The acceptability of the Fire and Rescue Service working with primary care to improve identification of mental health problems in older adults. A mixed-method qualitative study
Authors
Fisher, TamsinChew-Graham, Carolyn A.
Corp, Nadia
Farooq, Saeed
Kingston, Paul
Read, Ian
Southam, Jane
Spolander, Gary
Stevens, Dean
Walchester, Mark
Warren, Carmel
Kingstone, Tom
Affiliation
Keele University; Midlands Partnership NHS Foundation Trust; Midlands Partnership NHS Foundation Trust; Staffordshire Fire and Rescue Service; Robert Gordon UniversityPublication Date
2023-11-29
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Background: Mental ill-health in older adults (aged 60 years and over) is often underdiagnosed and undertreated. Older adults are less likely to access mental health services owing to perceived stigma and fear of being a burden. Non-traditional providers of health care, such as the Fire and Rescue Services (FRS), provide a possible solution to facilitate early detection of problems and help-seeking among older adults, especially in the context of pressured statutory services. Aim: To examine whether and how FRS Home Fire Safety Visits (HFSV) could be optimised to include detection and signposting for mental health problems — particularly anxiety and depression — in older adults. Design & setting: This mixed-method qualitative study took place in the West Midlands, UK in 2022. Method: This study involved focus groups (n = 24) and interviews with FRS staff (n = 4) to develop an in-depth contextual understanding of he acceptability and feasibility of expanding HFSV to include identification of anxiety and depression. Results: FRS staff were open to expanding their HFSVs to include mental health, provided they had sufficient training and support from partner agencies in primary and social care settings to accept referrals for service users presenting with symptoms of anxiety and/or depression. Conclusion: The positive reputation of FRS staff and engagement with older adults suggests that HFSV could support the detection of anxiety and depression in older adults, and appropriate signposting to other services including primary care.Citation
Fisher, T., Chew-Graham, C. A., Corp, N., Farooq, S., Kingston, P., Read, I., Southam, J., Spolander, G., Stevens, D., Walchester, M., Warren, C., & Kingstone, T. (2023). The acceptability of the Fire and Rescue Service working with primary care to improve identification of mental health problems in older adults. A mixed-method qualitative study. BJGP Open, 7(4), article-number BJGPO.2023.0059. https://doi.org/10.3399/BJGPO.2023.0059Publisher
Royal College of General PractitionersJournal
BJGP OpenAdditional Links
https://bjgpopen.org/content/7/4/BJGPO.2023.0059Type
ArticleLanguage
enDescription
Copyright © 2023, The Authors.EISSN
2398-3795Sponsors
This study is funded by the NIHR (Research for Patient Benefit [NIHR:201967]). Partial funding by the NIHR Applied Research Council West Midlands.ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.3399/bjgpo.2023.0059
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Except where otherwise noted, this item's license is described as https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

