Quality of Life and Unmet Need in People with Psychosis in the London Borough of Haringey, UK

Objectives. Deinstitutionalization of long-term psychiatric patients produced various community-based residential care facilities. However, inner-city areas have many patients with severe mental illness (SMI) as well as deprivation, unemployment, and crime. This makes meeting their community needs c...

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Main Authors: Maria Lambri, Apu Chakraborty, Gerard Leavey, Michael King
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2012-01-01
Series:The Scientific World Journal
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1100/2012/836067
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author Maria Lambri
Apu Chakraborty
Gerard Leavey
Michael King
author_facet Maria Lambri
Apu Chakraborty
Gerard Leavey
Michael King
author_sort Maria Lambri
collection DOAJ
description Objectives. Deinstitutionalization of long-term psychiatric patients produced various community-based residential care facilities. However, inner-city areas have many patients with severe mental illness (SMI) as well as deprivation, unemployment, and crime. This makes meeting their community needs complex. We undertook a needs assessment of service provision and consonance between service users’ evaluation of need and by care workers. Design. Cross-sectional study with random sample of SMI service users in four housing settings: rehabilitation units; high-supported; medium-supported; low-supported housing. Setting. London Borough of Haringey. Outcome Measures. 110 SMI service users and 110 keyworkers were interviewed, using Camberwell Assessment of Need; SF-36; Lancashire Quality-of-Life profile; demographic and clinical information. Results. People in “low-support” and “high-support” housing had similar symptom scores, though low support had significantly lower quality of life. Quality of life was positively predicted by self-reported mental-health score and negatively predicted by unmet-need score in whole sample and in medium-support residents. Residents’ and care-workers’ assessments of need differed considerably. Conclusions. Although patients’ housing needs were broadly met, those in low-supported housing fared least well. Attendance to self-reported mental health and unmet social needs to quality of life underpins planning of residential services for those with SMI. Social and personal needs of people in supported housing may be underestimated and overlooked; service providers need to prioritise these if concept of “recovery” is to advance.
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spelling doaj-art-7a77966477484c169436bd014bb0e77b2025-08-20T02:07:37ZengWileyThe Scientific World Journal1537-744X2012-01-01201210.1100/2012/836067836067Quality of Life and Unmet Need in People with Psychosis in the London Borough of Haringey, UKMaria Lambri0Apu Chakraborty1Gerard Leavey2Michael King3The Royal Society of Medicine, 1 Wimpole Street, London W1G 0AE, UKSquamish Mental Health and Addictions, 38075 2nd Avenue, Squamish, BC, V8B 0C2, CanadaBamford Centre for Mental Health and Wellbeing, University of Ulster, Londonderry BT48 7JL, UKUniversity College London, Gower Street, London WC1E 6BT, UKObjectives. Deinstitutionalization of long-term psychiatric patients produced various community-based residential care facilities. However, inner-city areas have many patients with severe mental illness (SMI) as well as deprivation, unemployment, and crime. This makes meeting their community needs complex. We undertook a needs assessment of service provision and consonance between service users’ evaluation of need and by care workers. Design. Cross-sectional study with random sample of SMI service users in four housing settings: rehabilitation units; high-supported; medium-supported; low-supported housing. Setting. London Borough of Haringey. Outcome Measures. 110 SMI service users and 110 keyworkers were interviewed, using Camberwell Assessment of Need; SF-36; Lancashire Quality-of-Life profile; demographic and clinical information. Results. People in “low-support” and “high-support” housing had similar symptom scores, though low support had significantly lower quality of life. Quality of life was positively predicted by self-reported mental-health score and negatively predicted by unmet-need score in whole sample and in medium-support residents. Residents’ and care-workers’ assessments of need differed considerably. Conclusions. Although patients’ housing needs were broadly met, those in low-supported housing fared least well. Attendance to self-reported mental health and unmet social needs to quality of life underpins planning of residential services for those with SMI. Social and personal needs of people in supported housing may be underestimated and overlooked; service providers need to prioritise these if concept of “recovery” is to advance.http://dx.doi.org/10.1100/2012/836067
spellingShingle Maria Lambri
Apu Chakraborty
Gerard Leavey
Michael King
Quality of Life and Unmet Need in People with Psychosis in the London Borough of Haringey, UK
The Scientific World Journal
title Quality of Life and Unmet Need in People with Psychosis in the London Borough of Haringey, UK
title_full Quality of Life and Unmet Need in People with Psychosis in the London Borough of Haringey, UK
title_fullStr Quality of Life and Unmet Need in People with Psychosis in the London Borough of Haringey, UK
title_full_unstemmed Quality of Life and Unmet Need in People with Psychosis in the London Borough of Haringey, UK
title_short Quality of Life and Unmet Need in People with Psychosis in the London Borough of Haringey, UK
title_sort quality of life and unmet need in people with psychosis in the london borough of haringey uk
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1100/2012/836067
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