2016
DOI: 10.1111/jpm.12322
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Improving care planning and coordination for service users with medical co‐morbidity transitioning between tertiary medical and primary care services

Abstract: This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited and is not used for commercial purposes. Accessible summaryWhat is known on the subject?• Mental health service users with medical co-morbidity frequently experience difficulties accessing and receiving appropriate treatment in emergency departments.• Service users frequently experience fragmented c… Show more

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Cited by 16 publications
(15 citation statements)
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“…If it is accepted that a care plan is valuable in communicating key information, this becomes crucial as someone transitions in and out of different settings, such as between hospital and community services (Jones & Bowles , Cranwell et al . ). This is especially so for people with dementia who may not be able to reliably communicate care information for themselves (Kitwood , Walsh , Brooker ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 97%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…If it is accepted that a care plan is valuable in communicating key information, this becomes crucial as someone transitions in and out of different settings, such as between hospital and community services (Jones & Bowles , Cranwell et al . ). This is especially so for people with dementia who may not be able to reliably communicate care information for themselves (Kitwood , Walsh , Brooker ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…Others have looked at transitional points of care and how care planning operates across care systems (Jones & Bowles , Cranwell et al . ). In the UK, this has included staff, service user and carer views in relation to CPA care planning in England and Care and Treatment Plans in Wales (Simpson , Simpson et al .…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…Research (Coffey et al, 2017, Drummond and Simpson, 2017, Simpson et al, 2016 into care planning and coordination in community mental health settings reveals that people using services are not always involved in care planning processes, with practitioners describing their work in this area as being administratively burdensome and largely focused on risk management. This contrasts with the aspiration that care plans for people receiving mental health care contain clear recovery focused goals with genuinely individualised ideas for their achievement (Coffey et al, 2017, Cranwell et al, 2017, Doody et al, 2017, Faulkner, 2017, Simpson et al, 2016. Dedicated training run over two days to prepare practitioners to produce care plans which reflect the principles of shared decision-making has been shown to be acceptable to staff but not to improve outcomes for people using services (Lovell et al, 2018).…”
Section: Integrated Care Plansmentioning
confidence: 95%
“…Care planning is considered to be a key element in the delivery of individualised comprehensive mental health care, taking in the person's multifaceted health and social care needs (Coffey, Hannigan, & Simpson, 2017;Cranwell, Polacsek, & McCann, 2017;Doody, Butler, Lyons, & Newman, 2017). Effective mental health care plans are co-produced by the person receiving care, the care recipient's family or carer as well as by health and social care professionals through a collaborative partnership in which there is active engagement by all parties in setting goals and objectives for recovery (Coffey et al, 2017;Cranwell et al, 2017;Fraser, Grundy, Meade, Callaghan, & Lovell, 2017;Olasoji, Maude, & McCauley, 2017). Theoretical and empirical evidence (Cranwell et al, 2017;Doody et al, 2017;NIHR, 2018) also underscores the positive impact that relatives can have on the continuity of mental healthcare which fosters recovery and an improved quality of life for the client.…”
Section: Care Planningmentioning
confidence: 99%