Mayview Discharge Study

31
Mayview Discharge Study University of Pittsburgh

description

Mayview Discharge Study. University of Pittsburgh. The Pitt Study. Goals of this presentation Recap findings Identify and focus on potential areas for improvement. Methods. 65 people (75% of a random sample) participated in a two-year follow up study of: - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Mayview Discharge Study

Page 1: Mayview Discharge Study

Mayview Discharge Study

University of Pittsburgh

Page 2: Mayview Discharge Study

The Pitt Study

• Goals of this presentation– Recap findings– Identify and focus on potential areas for

improvement

Page 3: Mayview Discharge Study

Methods

• 65 people (75% of a random sample) participated in a two-year follow up study of:– Standardized assessments of major

indicators of quality of life and recovery– Qualitative observations and interviews

• We met with people every three months– 45-50 participants at each time point

• 225 standardized assessments and 138 “check-ins” over two years

Page 4: Mayview Discharge Study

Major qualitative findings

• Participants like their new residences and were comfortable with the discharge process

• With new-found freedom, a few people get in trouble

• Many people have staff as their primary contacts, and some find their lives rather monotonous

• Housing is an on-going concern

Page 5: Mayview Discharge Study

People are satisfied with theirnew residences

• New residences are preferred to the hospital– No comparison. It’s better. It’s the freedom

factor– I’m free. I go more places. I do what I want to

do.

• People feel safe and comfortable – Here, I am much more relaxed– I am much more comfortable– There are less people. If residents don’t get

along, it gets taken care of by staff

Page 6: Mayview Discharge Study

Potential perils of freedom

• A small number of people became re-involved with criminal activity, usually illegal substance use, and experienced negative consequences

Page 7: Mayview Discharge Study

Progress needed on community integration

• Many participants would welcome more varied activities– Q: What do you do? A: Sleep. Get up and

watch TV. Come out here and smoke.– Q: What is there to do? A: Sleeping. Groups.

That’s about all. – I don’t go anywhere. I don’t have any money.

• Some participants are very active– I am in the process of getting prepared to get

a job. I’ll see what kinds of things I want to do.

Page 8: Mayview Discharge Study

Staff are often the primary social contacts

• Many people report that they depend mostly on staff– No one has visited me besides my peer

mentor and CTT –My case manager is my best friend,

guardian, big sister. I have 24-hour access to her.

– I can talk to CTT any time if there’s something going on or I need them to advocate for me

Page 9: Mayview Discharge Study

Housing is a continuing concern

• Some people adjust well to supervised housing situations designed for short stays (e.g., CRRs), and find the need to relocate again problematic

• Most participants are poor, and will rely on public housing as they become more independent– Public housing is not always available– When available, the quality and safety of

public housing is variable

Page 10: Mayview Discharge Study

Major quantitative findings

• Psychiatric symptoms go down over time– 50% of people meet a recently

published criterion for symptom remission at the 2-year time point

• Contact with friends and social adjustment go up over time

• No quantitative indicator deteriorated over time

Page 11: Mayview Discharge Study

Average BPRS score over time

Page 12: Mayview Discharge Study

Percent with at least moderate illness

(BPRS >41)

Page 13: Mayview Discharge Study

Criteria for remission

• Remission of BRPS-rated psychotic symptoms– Seven symptoms related to psychosis

• Grandiosity, suspiciousness, unusual thought content, hallucinations, conceptual disorganization, blunted affect

– Rated 3 (mild) or less for six months

• Additional criterion:– Overall BPRS < 31 for six months

• 50 participants had at least two standardized assessments in Year 2 of the study– We examined their last two observations

Page 14: Mayview Discharge Study

Remission

• 30 of 50 (60%) were in remission from psychotic symptoms

• 24 of 50 (48%) were in remission and also had low overall BPRS scores

Page 15: Mayview Discharge Study

See friends regularly (percent)

Page 16: Mayview Discharge Study

How do participants compare to other groups?

• Quality of life and Progress towards Recovery – Did not change over time– Compared favorably to other populations

for whom data have been published

• Perceptions of Care – Did not change over time–Were somewhat lower than the major

published benchmark

Page 17: Mayview Discharge Study

Quality of Life – all scales (by scale)

Page 18: Mayview Discharge Study

WHOQOL: Mayview contrasted with other samples (by sample)

Page 19: Mayview Discharge Study

WHOQol compared to other samples

Page 20: Mayview Discharge Study

WHOQol compared to other samples

Page 21: Mayview Discharge Study

Recovery Assessment Scale– all subscales (by subscale)

Page 22: Mayview Discharge Study

RAS: Mayview contrasted to Australian sample of MH

consumers

Page 23: Mayview Discharge Study

RAS: Mayview in contrast to Australian MH consumers

Page 24: Mayview Discharge Study

Perceptions of Care– all scales (by scale)

Page 25: Mayview Discharge Study

POC: Mayview contrasted with JCHO sample

Page 26: Mayview Discharge Study

Would you recommend this facility?

Page 27: Mayview Discharge Study

Rate services from 1-10 (percent)

Page 28: Mayview Discharge Study

Omitting the 25-30% who choose ‘10’

Page 29: Mayview Discharge Study

Rate services from 1 to 10 (percent)

Page 30: Mayview Discharge Study

Conclusions

• The closing was successful• Possible areas for continued discussion

are:– How to bring variety and community

integration into people’s lives– Housing

• Is there enough• Can it be stable, supportive, and recovery-oriented

– Perceptions are care• Can satisfaction with providers be improved

Page 31: Mayview Discharge Study

• “The best experience has been knowing that I can make it in the real world. Not as hard as I projected it to be.”