Recovery-oriented intersectoral care between mental health hospitals and community mental health services: An integrative review

Kim Jørgensen*, Tonie Rasmussen, Morten Hansen, Kate Andreasson

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalReviewpeer-review

Abstract

Background: Recovery-oriented intersectoral care is described as an aim in mental healthcare to create a holistic framework for planning that provides integration of treatment and rehabilitation. Existing studies show that nurses and other professionals do not take responsibility for the collaborative element of intersectoral care between mental health hospitals and community mental health services. The users of mental healthcare do not experience their patient journey as a cohesive process when they are discharged from a mental health hospital to community mental health services. 

Aim: The integrative review aims to examine the professionals’ experience with recovery-oriented intersectoral care between mental health hospitals and community mental health services. 

Design: Since the aim was to review user experience, we chose an integrative review as an obvious choice for design. 

Ethical approval: Not applicable. 

Findings: Seven studies met the inclusion criteria. The interactive inductive and deductive analysis generated four themes, which clarify the experience of professionals with recovery-oriented intersectoral care between the mental health hospitals and community mental health services, namely ‘structurally routine care’, ‘unequal balance of power between the sectors’, ‘bureaucracy as a barrier to recovery-oriented intersectoral care’ and ‘flexible mental healthcare approaches’. 

Conclusion: This review achieves specific knowledge of recovery-oriented intersectoral care. The studies included show that recovery-oriented intersectoral care is not clearly defined. It is challenging to transfer intersectoral care to an organisation with different structural and linguistic barriers.

Original languageEnglish
JournalInternational Journal of Social Psychiatry
Volume67
Issue number6
Pages (from-to)788-800
Number of pages13
ISSN0020-7640
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Sept 2021
Externally publishedYes

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2020.

Keywords

  • Community care
  • Decision-making
  • Health services research
  • Long-term care
  • Mental health

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