Effectiveness of a Nurse-Based Outreach Program for Identifying and Treating Psychiatric Illness in the Elderly
CONTEXT Elderly persons with psychiatric disorders are less likely than younger adults to be diagnosed as having a mental disorder and receive needed mental health treatment. Lack of access to care is 1 possible cause of this disparity. OBJECTIVE To determine whether a nurse-based mobile outreach pr...
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Veröffentlicht in: | JAMA : the journal of the American Medical Association 2000-06, Vol.283 (21), p.2802-2809 |
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Zusammenfassung: | CONTEXT Elderly persons with psychiatric disorders are less likely than younger
adults to be diagnosed as having a mental disorder and receive needed mental
health treatment. Lack of access to care is 1 possible cause of this disparity. OBJECTIVE To determine whether a nurse-based mobile outreach program to seriously
mentally ill elderly persons is more effective than usual care in diminishing
levels of depression, psychiatric symptoms, and undesirable moves (eg, nursing
home placement, eviction, board and care placement). DESIGN Prospective randomized trial conducted between March 1993 and April
1996 to assess the effectiveness of the Psychogeriatric Assessment and Treatment
in City Housing (PATCH) program. SETTING Six urban public housing sites for elderly persons in Baltimore, Md. PARTICIPANTS A total of 945 (83%) of 1195 residents in the 6 sites underwent screening
for psychiatric illness. Among those screened, 342 screened positive and 603
screened negative. All screen-positive subjects aged 60 years and older (n=310)
and a 10% random sample of screen-negative subjects aged 60 years and older
(n=61) were selected for a structured psychiatric interview. Eleven subjects
moved or died; 245 (82%) of those who screened positive and 53 (88%) of those
who screened negative were evaluated to determine who had a psychiatric disorder.
Data were weighted to estimate the prevalence of psychiatric disorders at
the 6 sites. INTERVENTION Among the 6 sites, residents in 3 buildings were randomized to receive
the PATCH model intervention, which included educating building staff to be
case finders, performing assessment in residents' apartments, and providing
care when indicated; and residents in the remaining 3 buildings were randomized
to receive usual care (comparison group). MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES Number of undesirable moves and scores on the Montgomery-Asberg Depression
Rating Scale (MADRS), a measure of depressive symptoms, and the Brief Psychiatric
Rating Scale (BPRS), a measure of psychiatric symptoms and behavioral disorder,
in intervention vs comparison sites. RESULTS Based on weighted data, at 26 months of follow-up, psychiatric cases
at the intervention sites had significantly lower (F1=31.18; P |
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ISSN: | 0098-7484 1538-3598 |
DOI: | 10.1001/jama.283.21.2802 |