2005
DOI: 10.1177/070674370505000106
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Community Treatment Orders: Profile of a Canadian Experience

Abstract: CTOs are effective tools for allowing patients to live in the least restrictive setting possible while they receive diverse services. They also effectively reduce rates and lengths of readmission to hospital.

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Cited by 42 publications
(27 citation statements)
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“…There was also no evidence for ''any effect of CTO on social functioning, arrests, homelessness, general mental state, psychopathology, quality of life, carer satisfaction, or perceived coercion.'' 2, p 179 Some small local studies, [26][27][28][29][30] all reporting improved patient outcomes, were excluded in Churchill et al's review given their naturalistic, retrospective design, combined with very small sample sizes (from 25-70 ). When repeating the search from those previous reviews to identify outcome studies published since 2013, 19 articles were identified, 9 of which reported on the outcomes described in Table 1 (6 UBAs, 1CBA, 1 epidemiological, and 1 meta-analysis).…”
Section: What Review Studies Findmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…There was also no evidence for ''any effect of CTO on social functioning, arrests, homelessness, general mental state, psychopathology, quality of life, carer satisfaction, or perceived coercion.'' 2, p 179 Some small local studies, [26][27][28][29][30] all reporting improved patient outcomes, were excluded in Churchill et al's review given their naturalistic, retrospective design, combined with very small sample sizes (from 25-70 ). When repeating the search from those previous reviews to identify outcome studies published since 2013, 19 articles were identified, 9 of which reported on the outcomes described in Table 1 (6 UBAs, 1CBA, 1 epidemiological, and 1 meta-analysis).…”
Section: What Review Studies Findmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…and, in practice, most CTOs are initiated from inpatient units (O'Brien & Farrell, 2005 to permit health information to be transferred between health care providers. Is it ethical to rely on implied consent if the person is receiving treatment involuntarily?…”
Section: Issues In Practicementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Three of these studies focus primarily on hospital utilization rates as an outcome measurement of the effectiveness of CTOs (O'Brien and Farrell 2005;Frank et al 2005;Hunt et al 2007). Two studies focus on stakeholders' perceptions of CTOs (O'Reilly et al 2000, andO'Reilly et al 2006).…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Two studies focus on stakeholders' perceptions of CTOs (O'Reilly et al 2000, andO'Reilly et al 2006). O'Brien and Farrell (2005) was the first small sample study (n = 25). It focused on a single site with no cross region comparisons.…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%