OBJECTIVE: The authors reviewed the literature to better understand
pathways to psychiatric care among young persons experiencing a first
episode of psychosis. Because no discrete body of literature exists about
how young people with psychotic illness gain access to psychiatric
services, the authors examined three related areas: illness recognition,
help-seeking, and referral pathways. METHODS: Automated and manual searches
of primarily medical and psychological sources from 1977 to 1995 were
conducted. RESULTS: The review found evidence of delay in obtaining early
treatment among young people with an emerging psychosis, although
comparisons between studies are difficult. Early psychiatric intervention
is believed to significantly aid recovery and is an increasingly important
clinical issue. Recognizing psychiatric illness is problematic for
professionals and nonprofessionals. CONCLUSIONS: Understanding of help
seeking by patients experiencing a first psychotic episode and of their
referral pathways is limited. Taken together, studies suggest factors
affecting access to treatment but provide neither sufficient empirical
information nor an adequate conceptual framework to better target secondary
prevention strategies. Formulation of a pathways-to-care model appears to
offer a useful way of understanding mental health care use. Exploration of
consumer experiences would enrich the model. Strategies to reduce treatment
delay could then be developed and evaluated. Increased consumer involvement
might help ensure that services are better tailored to patients' needs.
Abstract Teaser