Abstract

Community-based residential rehabilitation for people experiencing severe and persistent mental illness (SPMI) is increasingly available as an alternative to psychiatric inpatient care. Understanding who accesses these services and their outcomes will inform the optimal allocation of limited public mental health resources. This retrospective cohort study explored the outcomes of the first 100 consumers supported by a new Australian Community Care Unit (CCU). The primary outcome focus was acute mental health service use (emergency department presentations, acute mental health inpatient admission days), and secondary outcome foci were accommodation independence and substance use. When the 365 days before and after CCU support were compared, significant reductions in acute mental health bed days were observed (22days, W = 3.373, p = .001); greater reductions were noted for those staying >182 days (31days, W = 3.373, p = .001). Additionally, significant improvements in accommodation independence were found, (W = 3.373, p = .001). CCU consumers experienced reductions in acute mental health inpatient service use and improved accommodation independence. These observations are consistent with the intended functioning of the residential rehabilitation service.

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