Austin Lockwood
University of Manchester
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BMJ | 2007
Tom Burns; Jocelyn Catty; Michael Dash; Chris Roberts; Austin Lockwood; Max Marshall
Objectives To explain why clinical trials of intensive case management for people with severe mental illness show such inconsistent effects on the use of hospital care. Design Systematic review with meta-regression techniques applied to data from randomised controlled trials. Data Sources Cochrane central register of controlled trials, CINAHL, Embase, Medline, and PsychINFO databases from inception to January 2007. Additional anonymised data on patients were obtained for multicentre trials. Review methods Included trials examined intensive case management compared with standard care or low intensity case management for people with severe mental illness living in the community. We used a fidelity scale to rate adherence to the model of assertive community treatment. Multicentre trials were disaggregated into individual centres with fidelity data specific for each centre. A multivariate meta-regression used mean days per month in hospital as the dependent variable. Results We identified 1335 abstracts with a total of 5961 participants. Of these, 49 were eligible and 29 provided appropriate data. Trials with high hospital use at baseline (before the trial) or in the control group were more likely to find that intensive case management reduced the use of hospital care (coefficient −0.23, 95% confidence interval −0.36 to −0.09, for hospital use at baseline; −0.44, −0.57 to −0.31, for hospital use in control groups). Case management teams organised according to the model of assertive community treatment were more likely to reduce the use of hospital care (coefficient −0.31, −0.59 to −0.03), but this finding was less robust in sensitivity analyses and was not found for staffing levels recommended for assertive community treatment. Conclusions Intensive case management works best when participants tend to use a lot of hospital care and less well when they do not. When hospital use is high, intensive case management can reduce it, but it is less successful when hospital use is already low. The benefits of intensive case management might be marginal in settings that have already achieved low rates of bed use, and team organisation is more important than the details of staffing. It might not be necessary to apply the full model of assertive community treatment to achieve reductions in inpatient care.
Archives of General Psychiatry | 2005
Max Marshall; Shôn Lewis; Austin Lockwood; Richard Drake; Peter B. Jones; Tim Croudace
British Journal of Psychiatry | 2000
Max Marshall; Austin Lockwood; Caroline Bradley; Clive E Adams; Claire Joy; Mark Fenton
Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews | 2011
Max Marshall; Austin Lockwood
Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews | 2011
Max Marshall; Alastair Gray; Austin Lockwood; Rex Green
Archive | 2005
Max Marshall; Shôn Lewis; Austin Lockwood; Richard Drake; Peter B. Jones; Tim Croudace
BMC Psychiatry | 2004
Max Marshall; Austin Lockwood; Shôn Lewis; Matthew Fiander
British Journal of Psychiatry | 1997
Alastair Gray; Max Marshall; Austin Lockwood; Joan Morris
Psychological Medicine | 1998
Christine Barrowclough; Max Marshall; Austin Lockwood; Joanne Quinn; William Sellwood
British Journal of Psychiatry | 2004
Max Marshall; Austin Lockwood; G. Green; G. Zajac-Roles; Chris Roberts; G. Harrison