Predictors of recovery in a medium secure service: Influence of the Welsh Government's Mental Health (2010) Measure

Marie Smothers, Charlotte Hill, Daniel Lawrence*, Ruth Bagshaw, Andrew Watt

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Citation (Scopus)

Abstract

Background: Research to date has failed to examine the effectiveness of MSUs in facilitating recovery, or the influence that mental health policy may have on this process. Examining predictors of short-term clinical outcomes during inpatient admission and the effects of policy changes may inform future policy, treatment planning and may improve service user outcomes. Aims: To examine whether service user admission characteristics and length of stay predicted recovery status at discharge from medium secure care and whether a recovery-focused change in policy (introduction of the Mental Health (Wales) Measure (2010)) impacted either on recovery or the relationship between service user characteristics and recovery. Methods: The study adopted a retrospective analysis of quantitative data obtained from healthcare records from a Welsh MSU between 2007 and 2017 (n = 198). The DUNDUM-4 scale assessed recovery whilst DUNDRUM-2 assessed security need at admission. Service user admission characteristics included HCR-20 subscale scores, previous security-level transitions, adverse childhood experiences, substance misuse histories. Results: Shorter inpatient stays and higher scores on the dynamic HCR-20 clinical subscale were associated with poorer recovery outcomes. The relationship between admission characteristics and recovery endured despite changes in policy. Implementation of recovery focused legislation was associated with improved recovery. Conclusions: The findings suggest that treatment should focus on dynamic risk factors to improve service user outcomes and highlights the need for long-term medium-secure provision for some. Further research is needed to evaluate the success of MSUs and the validity of the DUNDRUM-4 across UK secure services.

Original languageEnglish
Article number101935
JournalInternational Journal of Law and Psychiatry
Volume91
Early online date15 Sept 2023
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 15 Sept 2023

Keywords

  • DUNDRUM
  • Forensic psychiatry
  • Legislation
  • Mental health policy
  • Patient outcomes
  • Recovery

Cite this