Lessons from the National Mental Health Integration Program.

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Abstract

Three projects were funded under the national Mental Health Integration Program (MHIP) in 1999, each of which employed a different model aimed at improving linkages between disparate parts of the mental health system. A national evaluation framework guided local evaluations of these projects, and this paper presents a synthesis of the findings. For providers, the projects improved working relationships, created learning opportunities and increased referral and shared care opportunities. For consumers and carers, the projects resulted in a greater range of options and increased continuity of care. For the wider system, the projects achieved significant structural and cultural change. Cost-wise, there were no increases in expenditure, and even some reductions. Many of the lessons from the projects (and their evaluations) may be generalised to other mental health settings and beyond.

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Eagar, K., Pirkis, J. E., Owen, A., Burgess, P. M., Posner, N., & Perkins, D. A. (2005). Lessons from the National Mental Health Integration Program. Australian Health Review : A Publication of the Australian Hospital Association, 29(2), 189–200. https://doi.org/10.1071/AH050189

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