T. Burns et al., Attitudes of general practitioners and community mental health team staff towards the locus of care for people with chronic psychotic disorders, PRIM CARE P, 6(2), 2000, pp. 67-71
Shared care of the long-term mentally ill (LTMI) has long been advocated bu
t little is known about the attitudes of general practitioners (GPs) and me
ntal health workers (MHWs) towards the locus of care of these patients. In
order to compare MHWs' and GPs' attitudes towards the care of patients with
chronic psychosis, in 1998 52 GPs and 58 MHWs involved in a study which wa
s conducted in three London boroughs about the locus of care for people wit
h chronic psychotic disorders were asked to complete postal questionnaires.
These questionnaires examined the issues of responsibility for both mental
and physical care, difficulties in providing care and professional satisfa
ction. There was agreement that psychiatric teams should take overall respo
nsibility for these patients, although in most cases 'care should be shared
'. The results showed that the MHWs wanted GPs to take more responsibility
for physical treatment than the GPs themselves wanted, that the GPs had mix
ed feelings about relapse monitoring and that the MHWs found patients with
chronic psychosis more rewarding and less difficult to work with. A compari
son with a 1991 study of GPs showed little change. However, despite recent
adverse publicity, a higher proportion of the GPs in 1998 agreed that these
patients are better off in the community, The GPs and MHWs generally agree
d on the roles they should take in the management of patients with chronic
psychosis but some important differences remain. Primary Care Psychiatry 20
00: 6:67-71. Copyright (C) 2000 by LibraPharm Limited.