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      Las personas con trastorno mental grave en un programa de alojamiento supervisado por un Equipo Comunitario Asertivo Translated title: People with severe mental disorders in a housing program supervised by an Assertive Community Team

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          Abstract

          Resumen: El objetivo de este trabajo es evaluar la actitud y satisfacción de 182 pacientes con trastorno mental grave alojados en pisos y residencias supervisadas, sus redes sociales, las necesidades de atención y los cambios clínicos. Se recogieron datos sociodemográficos y clínicos. Se aplicaron los cuestionarios de Actitudes del Usuario (CAU), de Red Social (CURES) y la Escala ENAR-CPB de Valoración de los Niveles de Atención Residencial, con repetición a los dos años. El 86% refirieron mejoría en su vida, 77% en su enfermedad y 50% en sus relaciones sociales. Se observó una reducción significativa en las necesidades de atención a los dos años. Un 86% no tuvo ingresos hospitalarios, frente al 99% del año previo. En general, encontramos una buena aceptación de los alojamientos, con mejoría en las relaciones sociales, la estabilidad clínica y hospitalizaciones. Gracias al tratamiento asertivo comunitario, la mayoría consideraba que había habido una mejoría en su enfermedad y en sus vidas.

          Translated abstract

          Abstract: The aim of this work was to evaluate the attitude and satisfaction of 182 patients with severe mental disorder in supervised accommodation, their social networks, their care needs and clinical changes. Sociodemographic and clinical data were collected. The User Attitudes Questionnaire (CAU), the Social Network Questionnaire (CURES) and the Scale of Assessment of the Levels of Residential Attention for people with Severe Mental Disorder (ENAR-CPB) were administered with repetition at two years. 86% of them reported improvement in their life, 77% in their illness, and 50% in their social relationships. There was a significant reduction in care needs at two years. 86% of the participants did not have hospital admissions, compared to 99% the previous year. In general, we found a good acceptance of the accommodations, as well as an improvement in their social relationships, clinical stability, and hospitalizations. Thanks to the assertive community treatment, the majority considered that there was an improvement both in their disease and in their lives.

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          Incidence of Schizophrenia and Other Psychoses in England, 1950–2009: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analyses

          Background We conducted a systematic review of incidence rates in England over a sixty-year period to determine the extent to which rates varied along accepted (age, sex) and less-accepted epidemiological gradients (ethnicity, migration and place of birth and upbringing, time). Objectives To determine variation in incidence of several psychotic disorders as above. Data Sources Published and grey literature searches (MEDLINE, PSycINFO, EMBASE, CINAHL, ASSIA, HMIC), and identification of unpublished data through bibliographic searches and author communication. Study Eligibility Criteria Published 1950–2009; conducted wholly or partially in England; original data on incidence of non-organic adult-onset psychosis or one or more factor(s) pertaining to incidence. Participants People, 16–64 years, with first -onset psychosis, including non-affective psychoses, schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, psychotic depression and substance-induced psychosis. Study Appraisal and Synthesis Methods Title, abstract and full-text review by two independent raters to identify suitable citations. Data were extracted to a standardized extraction form. Descriptive appraisals of variation in rates, including tables and forest plots, and where suitable, random-effects meta-analyses and meta-regressions to test specific hypotheses; rate heterogeneity was assessed by the I2-statistic. Results 83 citations met inclusion. Pooled incidence of all psychoses (N = 9) was 31.7 per 100,000 person-years (95%CI: 24.6–40.9), 23.2 (95%CI: 18.3–29.5) for non-affective psychoses (N = 8), 15.2 (95%CI: 11.9–19.5) for schizophrenia (N = 15) and 12.4 (95%CI: 9.0–17.1) for affective psychoses (N = 7). This masked rate heterogeneity (I2: 0.54–0.97), possibly explained by socio-environmental factors; our review confirmed (via meta-regression) the typical age-sex interaction in psychosis risk, including secondary peak onset in women after 45 years. Rates of most disorders were elevated in several ethnic minority groups compared with the white (British) population. For example, for schizophrenia: black Caribbean (pooled RR: 5.6; 95%CI: 3.4–9.2; N = 5), black African (pooled RR: 4.7; 95%CI: 3.3–6.8; N = 5) and South Asian groups in England (pooled RR: 2.4; 95%CI: 1.3–4.5; N = 3). We found no evidence to support an overall change in the incidence of psychotic disorder over time, though diagnostic shifts (away from schizophrenia) were reported. Limitations Incidence studies were predominantly cross-sectional, limiting causal inference. Heterogeneity, while evidencing important variation, suggested pooled estimates require interpretation alongside our descriptive systematic results. Conclusions and Implications of Key Findings Incidence of psychotic disorders varied markedly by age, sex, place and migration status/ethnicity. Stable incidence over time, together with a robust socio-environmental epidemiology, provides a platform for developing prediction models for health service planning.
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            Permanent supportive housing: assessing the evidence.

            Permanent supportive housing provides safe, stable housing for people with mental and substance use disorders who are homeless or disabled. This article describes permanent supportive housing and reviews research.
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              An empirical literature review of definitions of severe and persistent mental illness.

              Seventeen definitions of the severely and persistently mentally ill have appeared in the literature over the past decade. These definitions have been used by 13 authors to formulate service programs and to estimate the prevalence of serious mental illness in the population. To test the applicability of these definitions, the authors operationalized each definition and applied it to a representative sample of 222 patients receiving services in one of Philadelphia's inner-city neighborhoods. The analysis showed estimates of prevalence of serious mental illness ranging from 4% to 88% of the treated population, depending on the definition applied. The NIMH (1987) definition was representative of the middle-range estimates of 45% to 55% arrived at by eight authors.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                neuropsiq
                Revista de la Asociación Española de Neuropsiquiatría
                Rev. Asoc. Esp. Neuropsiq.
                Asociación Española de Neuropsiquiatría (Madrid, Madrid, Spain )
                0211-5735
                2340-2733
                December 2022
                : 42
                : 142
                : 49-66
                Affiliations
                [2] Tenerife Canarias orgnameUniversidad de la Laguna orgdiv1Departamento de Enfermería Spain
                [3] Tenerife Canarias orgnameUniversidad de la Laguna orgdiv1Departamento de Matemáticas, Estadística e Investigación Operativa Spain
                [4] Tenerife orgnameServicio Canario de Salud orgdiv1Consultorio de La Perdoma orgdiv2CS Orotava-San Antonio España
                [1] Tenerife Canarias orgnameUniversidad de la Laguna orgdiv1Departamento de Medicina Interna, Dermatología y Psiquiatría Spain
                Article
                S0211-57352022000200004 S0211-5735(22)04214200004
                10.4321/s0211-57352022000200004
                6596a62e-ec0b-4038-9f61-7bcc2fe60e13

                This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 3.0 International License.

                History
                : 05 May 2022
                : 10 November 2020
                Page count
                Figures: 0, Tables: 0, Equations: 0, References: 25, Pages: 18
                Product

                SciELO Spain

                Categories
                Artículos

                tratamiento asertivo comunitario,alojamiento de apoyo,rehabilitación psiquiátrica,recuperación de la salud mental,assertive community treatment,severe mental disorders,supported housing,psychiatric rehabilitation,mental health recovery,trastornos mentales graves

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