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Recognising and Responding to Psychiatric Deterioration

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Recognising and Responding to Psychiatric Deterioration A/Prof Richard Newton Medical Director, Mental Health, Austin Health, Victoria. Melbourne University – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Recognising and Responding to Psychiatric Deterioration


1
Recognising and Responding to Psychiatric
Deterioration
  • A/Prof Richard Newton
  • Medical Director, Mental Health,
  • Austin Health, Victoria.
  • Melbourne University
  • Monash University

2
Death of a Young Man with Schizophrenia
  • 18 yo, FEP, community case managed with moderate
    response to oral Olanzapine, but marked weight
    gain,
  • 2 years later reduced adherence with medication
    recognised but not acted on
  • Slow deterioration in mental state two months
    later not recognised, - withdrawal, low grade
    persecutory beliefs, worsening of auditory
    hallucinations
  • Six months later further escalating aggression
    and dangerous driving whilst intoxicated
    incorrectly attributed to personality issues
  • Family increasingly contacting case manager with
    concerns about mental state and risk but feel
    unheard
  • Service response is to provide phone number of
    drug detox service
  • Three months later patient admitted floridly
    psychotic, intoxicated with amphetamines,
  • Aggressive to police prior to admission and
    secluded for three days on admission
  • detoxed and the same oral antipsychotics
    reinitiated, response partial returned home after
    three weeks.
  • Drug abuse continues, ceases medication, family
    cant cope
  • 2 years later loss of home, move into poor
    quality rooming house, ongoing contact with
    service however
  • Gradual relapse of psychosis secondary to non
    compliance
  • Case manager documents worsening hopelessness and
    demoralisation, ongoing substance use, grief and
    anger with family, aggression risk assessed but
    no suicide risk assessment.
  • Found hanging in his bathroom a week later 5
    years after first diagnosis. In continuous
    contact with service throughout this
    deteriorating course.

3
National Safety and Quality Health Service
Standards
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Recognition and Response to the Deteriorating
Patient in Mental HealthIHI.ORG
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National Standards For Mental health Services
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National Standards For Mental health Services
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Scope of the issues
Recognising and Responding to Psychiatric
Deterioration
  • Acute Care Settings / Continuing Care Settings
  • Mental State / Physical Health / Psychosocial
    Deterioration
  • Risk to Self / Risk to Others
  • Time lag between change and response often months
  • Lack of objective measures to assess
    deterioration and reliance on subjective measures
  • Incongruence between documentation and clinical
    reality
  • families and carers as informants Vs Patient as
    informant
  • Makes tools such as risk assessment and other
    traffic light systems for recognition and rapid
    response to deteriorating patient hard to
    implement
  • Effect size for interventions 20 difference at
    best from placebo
  • Treatment that objectively does not meet adequate
    standards of care often leads to good outcomes

15
Complexity in Mental Health Care Practice
Recognising and Responding to Psychiatric
Deterioration
  • Quality of individual clinical practice
  • Adherence to professional standards
  • Culture and attitudes that develop in a team or a
    service
  • Service setting standards of care use of
    pathways etc
  • Service systems to support best care
  • Individuals and teams accountable to practice
    within these systems whilst professional
    standards and individual best practice supported.

16
How can we learn from adverse event reviews
  • Use of CIR methodology to review and act upon
    findings from review of
  • Sudden and Unexpected Death
  • Seclusion
  • Readmission
  • Assault
  • Self Harm
  • Absconding
  • Common theme is lack of recognition or response
    to the deteriorating patient

17
Case Study_ Reducing Seclusion
  • Primary prevention
  • Organisational philosophy that articulates
    non-violence in policy, procedure and practice
  • Risk assessment tools Risk Assessment and
    Management Plan
  • Comfort rooms and self soothing activities
  • Communication tools and handover tool developed
  • Protected Therapeutic Engagement Time

18
Seclusion Reduction
19
Case Study_ Reducing Seclusion
20
Protected Therapeutic Engagement Time
  • Contact Nurse will ensure that that they
    introduce themselves to their patients each
    shift.
  • They will arrange a time with the patient to
    catch up with them during their 8 hour shift to
    engage in a conversation with them aim for 20
    mins of contact time
  • The themes raised during that time will be
    documented in the clinical file under the heading
    of P.T.E.T
  • Where there are requests and or questions made by
    the patient these will be noted in the above
    section
  • Should a patient decline the offer of the P.T.E.T
    then this will be recorded in the clinical file.
  • P.T.E.T should be offered to all patients in the
    acute programme every morning and afternoon shift
    7 days per week.

21
Case Study_ Reducing Seclusion
  • Secondary Prevention
  • Recognise deterioration respond to prevent
    escalation
  • Personal safety plan
  • Avoid power struggles and coercive responses
  • Maintain a soothing environment
  • Tertiary Prevention
  • Explore precipitating factors
  • Post seclusion counselling
  • Review/update treatment plan
  • Restraint for shortest time possible
  • Review of seclusion and restraint events to
    inform new practice

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Case Example Recognising and Responding to
Psychiatric Deterioration - Specialist Eating
Disorder Unit
  • Acute Adult In-Patient Unit with 5 Specialist
    Eating Disorder Beds
  • 2008 Situation
  • Staff not confident to manage AN patients with
    physical health problems.
  • Perceived lack of support for physical health
    problems
  • Average BMI of IPs to specialist Eating Disorder
    beds gt17.5, average BMI change 0.1
  • High rates of NG tube refeeding and long stays in
    acute medical ward
  • Constant presence of eating disorder patients in
    medical beds
  • High rates of Dissatisfaction from staff and
    patients in unit

27
Recognising and Responding to Physical
Deterioration- Eating Disorders
  • Medical rescue identified as specialist role for
    unit
  • Medical Unit identified to provide specific
    support to Eating Disorders Programme
  • Nursing team trained to insert and manage NG tube
    refeeding on unit
  • Specialist meal support and other groups
    established
  • Team provided with education regarding the
    adaptive physiological response and maladaptive
    health risks associated with starvation
  • Twice weekly ward round with review tool adapted
    to the unit. Clearly specifies medical and
    psychiatric risks, frequency of investigations,
    frequency of visual and physical observations
  • Traffic light system to identify observations
    that require a clinical response

28
  Test/ Investigation Concern Alert
Nutrition BMI lt14 lt12
Nutrition Weight loss per week gt0.5kg gt1.0kg
Nutrition Albumin lt35 lt32
Nutrition Creatinine Kinase gt170 gt250
CVS Systolic BP lt90 lt80
CVS Diastolic BP lt70 lt60
CVS Postural drop gt10 gt20
CVS Pulse lt50 lt40
CVS QTc   gt450msec
Temperature Temperature lt35 lt34.5
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  Investigation Concern Alert
Bone Marrow WCC lt4.0 lt2.0
Bone Marrow Neutrophils lt1.5 lt1.0
Bone Marrow Hb lt110 lt90
Bone Marrow Platelets lt130 lt110
Electrolytes K lt3.5 lt3.0
Electrolytes Na lt135 lt130
Electrolytes Mg 0.5-0.7 lt0.5
Electrolytes PO4 0.5-0.8 lt0.5
Electrolytes Urea gt7 gt10
Electrolytes Glucose lt3.5 lt2.5
Liver Function Bilirubin gt20 gt40
Liver Function ALP gt110 gt200
Liver Function AST gt40 gt80
Liver Function ALT gt45 gt90
Liver Function GGT gt45 gt90
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2011 Eating Disorder Programme
  • mean admission BMI 14.5
  • Mean discharge BMI 16
  • BMI change 1.5
  • Frequency of medical transfer 7.5

34
Case study - Recognising and Responding to
Psychiatric Deterioration in an Acute General
Health Setting
  • Prevalence rates of significant psychiatric
    comorbidity in general acute wards varies between
    20 60.
  • Prevalence rates in the general community much
    lower 17-20
  • Referral rates from general wards to liaison
    psychiatry services low - lt5 but varies greatly

35
Case study - Recognising and Responding to
Psychiatric Deterioration in an Acute General
Health Setting
  • Adverse outcomes secondary to absence of a
    systematic structured approach to identifying,
    assessing and responding to deteriorating mental
    state in acute health wards
  • Recognised as issue by hospital wide governance
    processes
  • Need for structured mental health risk assessment
    and management identified
  • Clear agreement of broad principles
  • Failure to agree over one year of specifics of
    risk assessment and process for implementing

36
Case study - Recognising and Responding to
Psychiatric Deterioration in an Acute General
Health Setting
  • Need for high level leadership and oversight
  • Risk Tool developed over one year and then
    abandoned.
  • Use hospital wide of mental health risk
    assessment and management tool agreed
  • General hospital flow chart for use developed
  • Training incorporated into HMO and Registrar
    teaching
  • Referrals to Liaison Psychiatry require risk
    assessment to triage urgency of response

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Death of a Young Man with Schizophrenia
  • 18 yo, FEP with moderate response to oral
    Olanzapine, but marked weight gain
  • General Health and Metabolic monitoring, shared
    care processes with Primary Care, Dietetics on
    site
  • 2 years later reduced adherence with medication
    recognised but not acted on
  • Training on assisting patients with adherence,
    clinical review policies and tools include
    explicit statements on adherence
  • Slow deterioration in mental state two months
    later not recognised, - withdrawal, low grade
    persecutory beliefs, worsening of auditory
    hallucinations
  • All clinical contacts require explicit statement
    on Mental State and impression of change. Multi
    Disciplinary Clinical review requires MSE
    presentation, review of appropriateness of
    treatment plan, and tracking of activities to
    implement treatment plan.

40
Death of a Young Man with Schizophrenia
  • Six months later further escalating aggression
    and dangerous driving whilst intoxicated
    attributed to personality issues
  • Dual diagnosis workers embedded in service,
    shared care protocols in place with Drug and
    Alcohol Services, Improved Psychiatrist EFT to
    allow for review of all patients and diagnoses.
    Clinical review process as before and culture of
    easy escalation of care when patients
    deteriorating
  • Family increasingly contacting service with
    concerns about mental state and risk
  • All staff trained in Family sensitive practice,
    culture and attitudinal change encouraged to be
    open to carer report being an important part of
    clinical information
  • Service response is to provide phone number of
    drug detox service
  • Triage and clinical review processes in place to
    monitor quality of care provision.
  • Patient admitted floridly psychotic, intoxicated
    with amphetamines,
  • Aggressive to police prior to admission and
    secluded for three days on admission
  • Seclusion processes in place to ensure safe
    respectful care with seclusion use as an
    exception rather than norm

41
Death of a Young Man with Schizophrenia
  • detoxed and antipsychotics reinitiated, response
    partial returned home after three weeks.
  • In Patient clinical information integrated with
    community care
  • Drug abuse continues, ceases medication, family
    cant cope
  • Family support processes and easy referrals in
    place
  • Loss of home, move into poor quality rooming
    house, ongoing contact with service however
  • Partnerships with PDRSS to assist better quality
    housing, and support of family
  • Gradual relapse of psychosis secondary to none
    compliance
  • Adherence, clincal review, easy escalation as
    before
  • Case manager documents worsening hopelessness and
    demoralisation, ongoing substance use, grief and
    anger with family, aggression risk assessed but
    no suicide risk assessment.
  • Risk assessment tool requires systematic approach
    to risk assessment and appropriate response
    monitored via team review processes
  • Found hanging in his bathroom a week later
  • Prevented by all the above

42
Conclusions
Recognising and Responding to Psychiatric
Deterioration
  • Much can be learnt from Acute Health
  • Lack of objective measures for deterioration has
    to be managed
  • Reliance on subjective measures places greater
    burden on quality of systems
  • Team Culture, attitudes, individual practice
    needs to be in alignment with service standards
    and systems for those systems to be implemented
    adequately
  • Role of mobilising values of staff to get
    commitment to quality care Vs Role of standard
    setting and compliance systems
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