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A Typology of Advance Statements in Mental Health Care

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TLDR
There is recent convergence between the United Kingdom and the United States with respect to research interventions that facilitate the production of advance statements, as evidence emerges for the effectiveness of facilitated psychiatric advance directives and joint crisis plans.
Abstract
Advance statements documenting mental health service consumers’ preferences for treatment during a future mental health crisis or period of incapacity have gained currency in recent years in the United States and some European countries. Several kinds of advance statements have emerged—some as legal instruments, others as treatment planning methods—but no formal comparison has been made among them. This article reviews the literature in English and German to develop a comparative typology of advance statements: joint crisis plans, crisis cards, treatment plans, wellness recovery action plans, and psychiatric advance directives (with and without formal facilitation). The features that distinguish them are the extent to which they are legally binding, whether health care providers are involved in their production, and whether an independent facilitator assists in their production. The differing nature of advance statements is related to the diverse models of care upon which they are based and the legislative and service contexts in which they have been developed. However, there is recent convergence between the United Kingdom and the United States with respect to research interventions that facilitate the production of advance statements, as evidence emerges for the effectiveness of facilitated psychiatric advance directives and joint crisis plans. Different types of advance statements can coexist and in some cases may interact in complementary ways. However, the relationship of advance statements to involuntary treatment is more problematic, as is their effective implementation in many mental health service settings. (Psychiatric Services 59:63–71, 2008)

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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Shared decision-making in the medical encounter: What does it mean? (or it takes at least two to tango)

TL;DR: This paper attempts to provide greater conceptual clarity about shared treatment decision-making, identify some key characteristics of this model, and discuss measurement issues.

Effect of Joint Crisis Plans on use of Compulsory Treatment in Psychiatry

TL;DR: Use of joint crisis plans reduced compulsory admissions and treatment in patients with severe mental illness, the first structured clinical intervention that seems to reduce compulsory admission andreatment in mental health services.
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Effect of joint crisis plans on use of compulsory treatment in psychiatry: single blind randomised controlled trial

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated whether a form of advance agreement for people with severe mental illness can reduce the use of inpatient services and compulsory admission or treatment and found that the intervention group had fewer admissions (risk ratio 0.48, 95% confidence interval 0.24 to 0.95, P = 0.39 for those admitted).
Journal ArticleDOI

Facilitated Psychiatric Advance Directives: A Randomized Trial of an Intervention to Foster Advance Treatment Planning Among Persons with Severe Mental Illness

TL;DR: The facilitation session is an effective method of helping patients complete psychiatric advance directives and ensuring that the documents contain useful information about patients' treatment preferences, and enabling system-level policies to embed facilitation of these instruments in usual-care care settings.
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Use of Leverage to Improve Adherence to Psychiatric Treatment in the Community

TL;DR: A fairly consistent picture emerged in which leverage was used significantly more frequently for younger patients and those with more severe, disabling, and longer lasting psychopathology; a pattern of multiple hospital readmissions; and intensive outpatient service use.
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