Concept mapping is a powerful research tool using visual representation to expose the complementary impact and synergy of factors affecting a specific process. This article outlines an example, in the domain of mental health, of concept mapping applied to the specific issue of readmissions or recidivism of mental health patients. Concept mapping is used to unify the diverse perspectives found across the existing literature and in mental health care delivery so that patient input and engagement in the care process can be maximally applied to improvement in the delivery of local inpatient mental health care and, penultimately, to transformation of an inefficacious care delivery model.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFVisit nonadherence, that is, "no shows," in psychiatry costs the US healthcare $100 billion every year. Nonadherent visits undermine healthcare quality improvement efforts and erode patients' health. Previous research has focused on patient demographics or on redundant scheduling, rather than on the actual structure of visit nonadherence.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTechnology cannot be effectively used to drive improvements in health care quality and health care cost reduction until significantly more healthcare visits are attended. Visit attendance is often perceived as an intractable problem. This formative study identified and analyzed a set of visit adherence determinants to delineate a structure of adherence.
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