A systematic review of the perceptions and attitudes of mental health nurses towards alcohol and other drug use in mental health clients

Mental and substance use disorders are leading contributing factors for the Australian non‐fatal burden of disease. These disorders frequently co‐occur in the mental health population, and mental health nurses are the largest group of professionals treating dual diagnosis. A comprehensive understand...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of mental health nursing 2022-12, Vol.31 (6), p.1373-1389
Hauptverfasser: Merrick, Tammy Tran, Louie, Eva, Cleary, Michelle, Molloy, Luke, Baillie, Andrew, Haber, Paul, Morley, Kirsten C.
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container_issue 6
container_start_page 1373
container_title International journal of mental health nursing
container_volume 31
creator Merrick, Tammy Tran
Louie, Eva
Cleary, Michelle
Molloy, Luke
Baillie, Andrew
Haber, Paul
Morley, Kirsten C.
description Mental and substance use disorders are leading contributing factors for the Australian non‐fatal burden of disease. These disorders frequently co‐occur in the mental health population, and mental health nurses are the largest group of professionals treating dual diagnosis. A comprehensive understanding of mental health nurses' attitudes and perceptions is required to inform future implementation of dual diagnosis training programs. A systematic literature review of sources derived from electronic databases including Medline, CINAHL, SCOPUS review, and PsychINFO, along with Connected Papers. Selection criteria included a focus on mental health nurses' attitudes towards dual diagnosis of mental illness and substance use. Extracted data was qualitatively synthesized. Of the 5232 articles retrieved initially, 12 were included in the review. Four themes emerged from the synthesis: drug and alcohol use among mental health consumers (seven studies), caring for dual diagnosis consumers (eight studies), role perception (six studies), and treatment optimism (five studies). Salient beliefs included substance use as a self‐inflicted choice (71%) or a form of ‘self‐medication’ (29%); a lack of willingness to provide care (75%), or a strong commitment to care (25%); greater comfort with screening and acute medical management rather than ongoing management (83%); and pessimism about treatment effectiveness (100%). Mental health nurses' beliefs and attitudes towards dual diagnosis were often negative, which is likely to result in poor quality care and treatment outcomes. However, the lack of recent studies in this research area indicates the need for up‐to‐date knowledge that can inform the development of training programs.
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source Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); MEDLINE; Wiley Online Library Journals Frontfile Complete; Sociological Abstracts
subjects Alcohol
Alcohol use
Attitude of Health Personnel
Attitudes
Australia
Clinical outcomes
Comorbidity
Consumers
Disease management
Drug abuse
drug and alcohol
Drug use
Drugs
Educational programs
Health behavior
Health beliefs
Humans
Literature reviews
Medical diagnosis
Medical screening
Medicine
Mental disorders
Mental Health
Mental health services
Nurses
nursing
Optimism
Perceptions
Pessimism
Psychiatric nurses
Psychiatric Nursing
Quality of care
Selection criteria
Self-medication
Substance abuse
substance use
Substance use disorder
Substance-Related Disorders - therapy
Systematic review
Tests
Training
Treatment outcomes
title A systematic review of the perceptions and attitudes of mental health nurses towards alcohol and other drug use in mental health clients
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