scholarly journals An audit of Individual Care Plan (ICP) in Dublin North City and County (DNCC) child and adolescent mental health service (CAMHS)

BJPsych Open ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 7 (S1) ◽  
pp. S77-S78
Author(s):  
Uchechukwu Egbuta ◽  
Cillian Howley ◽  
Anitha Selvarajoo ◽  
Muhammad Iqbal ◽  
Diana Meskauskait

AimsThe objectives/aims of the Audit include: 1.To standardize and implement ICP for service users attending DNCC CAMHS team in accordance with the established policy.2.To achieve greater involvement of service users/parents in ICP.3.To standardize and improve treatment of care involving all members of one team.BackgroundEvery patient should have a care plan. Each care plan has a set of needs and goals. These are agreed between the service user and key worker and are assessed and measured frequently. Consultation with each service user/parents, as far as practicable is important. Specification of treatment and care required in accordance with best practice should be recorded. Identification of the necessary resources should be recorded and discussed with service user and key worker. Records kept in one composite set of documentation, and a signed copy should be made available to the service user/parents.MethodFirst Cycle commenced 15th October 2019. 166 files were selected from CAMHS team. Data were collected from clinical records from time of admission into CAMHS service to the time of audit. The audit report was prepared on the 6th December 2019, and intervention discussed at the multidisciplinary team meeting and wider DNCC CAMHS academic meeting. Second Cycle 23rd March 2020. 30 files randomly selected and audited. Data were collected by Dr Uchechukwu Egbuta, Mr Cillian Howley, Dr Anitha Selvarajoo, under supervision of Dr Muhammad Iqbal and Dr Diana Meskauskaite.Method of data input/analysis is IBM SPSS.ResultFor each ICP, the following were looked at: Files with ICP, Identifiable key worker, Formulation, Goals, Action plan, Copy of ICP to young person/parents, Next Review Date, Projected discharge date.Overall compliance shows 62% in first cycle, and 68% in second cycle after intervention.There was a 6% quality improvement of ICPs in terms of overall compliance in applying the various components of ICP.ConclusionEach service user should have an individual care plan. Each individual care plan should be measured regularly. To develop a therapeutic individual care plan, a formulation of the case from history taking is essential looking at the bio-psychosocial model and should be service user focused. Care plans are part of clinical governance, therefore continuous re-audit every three months was recommended. The follow-up audit will be carried out by the multidisciplinary team members.

2019 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 24-47 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ivan Harsløf ◽  
Mirela Slomic ◽  
Ole Kristian Sandnes Håvold

Several countries have introduced devices for coordination of complicated individual cases across care, health and welfare services. This study examined one such device: the individual care plan (ICP), introduced in Norway in 2001 to enhance user involve­ment and coordination across sectors and service providers. Despite strong political imperatives, however, ICPs have remained significantly underused. To understand why, this study investigated the experiences with ICPs among staff in municipal coordinating units, tasked with organising rehabili­ta­tion efforts and case­workers in local labour and welfare services. In focus groups, participants discussed the fictitious vignette of a patient with traumatic brain injury, a person clearly within the ICP target group. They praised ICPs for advancing the rehabilitation process but acknowledged that they were applied too rarely. Through abductive-retroductive recontextualisation, this study identified a practice of de-facto self-targeting: in some municipalities, patients had to request ICPs themselves. We argue that this mechanism may have emerged from ambiguous propensities of rehabilitation, simultaneously emphasising needs and potentials, and ultimately from ambiguities in the Norwegian welfare model balancing universalism and local autonomy.


BJPsych Open ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 7 (S1) ◽  
pp. S354-S355
Author(s):  
Chinedu Umeh ◽  
Simona Ionita

AimsThe main aim of this audit was to determine the prevalence of HDAP in Havering Community Recovery Team (CRT). The secondary aim was to determine how well HDAP has been monitored and documented - specifically, whether discussions around the reasons for continuing and the risks and benefits have been discussed.BackgroundThere is a focus to reduce high dose antipsychotic prescribing (HDAP) due to the lack of evidence that it is efficacious and that smaller doses have an equivalent effect and are better tolerated. Similarly, the consensus by the Royal College of Psychiatrists is that any prescribing of high dose antipsychotics should be an 'explicit, time-limited individual trial’ with a distinct treatment target. There should be a clear plan for regular clinical review including safety monitoring. The high-dose regimen should only be continued if the trial shows evidence of benefit that is not outweighed by tolerability or safety problems.' Following a CQC inspection in 2014 of NELFT which found that the trust was failing to comply with the relevant requirements of the Health and Social Care Act 2008 with regards to safe use of medicines, yearly audits of inpatient HDAP have been undertaken. Although improvements have been made in the inpatient setting, no such audits have been performed in the community setting and consequently there is no data in NELFT regarding community services compliance with the above regulations.MethodAll 349 patients in Havering CRT clinical records were screen by either using RIO or GP letters from recent CPA reviews. A data collection and analysis tool was created using Microsoft Excel. Data collection and analysis was carried out by the project lead and checked by a fellow project member.ResultOf the 349 patients included for analysis: 16 (4.58%) of patients were prescribed a high-dose antipsychoticOf the 16 prescribed high dose antipsychotics: 0 out of 16 had the high dose antipsychotic monitoring form available12 (75%) had well documented evidence of review of HDAP.4 (25%) had no documented evidence of review of HDAP.ConclusionThere is a small group of patients receiving high dose antipsychotic therapy for which better monitoring is needed. This should include education of staff regarding HDAP, better documentation in their care plans and working with pharmacy to make HDAP monitoring forms available widely in the community.


2020 ◽  
Vol 7 (2) ◽  
pp. 91-112
Author(s):  
Takahiro Miyo

The percentage of the elderly is increasing on a worldwide scale, and Japan has the highest in the world. Under this difficult demographic situation, how well the elderly can live their later lives is a very important question. The purpose of this study was to find out how the elderly in good health can envisage their future lives in which they need care from others, which may help the elderly make their own care-plans. I conducted semi-structured interviews with one married elderly couple, who had had various experiences of caring for their old parents. While recalling their old days when they used to care for their parents, they were also asked to envisage their own future lives, in which they will need care from others. Based on qualitative descriptive analyses of their interview data, a highly individual care-plan emerged for each study participant. It was suggested that the ways their old parents lived in their later lives, as well as their experiences of caring for them, were strongly reflected in their own future care-plans. In order to envisage one’s realistic future in which he/she needs care from others, concrete experience of relevance may be necessary, which would make it possible to discuss frequently his/her own future life with family, friends, and medical providers.


Author(s):  
David José Murteira Mendes ◽  
Manuel José Lopes ◽  
José Manuel García-Alonso ◽  
Jorge Santos ◽  
Luís Manuel Mota Sousa

The individual care plan (ICP) is a metamorphic being. The only steady reality that it maintains is its final objective, stated and explained in the previous chapter where the ICP is thoroughly introduced and debated. It is a fantastic beast, better described as a system of systems that is severely polymorphic due to its coverage both in level of care as well as sources of data to handle. Patient monitoring generates large volumes of data. There is the evident need of an advanced approach that can deal with these huge amounts of healthcare data extracted from various sources such as the wearable sensors, medical, and nursing records that are currently called big data. The purpose of this chapter is to introduce and discuss the software platform that is adequate to develop and deploy the system paying attention to the needs of high-availability, sensitive information security; service-level agreements for multiple healthcare interoperability; law and ruling conformance; as well as other technical and ethical aspects.


Author(s):  
Manuel José Lopes ◽  
César Fonseca ◽  
Patrícia Barbosa

The idea of the need for healthcare planning, whether in the individual or collective dimensions, is consensual among all health professionals. Despite this consensus, as well as a discourse that values teamwork, planning focused on health professionals has prevailed. Due to the current circumstances, particularly those resulting from changes in the epidemiological profile of the population, a new way of planning individual healthcare is required that must meet the following criteria: be of an individual nature, integrate the active participation of the citizen/family caregiver, be focused on care in the course of life, safeguard interdisciplinarity, assist in decision making about care, and be able to record decisions about care.


2008 ◽  
Vol 32 (7) ◽  
pp. 259-262 ◽  
Author(s):  
Julian Mason ◽  
Daphne Rice

Aims and MethodTo gauge the acceptability of copying a business-like clinic letter for general practitioners, written by a doctor working in the Newbury Community Mental Health Team for Older Adults. Between August 2004 and March 2006 every letter written by each doctor was stored electronically. The letters contained a clear statement of the diagnosis, the active problems and a bullet-point care plan. Any concerns or reactions to the letters were documented as they were received. Between September and October 2006, 50 service user or carer recipients of the letters were sent a questionnaire, checking whether the letter met standards of clarity, helpfulness and content.ResultsOver 20 months 427 service users and carers received a total of 731 letters. One carer asked for the letter not to be sent in future; four carers asked for details of the letter to be modified; in only one was the content of the letter to the general practitioner modified before it was sent to the service user. The questionnaire about the suitability of the clinic letter had a 90% reply rate and all respondents said the letters were clear, understandable and that their content was of no surprise to them.Clinical ImplicationsThis report of a successful use of a frank business-like letter copied to service users or carers should be understood in the context of the following factors: the doctor who wrote them was familiar with and confident about the clinical work and comfortable with the style of the letter; he had a good rapport with a generally well-educated population and positive support from his colleagues. With these factors in place, the direct style of the letter was well received by patients and carers.


2013 ◽  
Vol 14 (11) ◽  
pp. 791-800 ◽  
Author(s):  
Athanase Benetos ◽  
Jean-Luc Novella ◽  
Bruno Guerci ◽  
Jean-Frederic Blickle ◽  
Jean-Marc Boivin ◽  
...  

1994 ◽  
Vol 18 (2) ◽  
pp. 68-70 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Kingdon

The care programme approach has been introduced to improve the delivery of services to people with severe mental illness and minimise the risk that they lose contact with mental health services. Its essential elements are assessment of health and social need, a written care plan, nomination of a key worker, and regular review. It requires interprofessional collaboration and negotiation of care plans with users and carers but individual patients vary in their needs for multidisciplinary involvement and review.


2016 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
pp. 17
Author(s):  
Biljana Stojanović-Jovanović ◽  
Vesna Tripković

Modern methods of treatment of neonatal hydrocephalus, still does not give satisfactory results. The treatment of children with hydrocephalus requires intensive monitoring, emergency diagnosis and therapy. Preventing complications in the pre and postoperative period is vital for the quality of life of these children. This requires a high level of knowledge, greater commitment, maturity, responsibility and ability of nurses. By implementation of methods of medical care precess, nurse can notice the condition and care needs, definie nursing diagnosis and goals of care and genuine individual care plan. Based on an evaluation of the results of the work, it can be concluded that the nursing actions are most effective in addressing the problems of children with hydrocephalus. It also allows the nurse to assess their expertise and competence. Evaluation of accomplished, can give directions and guideline for improvement of the quality of work. Improving and developing the health care process brings the ability to improve the work of nurses.


2020 ◽  
pp. 20-27
Author(s):  
Natalia Burlova

The aim of the study was to determine the relevant aspects of the organization of nursing care for the patient after appendectomy based on an analysis of its problems, using a formalized assessment method. The existing problems of patients caused by the operational intervention were analysed. Results. Based on analysis of existing problems of patients caused by operative intervention for removal of worm-like process using formalized assessment method, nurse of surgical department has possibility to build individual (personal) program of patient care. Conclusion. Further study is needed on the use of formalized assessment of the existing problem of patients who are involved in the operational intervention in order to identify and treat possible complications in a timely manner and to draw up an individual care plan.


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