вторник, 25 сентября 2012 г.

New mental health research from University of California, Department of Public Health discussed. - Psychology & Psychiatry Journal

New investigation results, 'Involuntary civil commitments after the implementation of California's Mental Health Services Act,' are detailed in a study published in Psychiatric Services. According to a study from the United States, 'As of fiscal year 2008-2009, California's Mental Health Services Act (MHSA) has distributed $3.2 billion in new tax revenues to county mental health systems. This voter-approved act attempts to address the needs of unserved and underserved consumers with severe mental illness by implementing a 'whatever it takes' approach.'

'The research literature indicates that the incidence of involuntary treatment may gauge the overall functioning of the public mental health system. Consistent with the notion that the MHSA may facilitate effective treatment of severe mental illness, the authors tested the hypothesis that the incidence of two types of involuntary treatment-72-hour holds and 14-day psychiatric civil commitments--declines as the enhancement of service access and quality is supported by MHSA funds. The investigators obtained quarterly counts of involuntary 72-hour holds (N=593,751) and 14-day psychiatric hospitalizations (N=202,554) for 28 counties, with over 22 million inhabitants, from July 2000 to June 2007. A fixed-effects regression approach adjusted for temporal patterns in treatment. The petitions for involuntary 14-day hospitalizations, but not involuntary 72-hour holds, fell below expected values after disbursement of MHSA funds. In these counties, 3,073 fewer involuntary 14-day treatments-approximately 10% below expected levels-could be attributed to disbursement of MHSA funds. Results remained robust to alternative regression specifications. Fewer than expected involuntary 14-day holds for continued hospitalization may indicate an important shift in service delivery,' wrote T.A. Bruckner and colleagues, University of California, Department of Public Health.

The researchers concluded: 'MHSA funds may have facilitated the discharge of clients from the hospital by providing enhanced resources and access to a range of less-restrictive community-based treatment alternatives.'

Bruckner and colleagues published the results of their research in Psychiatric Services (Involuntary civil commitments after the implementation of California's Mental Health Services Act. Psychiatric Services, 2010;61(10):1006-11).

For additional information, contact T.A. Bruckner, University of California, Dept. of Public Health, Irvine, 202 Social Ecology I, Irvine, CA 92697-7075 USA.

Keywords: City:Irvine, State:CA, Country:United States, Mental Health, Mental Illness, Psychiatric, Psychiatry.

This article was prepared by Psychology & Psychiatry Journal editors from staff and other reports. Copyright 2010, Psychology & Psychiatry Journal via NewsRx.com.