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Effects and side-effects of integrating care: the case of mental health care in the Netherlands Cover

Effects and side-effects of integrating care: the case of mental health care in the Netherlands

Open Access
|Aug 2007

Abstract

Purpose

Description and analysis of the effects and side-effects of integrated mental health care in the Netherlands.

Context of case

Due to a number of large-scale mergers, Dutch mental health care has become an illustration of integration and coherence of care services. This process of integration, however, has not only brought a better organisation of care but apparently has also resulted in a number of serious side-effects. This has raised the question whether integration is still the best way of reorganising mental health care.

Data sources

Literature, data books, patients and professionals, the advice of the Dutch Commission for Mental Health Care, and policy papers.

Case description

Despite its organisational and patient-centred integration, the problems in the Dutch mental health care system have not diminished: long waiting lists, insufficient fine tuning of care, public order problems with chronic psychiatric patients, etc. These problems are related to a sharp rise in the number of mental health care registrations in contrast with a decrease of registered patients in first-level services. This indicates that care for people with mental health problems has become solely a task for the mental health care services (monopolisation). At the same time, integrated institutions have developed in the direction of specialised medical care (homogenisation). Monopolisation and homogenisation together have put the integrated institutions into an impossible divided position.

Conclusions and discussion

Integration of care within the institutions in the Netherlands has resulted in withdrawal of other care providers. These side-effects lead to a new discussion on the real nature and benefits of an integrated mental health care system. Integration requires also a broadly shared vision on good care for the various target groups. This would require a radicalisation of the distinction between care providers as well as a recognition of the different goals of mental health care.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.5334/ijic.198 | Journal eISSN: 1568-4156
Language: English
Published on: Aug 27, 2007
Published by: Ubiquity Press
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 4 issues per year

© 2007 Giel J.M. Hutschemaekers, Bea G. Tiemens, Micha de Winter, published by Ubiquity Press
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.