Publications by authors named "Yuriy Ignatyev"

Background: Cognitive alterations have been reported in early stages of psychosis including people with First Episode Psychosis (FEP), Clinical High-Risk Mental State (CHR), and Psychotic-Like Experience (PLE). This study aimed to compare the cognitive function in early stages of psychosis using the Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA), a low-cost and brief assessment tool of cognitive functions.

Methods: A total of 154 individuals, including 35 with FEP, 38 CHR, 44 PLE, and 37 healthy controls (HC), were evaluated with the MoCA in Santiago, Chile.

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Concern: In psychiatry, the transition phase presents a particular challenge. The study aims to investigate gaps in care during the transition to adult psychiatry.

Methodology: After a qualitative preliminary study, 100 patients with previous child and adolescent psychiatric treatment were interviewed in a standardised way about the utilisation behaviour, the need for help and the experience during, before and after the transition phase.

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Purpose: The Open Dialogue (OD) approach has been implemented in different countries worldwide. OD not only depends on therapeutic principles but also requires a distinct set of structural changes that may impede its full implementation. In Germany, OD is currently practiced in different mental health care settings across the country.

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In the context of psychiatric care, user-generated measurement instruments may contribute to quality development and assurance. An explorative construct of experience-related quality components was developed in participative-collaborative cooperation that grasps the users' experiences of psychiatric care. After developing the components using a grounded theory methodology, they were quantified, and their interrelations were investigated using a multidimensional scaling method to explore their internal cohesion.

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Article Synopsis
  • Effective triage of patients with inflammatory rheumatic diseases (IRD) is crucial for timely treatment and preventing long-term damage, as shown by a study of 600 patients in rheumatology clinics.
  • The study found that the median time from symptom onset to seeing a rheumatologist was 30 weeks, with shorter delays for IRD patients (26 weeks) compared to non-IRD patients (35 weeks).
  • Only a small percentage of patients had a delay of less than 12 weeks, and improvements in triage methods and pre-diagnosis treatment are recommended to reduce these delays and enhance patient care.
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A new Second Opinion Directive (SOD) was introduced in Germany in December 2018 for hysterectomy, tonsillotomy, and tonsillectomy to support shared decision making and to avoid unnecessary surgeries. Owing to its recent implementation, evidence and insights regarding outcomes and challenges encountered with the SOD are lacking, notably from the physicians' perspective. To assess this, we undertook an exploratory sequential mixed-methods design with an initial qualitative phase followed by a quantitative evaluation.

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To effectively self-manage a chronic disease, patients require specific education. In clinical routines, rheumatologists and other healthcare professionals often cannot devote the necessary time to adequately educate their patients. Digital technologies such as mobile applications represent promising tools to overcome this problem.

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The working routines in palliative care nursing are associated with a variety of causes of stress with regional and setting-specific differences in Germany. This mixed-methods study aimed to investigate the mental and physical well-being among nurses in German palliative and hospice care and to gain a deeper understanding of procedural and structural aspects that may influence the mental and physical burden in palliative nursing care. The mixed-methods approach combined qualitative interviews, ( = 16) an online survey ( = 101), and subsequent data validation in a focus group ( = 6).

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Introduction: Accurate health care evaluation using quality indicators (QIs) is of vital clinical importance for a quality-oriented health care system. The QUALIFY tool is the current research standard for assessing QIs of health care; however, its biometric properties in psychiatry have not yet been evaluated empirically. Our aim was to evaluate the internal consistency and structure of QUALIFY.

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Article Synopsis
  • A study was conducted to assess patient experiences with two digital diagnostic decision support systems (DDSS): an AI-based symptom checker (Ada) and an online self-referral tool (Rheport).
  • The trial involved 600 patients from rheumatology clinics in Germany, who were randomly assigned to use either tool and provide feedback on usability and helpfulness, with Rheport scoring higher than Ada in usability.
  • Results indicated that while a significant number of patients found both tools helpful for assessing symptoms, older patients rated both systems lower in usability compared to younger users, highlighting potential demographic differences in tool effectiveness.
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Background: Research tools to evaluate institutions or interventions in the field of mental health have rarely been constructed by researchers with personal experience of using the mental health system ("experiential expertise"). This paper presents a preliminary tool that has been developed within a participatory-collaborative process evaluation as part of a controlled, multi-center, prospective cohort study (PsychCare) to evaluate psychiatric flexible and integrative treatment, FIT for short, models in Germany.

Method: The collaborative research team consisting of researchers with and without experiential expertise developed 12 experiential program components of FIT models by an iterative research process based on the Grounded Theory Methodology.

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The past decade has witnessed the establishment of flexible and integrative treatment (FIT) models in 55 German and Polish psychiatric catchment areas. FIT is based on a global treatment budget (GTB), which integrates funding of all acute psychiatric hospital services for a regional population. Prior research has identified 11 specific program components of FIT in Germany.

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Background: Since 2003 a new remuneration and care model has been implemented in currently 22 psychiatric clinics in Germany, which provides flexible and integrative treatment (FIT) across different settings of treatment, including assertive outreach care. The FIT is based on a global treatment budget covering costs for all psychiatric hospital services and is related to the number of patients treated per year. Previous research identified 11 program components that describe treatment structures and processes of FIT.

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New cross-sectoral mental health care models have been initiated in Germany to overcome the fragmentation of the German health care system. Starting in 2013, flexible and integrative psychiatric care model projects according to §64b SGB V German Social Law (FIT64b) have been implemented. The study "PsychCare" combines quantitative and qualitative primary data with routine health insurance data for the evaluation of these models.

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Aim of the present study was to test for the relationship of mental disorders, substance use, criminal and treatment variables with reincarceration. A sample of 2484 men from eight prisons in Spain participated. Logistic regression analyses with the number of incarcerations as dependent variable and mental disorders, drug use and treatment characteristics as independent variables were calculated.

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Objective: This paper seeks to illustrate current implementation of and the stakeholders' experiences with Home Treatment (=HT) according to §64b of the German Social Code Book V (=SGB V).

Methods: 381 Patients from 8 hospitals were questioned about their experiences and evaluation of HT using a standardized questionnaire (SEPICC-Scale). Further interviews and focus groups with 37 participants (including users, carers and employees) were thematically analysed.

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Aim: New treatment models (according to §64b German Social Code) have been introduced in Germany to improve flexible and integrated forms of psychiatric care. The aim of this study was to analyse the specific conditions under which many of these models have been implemented in the federal state of Schleswig-Holstein (SH) in comparison to other federal regions.

Methods: A standardized survey reached 383 patients in seven psychiatric departments, among them three departments in SH.

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Objective: Since 2012, a new law (§64b, Book V of the Social Security Code [SGB V]) regulates the implementation of flexible and integrative psychiatric treatment projects (FIT64b) in Germany. FIT64b allows rapid discharge of patients from inpatient to outpatient settings and cost reductions of hospital stays. Several psychiatric centres exclusively provide FIT64b; others provide FIT64b alongside with standard health care.

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Contrary to the practice in some countries, access to flexible and integrated forms of psychiatric care (FIT models) is limited in Germany. Several legislations have been introduced to improve this situation, notably the recent §64b (flexible and integrative treatment model; FIT64b) of the German Social Code, which allows for a capitation-based accounting of fees for services. The aim of this study was to explore the effects of FIT64b implementation on various stakeholders (patients, informal caregivers and staff) in 12 psychiatric hospital departments across Germany.

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Background: High rates of mental disorders have been reported for prison populations. Understanding patterns of comorbidity may be essential for the development of adequate treatment interventions. The present study aimed to assess the underlying structure of comorbidity between mental health and substance use disorders in prison populations.

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Background: Flexible and integrative treatment (FIT) models are rather novel in German mental health care. This study aimed at identifying and evaluating empirically based, practicable, and quantifiable program components that describe the specific treatment structures and processes of German FIT models.

Methods: A multi-step, iterative research process, based on Grounded Theory Methodology (GTM), was used to identify and operationalise components.

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This pilot study aimed to evaluate and examine an instrument that integrates relevant aspects of cross-sectoral (in- and outpatients) mental health care, is simply to use and shows satisfactory psychometric properties. The development of the scale comprised literature research, held 14 focus groups and 12 interviews with patients and health care providers, item-pool generation, content validation by a scientific expert panel, and face validation by 90 patients. The preliminary scale was tested on 385 patients across seven German hospitals with cross-sectoral mental health care (CSMHC) as part of their treatment program.

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The aim of this study was to investigate the reliability, construct and criterion validity of the Symptom Check-List-90-R (SCL-90-R) for prison inmates. A sample of 427 adult prisoners was assessed at admission to the penal justice system in the metropolitan region of Santiago de Chile using the SCL-90-R and the mini international neuropsychiatric interview. We tested internal consistency using Cronbach's alpha.

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