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      Integrated Care to Address the Physical Health Needs of People with Severe Mental Illness: A Mapping Review of the Recent Evidence on Barriers, Facilitators and Evaluations

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          Abstract

          People with mental health conditions have a lower life expectancy and poorer physical health outcomes than the general population. Evidence suggests this is due to a combination of clinical risk factors, socioeconomic factors, and health system factors, notably a lack of integration when care is required across service settings.

          Several recent reports have looked at ways to better integrate physical and mental health care for people with severe mental illness (SMI). We built on these by conducting a mapping review that looked for the most recent evidence and service models in this area. This involved searching the published literature and speaking to people involved in providing or using current services.

          Few of the identified service models were described adequately and fewer still were evaluated, raising questions about the replicability and generalisability of much of the existing evidence. However, some common themes did emerge. Efforts to improve the physical health care of people with SMI should empower staff and service users and help remove everyday barriers to delivering and accessing integrated care. In particular, there is a need for improved communication among professionals and better information technology to support them, greater clarity about who is responsible and accountable for physical health care, and greater awareness of the effects of stigmatisation on the wider culture and environment in which services are delivered.

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          Most cited references35

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          Evaluating an individualized lifestyle and life skills intervention to prevent antipsychotic-induced weight gain in first-episode psychosis.

          Initiating antipsychotic medication frequently induces rapid, clinically significant weight gain. We aimed to evaluate the effectiveness of a lifestyle and life skills intervention, delivered within 4 weeks of antipsychotic medication initiation, in attenuating weight gain in youth aged 14-25 years with first-episode psychosis (FEP).
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            A well-being programme in severe mental illness. Reducing risk for physical ill-health: a post-programme service evaluation at 2 years.

            Cardiovascular disease is more prevalent in patients with severe mental illness (SMI) than in the general population. Seven geographically diverse centres were assigned a nurse to monitor the physical health of SMI patients in secondary care over a 2-year period in the "Well-being Support Programme" (WSP). A physical health screen was performed and patients were given individual weight and lifestyle advice including smoking cessation to reduce cardiovascular risk. Nine hundred and sixty-six outpatients with SMI >2 years were enrolled. The completion rate at 2 years was 80%. Significant improvements were observed in levels of physical activity (p 25. Physical health problems are common in SMI subjects. Many patients completed 2 years follow up suggesting that this format of programme is an acceptable option for SMI patients. Cardiovascular risk factors were significantly improved. Interventions such as the Well-being Support Programme should be made widely available to people with SMI.
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              Experiences of and influences on continuity of care for service users and carers: synthesis of evidence from a research programme.

              Health and social care systems experience difficulty in delivering the continuity of care that service users want. Lack of clarity about what continuity means hinders service organisation and delivery. The NIHR Service Delivery and Organisation programme funded a series of research projects to tackle this conceptual confusion, and subsequently commissioned a review of the projects' outputs. The aim was to assess how the projects had progressed conceptualisation and measurement of continuity, and increased knowledge about what influenced it. This paper concentrates on two questions: what is continuity of care, and what influences it? We reviewed the projects' outputs and extracted data using techniques adapted from systematic reviewing methods. We treated the outputs as 'transcripts' and used the Framework approach to qualitative analysis to handle them. This maintained the coherence of individual projects while allowing cross-project themes to emerge. We then produced a narrative synthesis of findings. Service users and carers valued good relationships with professionals; this did not always mean seeing the same person and encompassed trust, the professional's style and communication skills, and the time made available. Service users and carers also valued understanding the patient's condition and treatment. This went beyond giving information, to include communication that recognised individuals' capacities and that was skilled, given sufficient time, and from a trusted source. Service users valued co-ordination between professionals and services; this covered communication, planning, and services' storage and use of information about them. Co-ordination with carers and others was also important. Experiences of continuity were influenced by service users' characteristics and circumstances, care trajectories, the structure and administration of services, professionals' characteristics, carer participation, the wider context of the 'whole person' and satisfaction. The review highlighted how service users, carers and professionals construct continuity dynamically between themselves. This has implications for both professional training and service users' expectations. © 2011 Blackwell Publishing Ltd.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Role: Research Fellow
                Role: Research Fellow
                Role: Information Specialist
                Role: Professor of Health Economics
                Role: Professor of Social Policy Research
                Role: Professor of Research
                Journal
                Int J Integr Care
                Int J Integr Care
                1568-4156
                International Journal of Integrated Care
                Ubiquity Press
                1568-4156
                25 January 2018
                Jan-Mar 2018
                : 18
                : 1
                : 9
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Centre for Reviews and Dissemination, University of York, Heslington, YO10 5DD, York, UK
                [2 ]Department of Health Policy, London School of Economics and Political Science, WC2A 2AE, London, GB
                [3 ]Social Policy Research Unit, University of York, Heslington, YO10 5DD, York, UK
                Author information
                http://orcid.org/0000-0002-5196-9239
                Article
                10.5334/ijic.2605
                5854169
                29588643
                944dd588-5373-4300-bb30-69b6e2b27340
                Copyright: © 2018 The Author(s)

                This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (CC-BY 4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. See http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.

                History
                : 24 November 2016
                : 28 November 2017
                Categories
                Research and Theory

                Health & Social care
                integrated care,mental health,physical health,mapping review
                Health & Social care
                integrated care, mental health, physical health, mapping review

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