BMC Health Services Research (Sep 2024)

What does ‘safe care’ mean in the context of community-based mental health services? A qualitative exploration of the perspectives of service users, carers, and healthcare providers in England

  • Phoebe Averill,
  • Bryher Bowness,
  • Claire Henderson,
  • Nick Sevdalis

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12913-024-11473-3
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 24, no. 1
pp. 1 – 15

Abstract

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Abstract Background Having traditionally received limited attention in empirical research and safety improvement agendas, issues of patient safety in mental healthcare increasingly feature in healthcare quality improvement discourses. Dominant approaches to safety stem from narrow clinical risk management perspectives, yet existing evidence points to the limitations of this characterisation. Although mental healthcare is increasingly delivered in community-based settings, narratives of safety pertain primarily to hospital-based mental healthcare. Therefore, through exploratory qualitative interviews and one focus group, we aimed to examine how service users, carers, and healthcare providers conceptualise ‘patient safety’ in community-based mental healthcare. Methods Semi-structured interviews and a single focus group were conducted with users of UK community-based mental healthcare provision for adults (n = 13), their carers (n = 12), and providers (n = 18), who were diverse in characteristics and experiences. Study data were analysed in accordance with a reflexive approach to thematic analysis. Findings Four key themes were developed, reflecting contrasting conceptualisations of safety in this care context, where participant thinking evolved throughout discussions. ‘Systemic inertia: threats to safety’ characterises the entrenched, systemic challenges which rendered participants powerless to advocate for or deliver safe care. ‘Managing the risks service users present’ equates ‘safe care’ to the mitigation of risks service users may pose to themselves or others when unwell, or risks from those around them. ‘More than responding to risks: everyone plays a role in creating safety’ recognises providers’ agency in causing or proactively preventing patient harm. Finally, ‘The goals of ‘safety’: our destination is not yet in sight’ positions safety as a work in progress, calling for ambitious safety agendas, giving primacy to goals which meaningfully improve service users’ lives. Conclusions Our findings have implications for the understanding and improvement of patient safety in community-based mental healthcare settings, where improvement objectives should transcend beyond management of risks and preventing deterioration to address patient and carer-centred concerns, including practices that make people feel unsafe.

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