Background: There is an expectation in current heath care policy that family carers are involved in service delivery. This is also the case with compulsory outpatient mental health care, Community Treatment Orders (CTOs) that were introduced in England in 2008. No study has systematically investigated family involvement through the CTO process. Method: We conducted qualitative interviews with 24 family carers to ascertain their views and experiences of involvement in CTOs. The transcripts were subjected to thematic analysis that incorporated both deductive and inductive elements. Results: We found significant variation in both the type and extent of family carer involvement throughout the CTO process (initiation, recall to ...
Objective: To describe the lived experiences of people subject to community treatment orders (CTOs) ...
Aim The literature reporting experiences of relatives of people with mental illness regarding their ...
Despite their important contributions, many carers report feeling excluded by mental health services...
Abstract Background There is an expectation in current heath care policy that family carers are invo...
Carers are seen as legitimate stakeholders in wider policy processes and increasingly as ‘co-produce...
It is widely accepted that family and carer participation in adult mental health care is desirable. ...
This study assessed differences between service users', family carers' and mental healthcare provide...
Aim:The literature reporting experiences of relatives of people with mental illness regarding their ...
There is increasing emphasis on enhancing consumer and carer participation in the planning and provi...
Background: Current Australian mental health policy recommends that carers should be involved in the...
The development of anti-psychotic medications and deinstitutionalization has shifted the primary foc...
Approximately 5% of the UK population live with serious mental health problems. Data show that infor...
Background. Government health care policy urges service providers to involve service users in the de...
The development of anti-psychotic medications and deinstitutionalization has shifted the primary foc...
This paper presents findings from a national study into the Care Programme Approach funded by the De...
Objective: To describe the lived experiences of people subject to community treatment orders (CTOs) ...
Aim The literature reporting experiences of relatives of people with mental illness regarding their ...
Despite their important contributions, many carers report feeling excluded by mental health services...
Abstract Background There is an expectation in current heath care policy that family carers are invo...
Carers are seen as legitimate stakeholders in wider policy processes and increasingly as ‘co-produce...
It is widely accepted that family and carer participation in adult mental health care is desirable. ...
This study assessed differences between service users', family carers' and mental healthcare provide...
Aim:The literature reporting experiences of relatives of people with mental illness regarding their ...
There is increasing emphasis on enhancing consumer and carer participation in the planning and provi...
Background: Current Australian mental health policy recommends that carers should be involved in the...
The development of anti-psychotic medications and deinstitutionalization has shifted the primary foc...
Approximately 5% of the UK population live with serious mental health problems. Data show that infor...
Background. Government health care policy urges service providers to involve service users in the de...
The development of anti-psychotic medications and deinstitutionalization has shifted the primary foc...
This paper presents findings from a national study into the Care Programme Approach funded by the De...
Objective: To describe the lived experiences of people subject to community treatment orders (CTOs) ...
Aim The literature reporting experiences of relatives of people with mental illness regarding their ...
Despite their important contributions, many carers report feeling excluded by mental health services...