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Journal Article

Citation

Read J, Sampson M, Critchley C. Acta Psychiatr. Scand. 2016; 134(4): 287-294.

Affiliation

Department of Statistics, Data Sciences and Epidemiology, Swinburne University of Technology, Melbourne, Vic, Australia.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2016, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1111/acps.12552

PMID

26852371

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To determine whether staff responses to abuse disclosures had improved since the introduction of a trauma policy and training programme.

METHOD: The files of 250 clients attending four New Zealand mental health centres were audited.

RESULTS: There was a significant improvement, compared to an audit prior to the introduction of the policy and training, in the proportion of abuse cases included in formulations, and, to a lesser extent, in treatment plans. There was no significant improvement in the proportion referred for relevant treatment, which remained at less than 25% across abuse categories. The proportion of neglect disclosures responded to was significantly lower than for abuse cases. Fifty percent of the files in which abuse/neglect was recorded noted whether the client had been asked about previous disclosure, and 22% noted whether the client thought there was any connection between the abuse/neglect and their current problems. Less than 1% of cases were reported to legal authorities. People diagnosed with a psychotic disorder were significantly less likely to be responded to appropriately.

CONCLUSION: Future training may need to focus on responding well to neglect and people diagnosed with psychosis, on making treatment referrals, and on initiating discussions about reporting to authorities.


Language: en

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