Title: The acceptability of assertive community treatment
1The acceptability of assertive community treatment
- Dr Helen Killaspy
- Senior lecturer and honorary consultant in
rehabilitation psychiatry - University College London
- Camden Islington NHS Foundation Trust
- h.killaspy_at_medsch.ucl.ac.uk
2What is assertive community treatment?
- Maximum case load 10-12 per FT worker
- Extended hours
- In vivo contact
- Assertive engagement
- No drop-out policy
- Team based approach
- Regular and frequent team meetings - daily plans
- Use skills of team rather than outside agencies
- Family/carer support and liaison
- Own beds, responsible for admissions/discharges
- Dartmouth ACT Scale. Teague et al., 1998, Am J
of Orthopsychiatry, 68, 216-232
3Evidence re. ACT in US and Australia
- Stein, L. I. Test, M. A. (1980) Alternatives to
mental hospital treatment. Archives - of General Psychiatry, 37, 392 - 397.
- Hoult, J. (1986) Community care of the acutely
mentally ill. British Journal of Psychiatry, - 149, 137-144.
- Hambridge, J. A. Rosen, A. (1994) Assertive
community treatment for the seriously - mentally ill in suburban Sydney A programme
description and evaluation. Australian and - New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry, 28,
438-445.Hambridge Rosen, 1994 - Issakidis, C., Sanderson, K., Teeson, M., et al
(1999) Intensive case management in - Australia a randomized controlled trial. Acta
Psychiatrica Scandinavica, 99, 360-367. - Marshall Lockwood (1998) Marshall Lockwood
(1998) Assertive community treatment for - people with severe mental disorders. Cochrane
Schizophrenia Group, Cochrane database of - systematic reviews. 1, 2003
4Evidence re. ACT in US/Australia
- less likely to be lost to follow up
- less likely to be admitted and shorter admissions
- improved employment, accommodation stability and
satisfaction with services - no greater risk of adverse events
- no advantage over standard care in terms of
improvement in symptoms or social functioning
5Evidence re. ACT in Europe
- Holloway, F. Carson, J. (1998) Intensive case
management for the severely mentally - ill. Controlled Trial. British Journal of
Psychiatry, 172, 19-22. - Thornicroft, G., Wykes, T., Holloway, F., et al
(1998) From efficacy to effectiveness in - community mental health services. PRiSM Psychosis
Study 10. British Journal of - Psychiatry, 173, 423-427.
- Burns, T., Creed, F., Fahy, T., et al (1999)
Intensive versus standard case management - for severe psychotic illness A randomised trial.
Lancet, 353, 2185-9. - Killaspy, H., Bebbington, P., Blizard, R., et al
(2006) The REACT study Randomised - evaluation of assertive community treatment in
north London. British Medical Journal, - 332, 815-820.
- Sytema, S., Wunderink, L., Bloemers, W. et al
(2007) Assertive community treatment - in the Netherlands a randomized controlled
trial. Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica, 116, - 105-112
6Evidence re. ACT in Europe
- Increased contact/engagement
- Greater client satisfaction
- No advantage over standard care in terms of
inpatient service use - No advantage over standard care in terms of
improvement in symptoms or social functioning - Not (more) cost effective
7Concerns about coercion and ACT
- Assertive approach is, by definition, coercive
- Designed to regulate and normalise service users
behaviour - Paternalistic
- Service can limit access to e.g. housing and
finances - Some countries have legal measures to ensure
treatment adherence e.g. outpatient commitment,
community treatment orders, - ACT requires bending the will of an unwilling
participant - Underhand and insidious befriending focussing
on practical issues but with aim of increasing
treatment adherence
8Is there evidence of coercive practices in ACT?
- Angell, B., Mahoney, C. A., Martinez, N. I.
(2006). Promoting treatment - adherence in assertive community treatment.
Social Service Review, 80, 485 - 526
- Qualitative study in 1 urban and 1 rural ACT team
in Madison, Wisconsin - 45 client-staff contacts observed
- Very little use of coercive approaches e.g.
outpatient commitment, financial control - Evidence of wide range of collaborative
approaches that promoted psychoeducation and
engagement
9- Davidson, G. and Campbell, J. (2007). An
examination of the use of coercion - by assertive outreach and community mental health
teams in - Northern Ireland, British Journal of Social Work,
37, 537-555. - Service users perceived coercion reduced more
for ACT than CMHT clients - Fewer coercive strategies used by ACT than CMHT
staff - Killaspy, H., Bebbington, P., Blizard, R., et al
(2006) The REACT study - Randomised evaluation of assertive community
treatment in north London. - British Medical Journal, 332, 815-820.
- ACT clients ratings of intrusiveness of service
were lower than CMHT clients, despite having
three times the number of contacts and most in
vivo - Less coercive approaches reported than CMHT staff
in qualitative study
10Implementation of ACT
- UK National service framework for mental health
5 years on (Dept. Health, 2005) - 263 ACT teams (target 220)
- 168 Crisis Resolution Teams (target 335)
- 41 Early Intervention Services (target 50)
- Netherlands, Spain, Sweden, Italy, Germany
- Tobago, Trinidad, Sri Lanka
11Qualitative study of content of care delivered
to participants in the REACT study
- Staff felt ACT model more appropriate than CMHT
case management for working with hard to engage
clients - Model popular with staff, particularly due to the
support provided by the team approach and
flexibility of small case loads - Clients better engaged and more satisfied with
service, probably due to specific style of
working - Collaborative
- Respectful
- Common ground
- Focus on practical issues
- Informal support to families/carers
12Priebe, S., Watts, J., Chase, M et al. Processes
of disengagement and engagement in assertive
outreach patients qualitative study. British
Journal of Psychiatry, 2005, 187, 438-443
- Service users reported that a poor therapeutic
relationship was most important factor associated
with disengagement from ACT - Engagement was promoted where there was not a
focus on medication and where service users felt
they were in an authentic partnership and being
listened to
13 14Catty, J. (2004). The vehicle of success.
Theoretical and empirical perspectives on the
therapeutic alliance in psychotherapy and
psychiatry. Psychology and psychotherapy Theory,
Research and Practice, 77, 255-272
- Therapeutic alliance is one of the most powerful
predictors of outcome in psychotherapy - Outcomes include social functioning, global
improvement, drug use - Meta-analyses suggest around 25 of outcome can
be attributed to therapeutic alliance - Construct of therapeutic alliance comprises
affective bonds and collaboration - Similar to Rogers (1951) core conditions for
therapeutic success - empathy unconditional positive regard and
congruence
15Is therapeutic alliance in psychotherapy the same
thing as engagement in psychiatric practice?
- Obvious differences in how clients present to
psychotherapists vs psychiatrists - Engagement can mean medication adherence
appointment keeping not dropping out of contact
collaboration in treatment plan
16McCabe, R. Priebe, S. (In Press). The
therapeutic relationship in the treatment of
severe mental illness a review of methods and
findings. International Journal of Social
Psychiatry.
- Paucity of literature on therapeutic alliance in
schizophrenia - Most measures used to assess therapeutic alliance
developed for psychotherapy clients - Measures generally assess single relationship
- Associations found with medication adherence
satisfaction self-rated symptoms and social
functioning quality of life inpatient service
use (increased or decreased) - No convincing evidence that increased engagement
is associated with improved outcomes for ACT
service users, even after 3 years
17But.
- Association between therapeutic alliance and
outcome doesnt necessarily mean therapeutic
alliance is the active ingredient. It may
simply be a vehicle for delivery of interventions
that are effective.
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19Burns T, Catty J, Dash M. et al. (2007).
Intensive case management and hospitalisation
explaining the inconsistent findings. A
Systematic Review and Meta-Regression. BMJ,
335,336-40
- Fidelity to the team structure and organisation
aspect of ACT does explain much of the variation
in outcomes - Whether the team was primary therapist for its
clients was based off the hospital campus met
daily shared responsibility for caseloads was
available 24 hours had a team leader who was
also a case manager offered time-unlimited
services
20Wright, C, Brugha, T, Burns, T et al. Assertive
outreach in England a national study of service
organisation conformity to model fidelity.
British Journal of Psychiatry, In press
- 222 teams surveyed in 2002-3
- Wide range of model fidelity
- Only 12 were operating with high model fidelity
- Many of the missing components of the ACT model
(operates 24 hours a day meets daily team
manager has case load primary therapist for
clients) were those associated with greater
efficacy (Burns et al, 2007) - Average case load of 5 clients
- Average service user contact 2 hours per week
- Minimal provision of specialist psychosocial
interventions (2/3 had OT, very few had
psychologist) - Only half had a psychiatrist hence medication was
not prescribed or reviewed by the team - Few had substance misuse or vocational
rehabilitation specialist on staff - Rebadged community rehabilitation teams, which
made up 20 of ACT teams had good model fidelity,
better than newly formed teams
21Sustainability of ACT
- Carpenter, J., Luce, A. Wooff, D. (2008).
Assertive outreach in the - North East and Yorkshire. Final report
- Detailed surveys of all ACT teams in North East
England - in 2002/3 (n30) and 2005/6 (n34)
- Teams didnt change in staffing or model fidelity
over time - gt 50 no psychiatrist, gt 60 no occupational
therapist, gt 80 no psychologist at both time
points - No change in missing components
- Schneider et al. Assertive outreach policy and
reality, - Psych. Bulletin, 2006, 30,89-94
- Teams continued to work with target population
22Conclusions
- ACT is acceptable to staff
- ACT is more acceptable to service users than
standard care - Concerns about it being coercive may be unfounded
- Popular, sustainable and widely implemented
- Embodies recovery based practice
23The ACT vehicle
- Team approach
- In vivo working
- Extended hours
- Full clinical responsibility
- Manager has clinical case load
- Time unlimited service
- Appropriately staffed
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