BMC Psychiatry (Sep 2024)

Reducing mental health emergency visits: population-level strategies from participatory modelling

  • Catherine Vacher,
  • Nicholas Ho,
  • Adam Skinner,
  • Paul Crosland,
  • Seyed Hossein Hosseini,
  • Sam Huntley,
  • Yun Ju Christine Song,
  • Grace Yeeun Lee,
  • Andrea N. Natsky,
  • Sarah Piper,
  • Raphael Hasudungan,
  • Sebastian Rosenberg,
  • Jo-An Occhipinti,
  • Ian B. Hickie

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12888-024-06066-7
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 24, no. 1
pp. 1 – 12

Abstract

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Abstract Background Emergency departments (EDs) are often the front door for urgent mental health care, especially when demand exceeds capacity. Long waits in EDs exert strain on hospital resources and worsen distress for individuals experiencing a mental health crisis. We used as a test case the Australian Capital Territory (ACT), with a population surge of over 27% across 2011–2021 and a lagging increase in mental health care capacity, to evaluate population-based approaches to reduce mental health-related ED presentations. Methods We developed a system dynamics model for the ACT region using a participatory approach involving local stakeholders, including health planners, health providers and young people with lived experience of mental health disorders. Outcomes were projected over 2023–2032 for youth (aged 15–24) and for the general population. Results Improving the overall mental health care system through strategies such as doubling the annual capacity growth rate of mental health services or leveraging digital technologies for triage and care coordination is projected to decrease youth mental health-related ED visits by 4.3% and 4.8% respectively. Implementation of mobile crisis response teams (consisting of a mental health nurse accompanying police or ambulance officers) is projected to reduce youth mental health-related ED visits by 10.2% by de-escalating some emergency situations and directly transferring selected individuals to community mental health centres. Other effective interventions include limiting re-presentations to ED by screening for suicide risk and following up with calls post-discharge (6.4% reduction), and limiting presentations of frequent users of ED by providing psychosocial education to families of people with schizophrenia (5.1% reduction). Finally, combining these five approaches is projected to reduce youth mental health-related ED presentations by 26.6% by the end of 2032. Conclusions Policies to decrease youth mental health-related ED presentations should not be limited to increasing mental health care capacity, but also include structural reforms.

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