Supported accommodation for people with mental health problems: the QuEST research programme with feasibility RCT

H. Killaspy, S. Priebe, M. King, S. Eldridge, P. McCrone, G. Shepherd, Maurice Arbuthnott, G. Leavey, S. Curtis, P. McPherson, S. Dowling
{"title":"Supported accommodation for people with mental health problems: the QuEST research programme with feasibility RCT","authors":"H. Killaspy, S. Priebe, M. King, S. Eldridge, P. McCrone, G. Shepherd, Maurice Arbuthnott, G. Leavey, S. Curtis, P. McPherson, S. Dowling","doi":"10.3310/pgfar07070","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"\n \n Across England, around 60,000 people live in mental health supported accommodation: residential care, supported housing and floating outreach. Residential care and supported housing provide on-site support (residential care provides the highest level), whereas floating outreach staff visit people living in their own tenancies. Despite their abundance, little is known about the quality and outcomes of these services.\n \n \n \n The aim was to assess the quality, costs and effectiveness of mental health supported accommodation services in England. The objectives were (1) to adapt the Quality Indicator for Rehabilitative Care (QuIRC) and the Client Assessment of Treatment scale for use in mental health supported accommodation services; (2) to assess the quality and costs of these services in England and the proportion of people who ‘move on’ to less supported accommodation without placement breakdown (e.g. to move from residential care to supported housing or supported housing to floating outreach, or, for those receiving floating outreach, to manage with fewer hours of support); (3) to identify service and service user factors (including costs) associated with greater quality of life, autonomy and successful move-on; and (4) to carry out a feasibility trial to assess the required sample size and appropriate outcomes for a randomised evaluation of two existing models of supported accommodation.\n \n \n \n Objective 1 – focus groups with staff (n = 12) and service users (n = 16); psychometric testing in 52 services, repeated in 87 services (adapted QuIRC) and with 618 service users (adapted Client Assessment of Treatment scale). Objectives 2 and 3 – national survey and prospective cohort study involving 87 services (residential care, n = 22; supported housing, n = 35; floating outreach, n = 30) and 619 service users followed over 30 months; qualitative interviews with 30 staff and 30 service users. Objective 4 – individually randomised, parallel-group feasibility trial in three centres.\n \n \n \n English mental health supported accommodation services.\n \n \n \n Staff and users of mental health supported accomodation services.\n \n \n \n Feasibility trial involved two existing models of supported accommodation: supported housing and floating outreach.\n \n \n \n Cohort study – proportion of participants who successfully moved to less supported accommodation at 30 months’ follow-up without placement breakdown. Feasibility trial – participant recruitment and withdrawal rates.\n \n \n \n The adapted QuIRC [QuIRC: Supported Accomodation (QuIRC-SA)] had excellent inter-rater reliability, and exploratory factor analysis confirmed its structural validity (all items loaded onto the relevant domain at the > ± 0.3 level). The adapted Client Assessment of Treatment for Supported Accommodation had good internal consistency (Cronbach’s alpha 0.89) and convergent validity (r\n s = 0.369; p < 0.001). Supported housing services scored higher than residential care and floating outreach on six out of seven QuIRC-SA quality domains. Service users had a high prevalence of severe self-neglect (57%) and vulnerability to exploitation (37%). Those in supported housing (25%) and floating outreach (20%) experienced more crime than those in residential care (4%) but had greater autonomy. Residential care was the most expensive service (mean cost per resident per week was £581 for residential care, £261 for supported housing and £66 for floating outreach) but supported users with the greatest needs. After adjusting for clinical differences, quality of life was similar for users of supported housing and residential care (mean difference –0.138, 95% confidence interval –0.402 to 0.126; p = 0.306), whereas autonomy was greater for supported housing users (mean difference 0.145, 95% confidence interval 0.010 to 0.279; p = 0.035). Qualitative interviews showed that staff and service users shared an understanding of service goals and what constituted effective support. After adjusting for clinical differences, those in floating outreach were more likely to move on successfully at 30 months’ follow-up than those in residential care [odds ratio (OR) 7.96; p < 0.001] and supported housing (OR 2.74; p < 0.001), and this was more likely for users of supported housing than residential care (OR 2.90; p = 0.04). Successful move-on was positively associated with scores on two QuIRC-SA domains: the degree to which the service promoted ‘human rights’ (e.g. facilitating access to advocacy) and ‘recovery-based practice’ (e.g. holding therapeutic optimism and providing collaborative, individualised care planning). Service use costs for those who moved on were significantly lower than for those who did not. Recruitment in the feasibility trial was difficult: 1432 people were screened but only eight were randomised. Barriers included concerns about accommodation being decided at random and a perceived lack of equipoise among clinicians who felt that individuals needed to ‘step down’ from supported housing to floating outreach services.\n \n \n \n We did not find clear evidence on the most effective model(s) of mental health supported accommodation. Indeed, our feasibility study suggests that trials comparing effectiveness cannot be conducted in this country. A range of options are required to provide appropriate support to individuals with differing needs.\n \n \n \n Future research in this field requires alternatives to trials. Service planners should be guided by the mental health needs of the local population and the pros and cons of the different services that our study identified, rather than purely financial drivers.\n \n \n \n Current Controlled Trials ISRCTN19689576.\n \n \n \n This programme was funded by the National Institute for Heath Research (NIHR) Programme Grants for Applied Research programme and will be published in full in Programme Grants for Applied Research; Vol. 7, No. 7. See the NIHR Journals Library website for further project information. The fundholders are Camden and Islington NHS Foundation Trust and the research is a collaboration between University College London, Queen Mary University of London, King’s College London, the University of Ulster and Durham University.\n","PeriodicalId":32307,"journal":{"name":"Programme Grants for Applied Research","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2019-09-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"3","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Programme Grants for Applied Research","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.3310/pgfar07070","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q4","JCRName":"Medicine","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 3

Abstract

Across England, around 60,000 people live in mental health supported accommodation: residential care, supported housing and floating outreach. Residential care and supported housing provide on-site support (residential care provides the highest level), whereas floating outreach staff visit people living in their own tenancies. Despite their abundance, little is known about the quality and outcomes of these services. The aim was to assess the quality, costs and effectiveness of mental health supported accommodation services in England. The objectives were (1) to adapt the Quality Indicator for Rehabilitative Care (QuIRC) and the Client Assessment of Treatment scale for use in mental health supported accommodation services; (2) to assess the quality and costs of these services in England and the proportion of people who ‘move on’ to less supported accommodation without placement breakdown (e.g. to move from residential care to supported housing or supported housing to floating outreach, or, for those receiving floating outreach, to manage with fewer hours of support); (3) to identify service and service user factors (including costs) associated with greater quality of life, autonomy and successful move-on; and (4) to carry out a feasibility trial to assess the required sample size and appropriate outcomes for a randomised evaluation of two existing models of supported accommodation. Objective 1 – focus groups with staff (n = 12) and service users (n = 16); psychometric testing in 52 services, repeated in 87 services (adapted QuIRC) and with 618 service users (adapted Client Assessment of Treatment scale). Objectives 2 and 3 – national survey and prospective cohort study involving 87 services (residential care, n = 22; supported housing, n = 35; floating outreach, n = 30) and 619 service users followed over 30 months; qualitative interviews with 30 staff and 30 service users. Objective 4 – individually randomised, parallel-group feasibility trial in three centres. English mental health supported accommodation services. Staff and users of mental health supported accomodation services. Feasibility trial involved two existing models of supported accommodation: supported housing and floating outreach. Cohort study – proportion of participants who successfully moved to less supported accommodation at 30 months’ follow-up without placement breakdown. Feasibility trial – participant recruitment and withdrawal rates. The adapted QuIRC [QuIRC: Supported Accomodation (QuIRC-SA)] had excellent inter-rater reliability, and exploratory factor analysis confirmed its structural validity (all items loaded onto the relevant domain at the > ± 0.3 level). The adapted Client Assessment of Treatment for Supported Accommodation had good internal consistency (Cronbach’s alpha 0.89) and convergent validity (r s = 0.369; p < 0.001). Supported housing services scored higher than residential care and floating outreach on six out of seven QuIRC-SA quality domains. Service users had a high prevalence of severe self-neglect (57%) and vulnerability to exploitation (37%). Those in supported housing (25%) and floating outreach (20%) experienced more crime than those in residential care (4%) but had greater autonomy. Residential care was the most expensive service (mean cost per resident per week was £581 for residential care, £261 for supported housing and £66 for floating outreach) but supported users with the greatest needs. After adjusting for clinical differences, quality of life was similar for users of supported housing and residential care (mean difference –0.138, 95% confidence interval –0.402 to 0.126; p = 0.306), whereas autonomy was greater for supported housing users (mean difference 0.145, 95% confidence interval 0.010 to 0.279; p = 0.035). Qualitative interviews showed that staff and service users shared an understanding of service goals and what constituted effective support. After adjusting for clinical differences, those in floating outreach were more likely to move on successfully at 30 months’ follow-up than those in residential care [odds ratio (OR) 7.96; p < 0.001] and supported housing (OR 2.74; p < 0.001), and this was more likely for users of supported housing than residential care (OR 2.90; p = 0.04). Successful move-on was positively associated with scores on two QuIRC-SA domains: the degree to which the service promoted ‘human rights’ (e.g. facilitating access to advocacy) and ‘recovery-based practice’ (e.g. holding therapeutic optimism and providing collaborative, individualised care planning). Service use costs for those who moved on were significantly lower than for those who did not. Recruitment in the feasibility trial was difficult: 1432 people were screened but only eight were randomised. Barriers included concerns about accommodation being decided at random and a perceived lack of equipoise among clinicians who felt that individuals needed to ‘step down’ from supported housing to floating outreach services. We did not find clear evidence on the most effective model(s) of mental health supported accommodation. Indeed, our feasibility study suggests that trials comparing effectiveness cannot be conducted in this country. A range of options are required to provide appropriate support to individuals with differing needs. Future research in this field requires alternatives to trials. Service planners should be guided by the mental health needs of the local population and the pros and cons of the different services that our study identified, rather than purely financial drivers. Current Controlled Trials ISRCTN19689576. This programme was funded by the National Institute for Heath Research (NIHR) Programme Grants for Applied Research programme and will be published in full in Programme Grants for Applied Research; Vol. 7, No. 7. See the NIHR Journals Library website for further project information. The fundholders are Camden and Islington NHS Foundation Trust and the research is a collaboration between University College London, Queen Mary University of London, King’s College London, the University of Ulster and Durham University.
查看原文
分享 分享
微信好友 朋友圈 QQ好友 复制链接
本刊更多论文
为有精神健康问题的人提供支助性住宿:QuEST研究方案和可行性随机对照试验
在整个英格兰,大约有6万人住在心理健康支持的住宿中:住宿护理、支持住房和流动外展。住宿护理和支持性住房提供现场支持(住宿护理提供最高级别的支持),而流动的外展人员则访问住在自己租约中的人。尽管这些服务非常丰富,但人们对这些服务的质量和结果知之甚少。目的是评估英格兰心理健康支持住宿服务的质量、成本和有效性。目标是:(1)调整康复护理质量指标(QuIRC)和治疗客户评估量表,用于精神卫生支持住宿服务;(2)评估英格兰这些服务的质量和成本,以及在没有安置分解的情况下“转移”到支持较少的住宿的人的比例(例如,从住宿护理转到支持住房或支持住房转到流动外服务,或者,对于那些接受流动外服务的人,以更少的支持时间进行管理);(3)识别与更高生活质量、自主性和成功转型相关的服务和服务用户因素(包括成本);(4)开展可行性试验,以评估对两种现有支持性住宿模式进行随机评估所需的样本量和适当的结果。目标1 -工作人员(n = 12)和服务用户(n = 16)的焦点小组;在52个服务中进行心理测量测试,在87个服务中重复进行(改编的QuIRC)和618个服务用户(改编的治疗客户评估量表)。目标2和3:全国调查和前瞻性队列研究,涉及87个服务(住宿护理,n = 22;支撑房屋,n = 35;流动外展(n = 30)和619名服务用户随访30个月;对30名工作人员和30名服务使用者进行定性访谈。目标4 -在三个中心进行的单独随机、平行组可行性试验。英国心理健康支持住宿服务。心理健康支助住宿服务的工作人员和使用者。可行性试验涉及两种现有的支持住宿模式:支持住房和流动外展。队列研究-在随访30个月后,成功转移到支持较少的住所的参与者的比例,没有安置细分。可行性试验-参与者招募和退出率。改编后的QuIRC [QuIRC: Supported adaptive (QuIRC- sa)]具有优异的量表间信度,探索性因子分析证实了其结构效度(所有条目加载到相关域>±0.3水平)。适应的来访者评估支持住宿治疗具有良好的内部一致性(Cronbach 's α = 0.89)和收敛效度(r s = 0.369;p < 0.001)。在QuIRC-SA的七个质量领域中,有六个领域的支持住房服务得分高于住宿护理和流动外展服务。服务使用者普遍存在严重的自我忽视(57%)和易受剥削(37%)。那些住在支持住房(25%)和流动外展(20%)的人比住在寄宿护理(4%)的人经历了更多的犯罪,但拥有更大的自主权。住宿护理是最昂贵的服务(每个居民每周的平均费用为住宿护理581英镑,支持住房261英镑,流动外展66英镑),但支持的用户有最大的需求。在对临床差异进行调整后,支持性住房和住院护理使用者的生活质量相似(平均差值为-0.138,95%置信区间为-0.402至0.126;P = 0.306),而支持住房使用者的自主权更大(平均差异为0.145,95%置信区间为0.010至0.279;p = 0.035)。定性访谈表明,工作人员和服务使用者对服务目标和有效支助的构成有共同的理解。在调整临床差异后,在30个月的随访中,那些接受流动外展治疗的人比那些接受住院治疗的人更有可能成功地继续生活[优势比(OR) 7.96;p < 0.001]和支持住房(OR 2.74;p < 0.001),而且这种情况更可能发生在支持住房的使用者身上,而不是寄宿护理(OR 2.90;p = 0.04)。成功的转移与两个QuIRC-SA领域的得分呈正相关:服务促进“人权”的程度(例如促进获得宣传)和“基于康复的实践”(例如保持治疗乐观主义和提供协作,个性化护理计划)。那些搬家的人的服务使用成本明显低于那些没有搬家的人。可行性试验的招募是困难的:筛选了1432人,但只有8人是随机的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
求助全文
约1分钟内获得全文 去求助
来源期刊
CiteScore
1.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
9
审稿时长
53 weeks
期刊最新文献
Collaborative care intervention for individuals with severe mental illness: the PARTNERS2 programme including complex intervention development and cluster RCT Developing primary care services for stroke survivors: the Improving Primary Care After Stroke (IPCAS) research programme Improving the understanding and management of back pain in older adults: the BOOST research programme including RCT and OPAL cohort A casemix classification for those receiving specialist palliative care during their last year of life across England: the C-CHANGE research programme Peer support for discharge from inpatient to community mental health care: the ENRICH research programme
×
引用
GB/T 7714-2015
复制
MLA
复制
APA
复制
导出至
BibTeX EndNote RefMan NoteFirst NoteExpress
×
×
提示
您的信息不完整,为了账户安全,请先补充。
现在去补充
×
提示
您因"违规操作"
具体请查看互助需知
我知道了
×
提示
现在去查看 取消
×
提示
确定
0
微信
客服QQ
Book学术公众号 扫码关注我们
反馈
×
意见反馈
请填写您的意见或建议
请填写您的手机或邮箱
已复制链接
已复制链接
快去分享给好友吧!
我知道了
×
扫码分享
扫码分享
Book学术官方微信
Book学术文献互助
Book学术文献互助群
群 号:481959085
Book学术
文献互助 智能选刊 最新文献 互助须知 联系我们:info@booksci.cn
Book学术提供免费学术资源搜索服务,方便国内外学者检索中英文文献。致力于提供最便捷和优质的服务体验。
Copyright © 2023 Book学术 All rights reserved.
ghs 京公网安备 11010802042870号 京ICP备2023020795号-1