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17 - Individual patient outcomes
- from Part V - PROGRAMME-LEVEL RESEARCH
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- By Mirella Ruggeri, Instituto di Psichiatria, Mighele Tansella, Instituto di Psichiatria
- Edited by Helle Charlotte Knudsen, University of Copenhagen, Graham Thornicroft, Institute of Psychiatry, London
- Foreword by Norman Sartorius
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- Book:
- Mental Health Service Evaluation
- Published online:
- 05 August 2016
- Print publication:
- 14 March 1996, pp 281-295
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- Chapter
- Export citation
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Summary
Introduction
Already in 1958 the World Health Organization (WHO), in a declaration extended recently, stated that:
Health is a state of complete physical, mental and social wellbeing and not merely the absence of disease and infirmity. (WHO, 1958, 1985)
In fact, an individual's illness is usually dramatically characterised by feelings of discomfort, or perceptions of change in usual functioning, which are not necessarily correlated with clinical signs and symptoms. A correct evaluation of health should be based on how the patient feels, on his or her individual judgement, in addition to clinical signs or symptoms. Moreover, in chronic illnesses treatments should be evaluated mainly in terms of whether they are more or less likely to lead to an outcome of a life worth living in social and psychological, as well as physical, terms.
The WHO concept of health implicitly defines the efficacy of an intervention as its ability to bring an individual to a condition of complete or partial wellbeing, and clearly emphasises: (1) social functioning as a complement of the clinical signs; (2) the comprehensiveness and the multidimensionality of the enquiry; (3) the subjectivity of the evaluation. The model for outcome evaluation proposed by the WHO is a complex one, far from the simple, symptom-based model that clinicians frequently have in mind when evaluating outcome. If such a complex approach seems to provide extremely important information in all medical disciplines, it becomes absolutely necessary in psychiatry. Among others, Schulberg & Bromet in 1981 individuated issues and strategies for the measurement of outcome which raise problems currently unsolved and stated that:
Outcome studies should be sophisticated if they are to be valid and useful to programme planning.
(Schulberg & Bromet, 1981)Referring to, and extending, their statements, outcome studies should aim to answer the following questions: Which intervention is efficacious? On what parameters? According to whom? In which subjects? Under which conditions?
Evaluation of outcome has been neglected in psychiatry. The lack of knowledge on the efficacy of psychiatric interventions has been outlined recently by various authors (Wright et al., 1989; Jenkins, 1990; Mirin & Namerow, 1991; Attkisson etaL, 1992).