Reducing violence in severe mental illness: randomised controlled trial of intensive case management compared with standard care
Abstract Objectives: To establish whether intensive case management reduces violence in patients with psychosis in comparison with standard case management. Design: Randomised controlled trial with two year follow up. Setting: Four inner city community mental health services. Participants: 708 patie...
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Published in: | BMJ Vol. 323; no. 7321; pp. 1093 - 1096 |
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Main Authors: | , , , , , , , , |
Format: | Journal Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
England
British Medical Journal Publishing Group
10-11-2001
British Medical Association BMJ Publishing Group LTD BMJ Publishing Group BMJ |
Edition: | International edition |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | Abstract Objectives: To establish whether intensive case management reduces violence in patients with psychosis in comparison with standard case management. Design: Randomised controlled trial with two year follow up. Setting: Four inner city community mental health services. Participants: 708 patients with established psychotic illness allocated at random to intervention (353) or control (355) group. Intervention: Intensive case management (caseload 10–15 per case manager) for two years compared with standard case management (30-35 per case manager). Main outcome measure: Physical assault over two years measured by interviews with patients and case managers and examination of case notes. Results: No significant reduction in violence was found in the intensive case management group compared with the control group (22.7% v 21.9%, P=0.86). Conclusions: Intensive case management does not reduce the prevalence of violence in psychotic patients in comparison with standard care. What is already known on this topic Psychosis and violence are known to be associated Community psychiatric interventions aimed at reducing the risk of violence have not been evaluated What this study adds Increasing the intensity of contact between patients and case managers does not reduce the prevalence of violent behaviour in patients with psychosis Younger age, learning difficulties, and a history of violence, drug misuse, and victimisation predict violent behaviour in psychotic patients |
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Bibliography: | PMID:11701572 href:bmj-323-1093.pdf local:bmj;323/7321/1093 ark:/67375/NVC-7WM962KD-T ArticleID:bmj.323.7321.1093 istex:913BA0518CD25E8B06266C5B53CC623E118FD721 Correspondence to: E Walsh ObjectType-Article-2 SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1 ObjectType-Feature-1 content type line 23 ObjectType-Undefined-3 Contributors: EW contributed to the idea for the study, collected data at the four clinical sites, analysed the data, and drafted the manuscript. CG, CS, KH, and CM collected data and helped to draft and revise the manuscript. PT, FC, and RM advised on the study design and execution and critically revised the text for intellectual content. TF conceived the idea for the study, coordinated the research, and revised the manuscript. EW and TF are the guarantors. Correspondence to: E Walsh sppmemw@iop.kcl.ac.uk |
ISSN: | 0959-8138 0959-8146 1468-5833 1756-1833 |
DOI: | 10.1136/bmj.323.7321.1093 |