Abstract

Community care is increasingly the mainstay of mental healthcare provision in many countries and patient satisfaction is an important barometer of quality of patient care. This paper explores the key factors associated with patient satisfaction with community mental health services in England and then compares providers’ performance on patient satisfaction. Our analysis is based on patient-level responses from the community mental health survey, which is run annually by the Care Quality Commission (CQC) for the years 2010 to 2013. We perform a repeated cross-section analysis, identifying factors associated with patient satisfaction via a multi-level ordered probit model, including both patient- and provider-level variables. We identify hospital-specific effects via empirical Bayes estimation. Our analysis identifies a number of novel results. First, patient characteristics such as older age, being employed, and being able to work, are associated with higher satisfaction, while being female is associated with lower satisfaction. Service contact length, time since last visit, condition severity and admission to a mental health institution, are all associated with lower satisfaction. Second, treatment type affects satisfaction, with patients receiving talking therapies or being prescribed medications being more satisfied. Third, care continuity and involvement, as proxied by having a care plan, is associated with higher satisfaction. Fourth, seeing a health professional closer to the community improves satisfaction, with patients seeing a community-psychiatric nurse, a social worker or a mental-health support worker being more satisfied. Finally, our study identifies the need for service integration, with patients experiencing financial, accommodation, or physical health needs being less satisfied. At a provider level, we find a negative association between the percentage of occupied beds and satisfaction. We further identify significant provider-specific effects after accounting for observable differences in patient and provider characteristics which suggests significant differences in provider quality of care.

Highlights

  • The provision of mental health services saw a paradigm shift away from institutional models of care towards care being provided in the community (Heller 1989; World Health Organization 1990)

  • This paper explores the determinants of patient satisfaction with community mental health services in England performing a multi-level repeated cross-section analysis of individual responses to the Care Quality Commission (CQC) community mental health survey for the years 2010 to 2013

  • Correlation analysis identified patient satisfaction being correlated with having a care plan, support received from services for specific needs, and variables associated with relationships with care professionals, such as being listened to

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Summary

Introduction

The provision of mental health services saw a paradigm shift away from institutional models of care towards care being provided in the community (Heller 1989; World Health Organization 1990). Community mental health services include aspects of both mental healthcare—such as treatment, crisis care and preventative care, and social care—such as day-today support around managing work, relationships, personal care, and housing—or any combination of the two (Burns 2004). Depending on the healthcare system, access to services generally requires the assessment of the care needs by an appropriate professional (Mind 2013). The attendance of those needs might include a variety of care professionals

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