← Volver atrás
Publicaciones

Patterns of mental health care provision in urban areas: A comparative analysis for local policy in the ACT

Autores

Furst M.A. , SALINAS PÉREZ, JOSÉ ALBERTO, RUIZ GUTIÉRREZ COLOSIA, MENCIA, Mendoza J. , Bagheri N. , Anthes L. , Salvador-Carulla L.

Publicación externa

No

Medio

PLoS ONE

Alcance

Article

Naturaleza

Científica

Cuartil JCR

Cuartil SJR

Impacto JCR

2.9

Impacto SJR

0.839

Fecha de publicacion

01/04/2023

ISI

000970555500020

Scopus Id

2-s2.0-85152476336

Abstract

Urbanisation presents specific mental health challenges, requiring a better understanding of service availability in urban areas for mental health care planning. Our objective is to analyse patterns of urban mental healthcare provision in Australia, and compare these with relevant national and international regions to inform urban mental healthcare policy and planning. Following a health ecosystems approach, we use a standardised service classification instrument, the Description and Evaluation of Services and DirectoriEs (DESDE), and Mental Health Care Atlases, to compare the availability, bed capacity and diversity of services providing specialised mental health or psychosocial care that are universally accessible (ie provided at no or low cost only in all relevant care sectors in four Australian and three international urban regions. We used a heuristics approach and an homogeneity test. Applicability to local policy was assessed using the Adoption Impact Ladder. Community care was less developed in Australia than internationally, except in the case of residential care in Australian Capital Territory, our reference area. Alternatives to hospitalisation were scarce across all regions. The Atlas was applicable to regional and local mental health planning. Differences in pattern of care between regions has implications for planning, equality of access to care and prioritisation of resources. An ecosystems approach is relevant to service planning in mental healthcare at local level. © 2023 Furst et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.

Palabras clave

adoption; article; Australia; Australian Capital Territory; community care; controlled study; directory; ecosystem; health care policy; heuristics; hospital bed capacity; hospitalization; human; human experiment; mental health; mental health care; psychosocial care; residential care; urban area; mental health; mental health service; policy; Australia; Ecosystem; Humans; Mental Health; Mental Health Services; Policy