diagnostic assessment with formulation of aetiology, diagnosis and prognosis followed by specific treatments aimed at recovery with maintenance of functioning. Reference Craddock, Antebi, Attenburrow, Bailey, Carson and Cowen1 Although everybody would agree that some degree of expertise and experience may be necessary to pilot a plane, psychiatric interventions and treatments are often viewed as low-tech, unspecific and unsophisticated instruments to merely calm people who are mentally ill. However, there is no alternative to the increasing introduction of technology in psychiatry, and many of the concerns about costs are the result of discrimination regarding people with mental illness over those who have ‘socially friendly’ conditions such as cancer or even dementia.

Specialised care in bipolar disorder

In the specific case of bipolar disorder, it has a complex phenotype with high external validity that requires a broad knowledge of psychopathology, neuropsychology, psychopharmacology and psychotherapy. These, and other reasons, have prompted some authors to advocate that bipolar disorder is ‘the heartland’ of psychiatry. Reference Goodwin and Geddes2 In this issue of the Journal, Kessing et al Reference Kessing, Hansen, Hvenegaard, Christensen, Dam and Gluud3 report that treatment in a specialised mood disorder clinic early in the course of bipolar disorder substantially reduces readmissions to hospital and increases satisfaction with care compared with standard community care. Strengths of the study include the randomised design and the practical relevance of the question addressed. This study supports specialised management of patients with bipolar disorder.

What would be the cons of giving too much support to specialised care as opposed to traditional community care? One risk may be fragmentation of care, especially if the setting for specialised care is a tertiary hospital that may be far away from patients' homes. Too much specialisation may also result in gaps in overall care if not properly organised, and may not guarantee the focus on functional recovery. Reference Rosa, Reinares, Amann, Popovic, Franco and Comes4 Another concern may be cost. However, bipolar disorder units may actually provide better continuity of care if the same patient is seen by the same team regardless of the setting, and they may also carry advantages in terms of education and research. Reference Vieta5Reference Henry, Etain, Mathieu, Raust, Vibert and Scott7 Hence, the European Union seventh framework programme has sponsored a network of expert centres called ENBREC (Euoropean Network of Bipolar Research Expert Centres), aimed at developing common tools for the assessment and management of bipolar disorder across Europe. Obviously, specialised centres may well be better suited for research and training on the specific condition of their expertise compared with community centres. Moreover, sophisticated interventions that have been designed by experts from referral centres, such as group psychoeducation or functional remediation, may be cost-effective and may be implemented in all sorts of settings if therapists are adequately trained. Reference Scott, Colom, Popova, Benabarre, Cruz and Valenti8Reference Martínez-Arán, Torrent, Solé, Bonnín, Rosa and Sánchez-Moreno9 Hence, the key to getting the best from both specialised and community care may be to enable their rational integration into existing psychiatric services, Reference Lyndon10 and choosing the right setting for the right patient at the right moment – perhaps not easy, but feasible and highly desirable.

Footnotes

See pp. 212-219, this issue.

Declaration of interest

E.V. leads a specialist bipolar disorder care unit at a public university hospital in Catalonia, Spain.

References

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