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Practice into theory : working collaboratively with clinicians to articulate mental health triage practice

conference contribution
posted on 2005-01-01, 00:00 authored by Natisha SandsNatisha Sands
Learning objectives: To contribute to mental health nurses understanding and knowledge of mental health triage practice through the presentation of current research findings on the topic. A specific focus of the paper will be an overview of how mental health triage practice differs across the lifespan.

Mental health triage is a highly specialised area of clinical practice for mental health nursing that is in its infancy in terms of articulating practice and theory. This paper addresses the conference theme of mental health nursing practice: new roles, new challenges by presenting the findings of a qualitative research project that investigated mental health triage/duty/intake practices across the five community mental health agencies of The Alfred Hospital, Melbourne. The overall aim of the project was to work collaboratively with clinicians to further develop the quality and consistency of mental health triage, duty, and intake clinical practice across all arms of Alfred Psychiatry. The project was designed to facilitate the expansion of the mental health triage knowledge base, and thus contribute to the further development of triage clinical practice. One of the unique aspects of the project was its triangulation across the adult triage service (acute), the two Continuing Care Teams, and the specialist psychiatric services such as the Child and Adolescent Mental Health Service, the Homeless and Outreach Psychiatric Service, and the Mobile Aged Psychiatric Service. The project employed focus group method to collect in-depth, qualitative data. A series of nine focus groups were conducted at each site, which concentrated on eliciting data on the core areas of mental health triage practice such as telephone consultation skills, mental status examination, risk assessment, decision-making, negotiation, crisis assessment, secondary consultation, and documentation. The investigation produced a considerable amount of high quality, in-depth data that was analysed using content analysis methods. The project produced data that will make a significant contribution to the expanding body of knowledge on mental health triage practice.

History

Event

Australian and New Zealand College of Mental Health Nurses International Conference (31st : 2005 : Fremantle, W.A.)

Publisher

Australian and New Zealand College of Mental Health Nurses International Conference

Location

Fremantle, W.A.

Place of publication

[Fremantle, W.A.]

Start date

2005-10-24

End date

2005-10-28

Language

eng

Publication classification

E3.1 Extract of paper

Copyright notice

2005, Australian and New Zealand College of Mental Health Nurses International Conference

Title of proceedings

Proceedings of the 31st Annual Australian and New Zealand College of Mental Health Nurses International Conference

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