Exploratory study of mental health consultation-liaison nursing in Australia.
journal contribution
posted on 2017-12-06, 00:00authored byJ Sharrock, J Bryant, P McNamara, J Forster, Brenda Happell
Mental health nursing roles in Consultation-Liaison (CL) psychiatry and emergency departments are rapidly developing within Australia since the mainstreaming of mental health services within the general health-care system. Anecdotal evidence suggests that many of these positions have been initiated and developed in relative isolation and with little formalized support. Consequently, a comprehensive understanding of these roles and the nurses who occupy them is limited. A survey was developed and distributed to gather information on CL nurses in Australia. The survey was aimed at CL nurses working in a range of settings and included questions relating to demographics, qualifications, experience, clinical practice, organizational structure, education, clinical supervision, education and training and work satisfaction. This, the first of a two-part paper, will present the key findings relating to demographics and characteristics of the role. Overall, the findings demonstrated that the CL nurses who responded to the survey (n = 56) were experienced psychiatric/mental health nurses working primarily in general hospital wards and/or emergency departments; receive requests fo rconsultation from a range of health professionals but predominantly nurses; provide education to a range of staff groups; and use a range of titles to identify their role.
Funding
Category 1 - Australian Competitive Grants (this includes ARC, NHMRC)