TY - JOUR
T1 - Defining continuity of care from the perspectives of mental health service users and professionals
T2 - An exploratory, comparative study
AU - Sweeney, Angie
AU - Davies, Jonathon
AU - Mclaren, Susan
AU - Whittock, Margaret
AU - Lemma, Ferew
AU - Belling, Ruth
AU - Clement, Sarah
AU - Burns, Tom
AU - Catty, Jocelyn
AU - Jones, Ian Rees
AU - Rose, Diana
AU - Wykes, Til
PY - 2016/8/1
Y1 - 2016/8/1
N2 - Background: Continuity of care (COC) is central to the organization and delivery of mental health services. Traditional definitions have excluded service users, and this lack of involvement has been linked to poor conceptual clarity surrounding the term. Consequently, very little is known about the differences and similarities in the conceptualization of COC by mental health service users and professionals. Objective: To explore and compare mental health service users’ and professionals’ definitions of COC. Methods: Using an exploratory, qualitative design, five focus groups with 32 service users each met twice. Data were analysed thematically to generate a service user-defined model of COC. In a cross-sectional survey, health and social care professionals (n = 184) defined COC; responses were analysed thematically. Service user and professional definitions were conceptually mapped and compared to identify similarities and differences. Results: There was crossover between the service user and professional derived models of COC. Both contained temporal, quality, systemic, staff, hospital and needs-related elements of COC. Service users prioritized access, information, peer support and avoiding services; health professionals most frequently referred to staff, cross-sectional and temporal COC. Service users alone identified service avoidance, peer support and day centres as COC elements; professionals alone identified cross-sectional working. Conclusions: Important similarities and differences exist in service user and professional conceptualizations of COC. Further research is necessary to explore these differences, prior to integrating service user and professional perspectives in a validated COC framework which could enable the development and evaluation of interventions to improve COC, informing policy and practice.
AB - Background: Continuity of care (COC) is central to the organization and delivery of mental health services. Traditional definitions have excluded service users, and this lack of involvement has been linked to poor conceptual clarity surrounding the term. Consequently, very little is known about the differences and similarities in the conceptualization of COC by mental health service users and professionals. Objective: To explore and compare mental health service users’ and professionals’ definitions of COC. Methods: Using an exploratory, qualitative design, five focus groups with 32 service users each met twice. Data were analysed thematically to generate a service user-defined model of COC. In a cross-sectional survey, health and social care professionals (n = 184) defined COC; responses were analysed thematically. Service user and professional definitions were conceptually mapped and compared to identify similarities and differences. Results: There was crossover between the service user and professional derived models of COC. Both contained temporal, quality, systemic, staff, hospital and needs-related elements of COC. Service users prioritized access, information, peer support and avoiding services; health professionals most frequently referred to staff, cross-sectional and temporal COC. Service users alone identified service avoidance, peer support and day centres as COC elements; professionals alone identified cross-sectional working. Conclusions: Important similarities and differences exist in service user and professional conceptualizations of COC. Further research is necessary to explore these differences, prior to integrating service user and professional perspectives in a validated COC framework which could enable the development and evaluation of interventions to improve COC, informing policy and practice.
KW - Continuity of care
KW - General adult psychiatry
KW - Health professionals
KW - Mental health services
KW - Service users
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84978066567&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1111/hex.12435
DO - 10.1111/hex.12435
M3 - Article
C2 - 26714263
SN - 1369-6513
VL - 19
SP - 973
EP - 987
JO - Health expectations : an international journal of public participation in health care and health policy
JF - Health expectations : an international journal of public participation in health care and health policy
IS - 4
ER -