Accessible summary
The transitional relationship model (TRM) facilitates the discharge of psychiatric clients from hospital to community by providing hospital staff involvement until a therapeutic relationship has been established with a community care provider as well as peer support.
Psychiatric wards at six hospital sites implemented the TRM in three waves. Monthly summaries, progress reports, meeting minutes and focus group discussions were reviewed in order to uncover facilitators and barriers to TRM implementation.
Factors that facilitated TRM implementation included: educational modules for staff and peer training, the presence of on‐site champions, and supportive documentation systems. Barriers included: feeling swamped/overwhelmed, death by process, team dynamics and changes in champions.
Implementation strategies suggested by the initial hospital wards were used to enhance implementation on subsequent wards, leading to positive outcomes. This study highlights the need to address work environment issues when implementing healthcare interventions, particularly for interprofessional teams.
Abstract
The transitional relationship model (TRM) facilitates the discharge process by providing peer support and hospital staff involvement until a therapeutic relationship has been established with a community care provider. A quasi‐experimental, action‐oriented research design was employed in which psychiatric wards at six hospital sites implemented the model in three waves. Helpful strategies were identified by each wave of wards for consideration by subsequent wards. Using an ethnographic approach, qualitative data were examined to uncover experiences and perceptions of TRM implementation and to help identify key issues that were supporting or hampering implementation. Specific strategies that facilitate the implementation of TRM include: (1) the use of educational modules for on‐ward hospital staff training and peer training; (2) presence of on‐site champions; and (3) supportive documentation systems. Issues identified as barriers to implementation included: (1) feeling drowned, swamped and overwhelmed; (2) death by process; (3) team dynamics; and (4) changes in champions. Staged large‐scale implementation of the TRM allowed for iterative improvements to the model leading to positive outcomes. This study highlights the need to address work environment issues, particularly interprofessional teams.
This article describes a qualitative research project, based on a grounded theory design, that addressed the processes involved in how individuals with schizophrenia were able to use their own abilities to form a self-authored community. The article offers a perspective on community integration that takes into account the importance of relationships, and in the case of individuals with schizophrenia, the importance of day-to-day relationships. The assumption is that the constitution of community is an outcome of the processes involved in learning and practicing being social (Cohen 1985, p. 15). These relationships do not necessarily have to be strong or numerous in order for community integration to be realized. In this article it is argued that an element in the establishment of such relationships for individuals with schizophrenia is the ready availability of others on a day-to-day basis. Relationships and friendships grew for individuals diagnosed with schizophrenia when such access occurred in a place where the context of what was likely to happen in an interaction was relatively well understood.
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