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Improving access to physical healthcare for older people in mental health settings: the ImPreSs-care qualitative study

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posted on 2025-10-09, 14:46 authored by Lucy BeishonLucy Beishon, Bethan Hickey, Bhavisha Desai, Damodar Chari, Firoza Davies, Rachel Evley, Hari Subramaniam, Elizabeta Mukaetova-Ladinska, Gregory Maniatopoulos, Tomas J Welsh, Elizabeth L Sampson, Nilesh Sanganee, Peter Neville, Cheryl Clegg, Anthony Donovan, Tom Dening, Anto P Rajkumar, Thompson Robinson, Carolyn Tarrant
<p dir="ltr">Background Older people with serious mental ill health have high levels of physical comorbidity. Despite this, mental health services receive limited physical health support from primary or secondary care. This study investigated the facilitators and barriers to delivering physical healthcare for older people in mental health settings. Methods In total, 54 semi-structured interviews (REC:22/IEC08/0022) were conducted with different stakeholders [staff (n = 28), patients (n = 7), carers (n = 19)] across two mental health hospitals. Interviews explored the facilitators and barriers to delivering physical healthcare for older people (>65 years) receiving secondary mental healthcare (dementia and psychiatric disorders). Data were analysed thematically, underpinned by a framework of integrated care for individuals living with multimorbidity. Results A ‘multidisciplinary approach’ was valued, particularly to identify patients for targeted physical health support. There was felt to be a loss of physical health ‘training and skills’ over time, particularly amongst nursing and medical staff. Admissions to the acute hospital were potentially avoidable through improved ‘support and availability of physical health expertise’, to provide more proactive than reactive care. Alongside improved training and support, managing advanced care planning, end of life care and polypharmacy were perceived to facilitate improved physical healthcare in mental health settings. Conclusions Lack of senior physical health leadership (e.g. geriatrician or general practitioner) and loss of skills and confidence in managing physical health in mental health settings have led to a low threshold for admissions to the acute hospital. In particular, services should support advanced care planning and end of life care from physical causes in mental health settings.</p>

History

Author affiliation

College of Life Sciences Medical Sciences

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Age and Ageing

Volume

54

Issue

9

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

issn

0002-0729

eissn

1468-2834

Copyright date

2025

Available date

2025-10-09

Spatial coverage

England

Language

en

Deposited by

Dr Lucy Beishon

Deposit date

2025-09-27

Data Access Statement

Extensive supporting data is provided in the Supplementary Material, but further data is available on request from the corresponding author.