Comparison of referrals from primary and secondary care to CMHT psychologists.
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Authors
Curtis, Louise
Byrne, Michael
Issue Date
2009-Jun
Type
Journal Article
Language
en
Keywords
Alternative Title
Abstract
To explore whether (direct) referrals from GPs to two Community Mental Health Team (CMHT) clinical psychologists differed from those received from both 'Psychiatric' (eg. consultant psychiatrists) and 'Other' sources.
The two psychologists retrospectively examined and coded the case files of all clients who attended them during a 12-month period. The six measures used were diagnostic prevalence and groups, co-morbidity, chronicity, previous hospital admission and CMHT contact Separate cross-tabulations and chi squared tests were conducted for the various dependent variables to profile differences across the three referral sources.
There was no difference in prevalence of Axis I disorders, co-morbidity and chronicity of disorders between 'GP' and 'Psychiatric' referrals to the two CMHT psychologists. However, although low in number, there were more eating and psychotic disorders among the 'Psychiatric' referrals, and more of these referrals had previous hospital admission and CMHT contact.
'GP' referrals were similar to 'Psychiatric' referrals on some measures but differed on others. Hence, as to whether an 'open access' model of (direct) referral to CMHT clinical psychologists lowers the clinical threshold for referrals depends on which measures are deemed most critical. Consistently applying a composite index of referral 'severity' could prevent the former.
The two psychologists retrospectively examined and coded the case files of all clients who attended them during a 12-month period. The six measures used were diagnostic prevalence and groups, co-morbidity, chronicity, previous hospital admission and CMHT contact Separate cross-tabulations and chi squared tests were conducted for the various dependent variables to profile differences across the three referral sources.
There was no difference in prevalence of Axis I disorders, co-morbidity and chronicity of disorders between 'GP' and 'Psychiatric' referrals to the two CMHT psychologists. However, although low in number, there were more eating and psychotic disorders among the 'Psychiatric' referrals, and more of these referrals had previous hospital admission and CMHT contact.
'GP' referrals were similar to 'Psychiatric' referrals on some measures but differed on others. Hence, as to whether an 'open access' model of (direct) referral to CMHT clinical psychologists lowers the clinical threshold for referrals depends on which measures are deemed most critical. Consistently applying a composite index of referral 'severity' could prevent the former.
Description
Citation
Curtis, L., & Byrne, M. (2009). Comparison of referrals from primary and secondary care to CMHT psychologists. Irish journal of psychological medicine, 26(2), 73–75. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0790966700000276
Publisher
License
Journal
Irish journal of psychological medicine
Volume
26
Issue
2
PubMed ID
ISSN
2051-6967