challenges in mental health nursing

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Challenges in Mental Health (Psychiatric) Care Dr. Riaz.K.M. MSc (N), PhD. Assistant Professor, Govt. College of Nursing, Thrissur, Kerala [email protected]

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Page 1: Challenges in Mental Health Nursing

Challenges in Mental Health (Psychiatric) Care

Dr. Riaz.K.M. MSc (N), PhD. Assistant Professor, Govt. College of

Nursing, Thrissur, [email protected]

Page 2: Challenges in Mental Health Nursing

Objectives • Describe misconception as a challenge in mental health• Explain scope and challenges in mental health• Lists the priorities of the Helsinki Declaration• Lists the challenges on Roles and Responsibilities• Explain Challenges in Providing Care within Psychiatric

Wards for Improving Psychiatric Care• Explain the challenges related to Role of mental health

nurses and Lack of clinical guidelines• Explain the challenges in Creating international network of

mental health nurses, Recovery-Focused care and Values-based education

Page 3: Challenges in Mental Health Nursing

Why this topic

• Challenge +

• Control for future Change in MH+

• Commitment

Page 4: Challenges in Mental Health Nursing

Challenge Noun

• A call to someone to

participate in a competitive

situation or fight to decide

who is superior in terms of

ability or strength.

• A call to prove or justify

something

Verb

• Dispute the truth or

validity of.

• Invite (someone) to

engage in a contest

Page 5: Challenges in Mental Health Nursing

Control• The power to influence

or direct people's behaviour or the course of events

• Determine the behaviour or supervise the running of

Commitment • The state or quality of

being dedicated to a cause, activity, etc

• A willingness to give your time and energy to something that you believe in, or a promise or firm decision to do something

Page 6: Challenges in Mental Health Nursing

“Future nursing” – challenge?

• “Transformational nursing”, • “Translational nursing”, • “Interdisciplinary nursing”, • “Multidisciplinary nursing”,• “Multileveled nursing,” • “Integrative nursing”,

Page 7: Challenges in Mental Health Nursing

Priorities of the Helsinki Declaration (1964 & 2013)

1. Foster awareness of the importance of mental well-being

2. Collectively tackle stigma, discrimination and inequality

3. support people with mental health problems and their families to be actively engaged in treatment process

4. Design and implement comprehensive, integrated and efficient mental health systems (promotion, prevention, treatment and rehabilitation)

5. Address the need for a competent workforce, effective in all settings and areas

Page 8: Challenges in Mental Health Nursing

A former student’s view • Mr X, 29, studied mental health nursing. He now works in an

adult acute admission ward

• “Throughout my studies and career so far it has been clear

there are still many misconceptions of mental health nursing

and patients - the expectation of violence as a daily feature of

my job is still, without a doubt, a strong one.

• In my spare time I practice kung fu and during one training

session received a black eye; I was surprised by how many

people assumed I’d received the injury at work.

Page 9: Challenges in Mental Health Nursing

• “I think the most powerful tool we have in changing

these misconceptions is challenging stigma as it

arises. Advertising campaigns are all very well, but

it’s in conversation with the general public that, as

professionals, we can address these

misconceptions and negative stereotypes.”

Page 10: Challenges in Mental Health Nursing

Scope/Challenge• Misconceptions (both the public and fellow nursing

professionals) - fuel for stigma and discrimination

• The mental health nursing profession- subject of many

misconceptions

• The mental health nursing profession - “brand”

• The responsibility for challenging misconceptions lies with

each member of the mental health nursing community

Page 11: Challenges in Mental Health Nursing

Scope/Challenge • Shift of practice from mental illness to mental health,

leaving a vacuum in the care of serious mental illness.

• Deinstitutionalization of mental illness care, with

emptying out or closure of many public mental hospitals.

• Limited access to urgent psychiatric care

• Marked decline in hospital stays for patients with

psychiatric disorders.

Page 12: Challenges in Mental Health Nursing

Scope/Challenge

• Inadequate reimbursement for time-consuming “talk

therapy” without compensatory procedural

reimbursement.

• Lack of parity of coverage for physical and mental

illness.

• Rapid decline of psychotherapy and shift toward drug

therapy and “med checks” practice.

Page 13: Challenges in Mental Health Nursing

Scope/Challenge

• Expansion of criteria for psychiatric disorders in

subsequent Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of

Mental Disorders editions.

• Growth of various mental health professions in

practices not supervised by psychiatrists.

• Criminalization of the seriously mentally ill, with

misuse of jails as mental hospitals.

Page 14: Challenges in Mental Health Nursing

Scope/Challenge• Income inequality and class differences have reached

historic highs in recent years- lack of health insurance

• we can no longer afford the waste, duplication, and profits of private payers.

• Public payers are more efficient, provide more value, and control costs better than private payers

• a larger role of government and public financing of health care

• Progress of single-payer initiatives

Page 15: Challenges in Mental Health Nursing

Scope/Challenge

• Broadening scope and the shift to community

based mental health services introduce greater

levels of complexity, affecting the role

• Planning and management will take a more

central place, and accountability is likely to

become more transparent.

Page 16: Challenges in Mental Health Nursing

Challenges in • Community characteristics

– MH configuration– Prevalence of disorders– Demand of services – Demographics

• Institutional characteristics– Ownership– Facility type– Organization of services– Size and occupancy– Staff patient ratio– Source of payment

• Provider characteristics – Demographics– Specialty training – Method of payment

• Patient characteristics – Demographics– Insurance coverage– Risk factors– Protective factors

Page 17: Challenges in Mental Health Nursing

Challenges in• Entry status

• Clinical• Legal

• Diagnostic evaluation• Diagnosis• Severity• co morbidity

• Treatment approach • style of treatment• intensity • frequency• appropriateness

• Treatment response• Compliance• Change in symptoms• Medication effect• complication

• Disposition • Clinical • Legal• Follow up / Placement

Page 18: Challenges in Mental Health Nursing

Challenges in

• Specific outcomes– Clinical– Functioning– Mortality– Quality of life– Societal costs

Page 19: Challenges in Mental Health Nursing
Page 20: Challenges in Mental Health Nursing
Page 21: Challenges in Mental Health Nursing
Page 22: Challenges in Mental Health Nursing

Challenges on Roles and Responsibilities

1. Therapeutic role2. Membership of multi-

disciplinary team3. Functioning in diverse

roles and settings4. Broadening societal

scope of psychiatric nursing

5. Partnership working

6. Leadership7. Information systems8. Research9. Competence10. Career development11. Status and funding12. Legislation13. Stigma

Page 23: Challenges in Mental Health Nursing

Challenges in Providing Care within Psychiatric Wards

• Politics and Rules of Organization, • Safety and Security Issues, • Uncertainty about the Role, • Lack of Trained Staff, • Socio cultural Issues,• Limited resources,• Complexities in role,• Pre- licensure, post-licensure challenges, • Professional obstacles, • Public perception

Page 24: Challenges in Mental Health Nursing

Challenges in Improving Psychiatric Care

• Empowerment across – Psychiatric Nurses, – Mentally Ill Patients and their Families, – The Psychiatric Mental Health System, and – the Cultural Context.

Page 25: Challenges in Mental Health Nursing

Challenges in Role of mental health nurses

Page 26: Challenges in Mental Health Nursing

Challenges in Role of mental health nurses

• Assessment• Care planning• Drug administering (Even Prescribing)• Advocacy• Case management• Community care• Psycho education• Psychotherapy

Page 27: Challenges in Mental Health Nursing

Challenges towards de institutionalization

• Reallocation of staff from hospital to community based services

• Development of new set of competencies is needed

Page 28: Challenges in Mental Health Nursing

Challenges related to Lack of clinical guidelines

• Absence of national guidelines for mental health nurses

• Lack of evidence based practice• Lack of research• Activity of professional bodies

Page 29: Challenges in Mental Health Nursing

Challenges in Creating international network

• A lack of core indicators leads to invisibility and

marginalization of people affected by mental disorders

• Mental illness is not perceived as amenable to quick solutions

• Human resource planning

• Integration of mental health into the social development

sector

• Avoiding a narrow focus on psychosocial issues

• Access to mental health interventions

Page 30: Challenges in Mental Health Nursing

Challenges in Recovery-Focused care

• Recovery-focused care gives professionals an insight into service users’ needs

• Involving family members in care and discussing how mental illness affects all areas of a person’s life can help to build trust

• A lack of time is often cited as a reason for nurses not focusing on recovery

• Nurses can provide person-centred care by involving service users in making decisions about their care

Page 31: Challenges in Mental Health Nursing

Challenges in Values-based education

• Acknowledging and respecting values is important for building relationships between staff and patients

• Training to improve values-based practice has been developed in Scotland

• Providing training outside a clinical environment helps reduce distractions

• Group discussion helps increase awareness• Evidence on how mental health nurses are applying

values-based care should be collected

Page 32: Challenges in Mental Health Nursing

Challenge in mental health HEALTH INSURANCE

• MULTI PAYER V/S SINGLE PAYER

Page 33: Challenges in Mental Health Nursing

• SINGLE PAYER• poor coverage• Cost containment

difficult• Cost sharing high • No choice for doctor

and hospital • Poor quality of care

possible• Sustainable

• MULTIPAYER • Good coverage• Cost containment easy

• Cost haring low• Free choice to select

doctor and hospital• High quality of care• Not sustinable

Page 34: Challenges in Mental Health Nursing

Challenges in Future Measurement Criteria

• Utilizes ethical principles to create a system of advocacy for access and parity for mental health problems, psychiatric disorders, and addiction services.

• Influences health policy to reduce the impact of stigma on services for prevention and treatment of mental health problems and psychiatric disorders.

• Works to influence decision-making bodies to improve patient care

• Provides direction to enhance the effectiveness of the healthcare team

Page 35: Challenges in Mental Health Nursing

Challenges in Future Measurement Criteria

• Provides direction to enhance the effectiveness of the

healthcare team

• Initiates and revises protocols or guidelines to reflect

evidence-based practice, to reflect accepted changes in care

management, or to address emerging problems.

• Promotes communication of information and advancement of

the profession through writing, publishing, and presentations

• Designs innovations to effect change in practice and improve

health outcomes.

Page 36: Challenges in Mental Health Nursing

“online disinhibition effect”• excessive Internet use may be correlated with social

anxiety, depression, and introversion• Examinations of Facebook pages

– detailed, publically accessible postings describing depressive

symptomatology and ongoing patterns of substance abuse

STUDY among aged between 10-17 found that the 5% of subjects

who reported symptoms of major depression spent more time

online and were more likely to post identifiable information (if

they were male) and pictures (if they were female)

Page 37: Challenges in Mental Health Nursing

“online disinhibition effect”• Disclosure of patient-related information is often problematic

• health professionals “behaving badly” may call their clinical

judgment into question, raising doubts in patients' minds

about the quality of the treatment they will receive.

• Unreflective and excessive self-disclosure by nurses, especially

when they are engaged in psychotherapy, is another concern

inherent in their use of social media.- “black state”

• breakdown of boundaries in the nurse-patient relationship

Page 38: Challenges in Mental Health Nursing

“online disinhibition effect”

• groups of health professionals with similar interests;

share resources with colleagues (e.g., the SlideShare

website, which allows users to upload and share

Powerpoint presentations and other educational

materials)

Page 39: Challenges in Mental Health Nursing

“online disinhibition effect”

• “Twenty-first century psychiatric nurse should be

able to be a cautious but vigorous participant in the social media revolution”

Page 40: Challenges in Mental Health Nursing

The giant ship engine that failed?

• The ship’s owners tried one expert after another, but

none of them could figure but how to fix the engine.

Then they brought in an old man who had been

fixing ships since he was a youngster. He carried a

large bag of tools with him, and when he arrived, he

immediately went to work. He inspected the engine

very carefully, top to bottom.

Page 41: Challenges in Mental Health Nursing

The giant ship engine that failed?

• Two of the ship’s owners were there, watching this

man, hoping he would know what to do. After

looking things over, the old man reached into his bag

and pulled out a small hammer. He gently tapped

something. Instantly, the engine lurched into life. He

carefully put his hammer away. The engine was fixed

Page 42: Challenges in Mental Health Nursing

The giant ship engine that failed?

• A week later, the owners received a bill from the old

man for ten thousand dollars.“What?!” the owners

exclaimed. “He hardly did anything!”

• So they wrote the old man a note saying, “Please

send us an itemized bill.”

Page 43: Challenges in Mental Health Nursing

• The man sent a bill that read:• Tapping with a hammer …………………

$ 2.00• Knowing where to tap ……………………….

$ 9998.00• Effort is important, but knowing

where to make an effort in your life makes all the difference.

Page 44: Challenges in Mental Health Nursing

Take home message • Misconception is a major challenge in mental health

even today.• Priorities set in Helsinki Declaration are still remains• Future Roles and Responsibilities are challenge in

psychiatric wards• There is a Lack of clinical guidelines in mental health• International network among mental health nurses is a

challenge • Recovery-Focused care and Values-based education

will helps to overcome challenge in mental health

Page 45: Challenges in Mental Health Nursing