Jitka Všetečková
Open University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Jitka Všetečková.
BMC Psychiatry | 2016
Alan Simpson; Ben Hannigan; Michael Coffey; Sally Barlow; Rachel Cohen; Aled Jones; Jitka Všetečková; Alison Faulkner; Alexandra Thornton; Martin Cartwright
BackgroundIn the UK, concerns about safety and fragmented community mental health care led to the development of the care programme approach in England and care and treatment planning in Wales. These systems require service users to have a care coordinator, written care plan and regular reviews of their care. Processes are required to be collaborative, recovery-focused and personalised but have rarely been researched. We aimed to obtain the views and experiences of stakeholders involved in community mental health care and identify factors that facilitate or act as barriers to personalised, collaborative, recovery-focused care.MethodsWe conducted a cross-national comparative study employing a concurrent transformative mixed-methods approach with embedded case studies across six service provider sites in England and Wales. The study included a survey of views on recovery, empowerment and therapeutic relationships in service users (n = 448) and recovery in care coordinators (n = 201); embedded case studies involving interviews with service providers, service users and carers (n = 117) and a review of care plans (n = 33). Quantitative and qualitative data were analysed within and across sites using inferential statistics, correlations and framework method.ResultsSignificant differences were found across sites for scores on therapeutic relationships. Variation within sites and participant groups was reported in experiences of care planning and understandings of recovery and personalisation. Care plans were described as administratively burdensome and were rarely consulted. Carers reported varying levels of involvement. Risk assessments were central to clinical concerns but were rarely discussed with service users. Service users valued therapeutic relationships with care coordinators and others, and saw these as central to recovery.ConclusionsAdministrative elements of care coordination reduce opportunities for recovery-focused and personalised work. There were few common understandings of recovery which may limit shared goals. Conversations on risk appeared to be neglected and assessments kept from service users. A reluctance to engage in dialogue about risk management may work against opportunities for positive risk-taking as part of recovery-focused work. Research to investigate innovative approaches to maximise staff contact time with service users and carers, shared decision-making in risk assessments, and training designed to enable personalised, recovery-focused care coordination is indicated.
BMC Psychiatry | 2015
Alan Simpson; Ben Hannigan; Michael Coffey; Aled Jones; Sally Barlow; Rachel Lara Cohen; Jitka Všetečková; Alison Faulkner; Mark Haddad
BackgroundThe collaborative care planning study (COCAPP) is a cross-national comparative study of care planning and coordination in community mental healthcare settings. The context and delivery of mental health care is diverging between the countries of England and Wales whilst retaining points of common interest, hence providing a rich geographical comparison for research. Across England the key vehicle for the provision of recovery-focused, personalised, collaborative mental health care is the care programme approach (CPA). The CPA is a form of case management introduced in England in 1991, then revised in 2008. In Wales the CPA was introduced in 2003 but has now been superseded by The Mental Health (Care Co-ordination and Care and Treatment Planning) (CTP) Regulations (Mental Health Measure), a new statutory framework. In both countries, the CPA/CTP requires providers to: comprehensively assess health/social care needs and risks; develop a written care plan (which may incorporate risk assessments, crisis and contingency plans, advanced directives, relapse prevention plans, etc.) in collaboration with the service user and carer(s); allocate a care coordinator; and regularly review care. The overarching aim of this study is to identify and describe the factors that ensure CPA/CTP care planning and coordination is personalised, recovery-focused and conducted collaboratively.Methods/designCOCAPP will employ a concurrent transformative mixed methods approach with embedded case studies. Phase 1 (Macro-level) will consider the national context through a meta-narrative mapping (MNM) review of national policies and the relevant research literature. Phase 2 (Meso-level and Micro-level) will include in-depth micro-level case studies of everyday ‘frontline’ practice and experience with detailed qualitative data from interviews and reviews of individual care plans. This will be nested within larger meso-level survey datasets, senior-level interviews and policy reviews in order to provide potential explanations and understanding.DiscussionCOCAPP will help identify the key components that support and hinder the provision of personalised, recovery-focused care planning and provide an informed rationale for a future planned intervention and evaluation.
Acta Medica (Hradec Kralove, Czech Republic) | 2013
Jitka Všetečková; Nicholas Drey
This cross sectional study focused on how Postural Stability (PS) indicators: body sway deviation (BSD) and body sway velocity (BSV), change with age and their association with levels of social and physical activity. Observational study: 80 older adults (aged: 60-96) were purposefully recruited from two sources: the University of the Third Age (TAU) (n = 35) and a residential care home (CH) (n = 45). Differences in the indicators of PS, approximated through Centre of Pressure (COP) measurements, were assessed by the Romberg Stance Test (Test A) subsequently repeated on 10 cm foam surface (Test B), using a Kistler Dynamometric Platform. The RCH Group was older, had higher BMI and was less socially and physically active, showed more body sway in all indicators compared to TAU group. For all participants body sway velocity (BSV) was significantly correlated with age. The strength of correlation of body sway deviation (BSD) with age was also significant but not as strong. The findings indicate in line with previous studies that deterioration in BSV is associated with poor PS more than deterioration in BSD.
Journal of Patient Experience | 2018
Yannis Pappas; Jitka Všetečková; Nikolas Mastellos; Geva Greenfield; Gurch Randhawa
This article provides an analysis of the skills that health professionals and patients employ in reaching diagnosis and decision-making in telemedicine consultations. As governmental priorities continue to emphasize patient involvement in the management of their disease, there is an increasing need to accurately capture the provider–patient interactions in clinical encounters. Drawing on conversation analysis of 10 video-mediated consultations in 3 National Health Service settings in England, this study examines the interaction between patients, General Practitioner (GPs), nurses, and consultants during diagnosis and decision-making, with the aim to identify the range of skills that participants use in the process and capture the interprofessional communication and patient involvement in the diagnosis and decision-making phases of telemedicine consultations. The analysis shows that teleconsultations enhance collaborative working among professionals and enable GPs and nurses to develop their skills and actively participate in diagnosis and decision-making by contributing primary care–specific knowledge to the consultation. However, interprofessional interaction may result in limited patient involvement in decision-making. The findings of this study can be used to inform training programs in telemedicine that focus on the development of effective skills for professionals and the provision of information to patients.
Health Services and Delivery Research | 2016
Alan Simpson; Ben Hannigan; Michael Coffey; Aled Jones; Sally Barlow; Rachel Lara Cohen; Jitka Všetečková; Alison Faulkner
Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews | 2016
Nakul Saxena; Bhone Myint Kyaw; Jitka Všetečková; Parvati Dev; Pradeep G. Paul; Kenneth Teck Kiat Lim; Andrzej A. Kononowicz; Italo Masiello; Lorainne Tudor Car; Charoula Konstantia Nikolaou; Nabil Zary; Josip Car
Health Services and Delivery Research | 2017
Alan Simpson; Michael Coffey; Ben Hannigan; Sally Barlow; Rachel Lara Cohen; Aled Jones; Alison Faulkner; Alexandra Thornton; Jitka Všetečková; Mark Haddad; Karl Marlowe
Archive | 2016
Nakul Saxena; Bhone Myint Kyaw; Jitka Všetečková; Parvati Dev; Pradeep G. Paul; Kenneth Teck Kiat Lim; Andrezej Kononowicz; Italo Masiello; Lorainne Tudor Car; Charoula Konstantia Nikolaou; Nabil Zary; Josip Car
Archive | 2019
Jitka Všetečková; Manik Gopinath; Erica Borgstrom; Caroline Holland; Janet Draper; Yannis Pappas; Eamonn McKeown; Klara Dadova; Stephen Gray
Archive | 2018
Erica Borgstrom; Manik Gopinath; Jitka Všetečková