Exploring the Role of Rehabilitation Medicine within an Inclusion Health Context: Examining a Population at Risk from Homelessness and Brain Injury in Edinburgh
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Quantitative
2.2. Qualitative
3. Results
3.1. Quantitative
3.2. Qualitative Analysis
3.2.1. The Effect of Psychological Trauma
“Many of our clients, particularly those with addictions, feel quite stigmatized. So, the environment in general can be quite difficult for them and just feeling they’ve got somebody there who’s on their side and advocating for them can make a huge difference.”Inclusion Health Program Manager
“One of the biggest challenges is getting to engage in the first place, you know, just getting them to trust those services because that’s been broken in the past, previous experiences in mainstream GP practices where they’ve stigmatized, and they’ve just turned away for the wee least outburst. Whereas, we have quite a high tolerance level for people’s behavior. I don’t mean we accept really bad behavior; we accept that somebody’s in distress a lot more and we try.”Nurse at Access GP Practice
“Yes, so main obstacles … a lot of mistrust like. A lot of people feel that they have had negative experiences with other GP surgeries, and there have felt a lot of stigma, yeah. So, it’s all about that trust building, isn’t it?”Nurse at Access GP Practice
“Mental health is a big issue and anxiety, and I would argue that we try to be as trauma informed as we can and have started the whole process and becoming more trauma informed…”Nurse at GP Access Practice
“I’ve done some trauma-informed practice training of my own back.”Doctor working within local In-Reach Inclusion Health Service
“…we try to be as trauma-informed as we can and you know have it, have started the whole process and becoming more trauma-informed.”Doctor working within local In-Reach Inclusion Health Service
3.2.2. Under Recognition of the Needs of PEH
“…the average age of death in Edinburgh if you’re homeless is 41 for a woman and 47 for men, 87% had morbidities of the same number as a cohort of the over 80 s. So huge, huge multi-morbidity, very frail, but young cohort, and so all the services available to elderly patients, which are not available [to them].”Doctor working within local Inclusion In-Reach Health Service
“I think brain injury in general is vastly under-recognized, if you compare it to something like stroke or maybe cancer services, you know you’re talking about equally life changing illnesses, and [they] also affect… usually affecting younger people. So, they are going to live with this for a longer period of time, so, no, brain injury is vastly under-recognized and under-resourced, I would say…”Specialist Brain Injury Occupational Therapist
“…our inclusion health huddle on a Wednesday, we have hepatitis in reach, nurse drug liaison who are really important third sector. I mean, we haven’t really thought about neurorehabilitation. But now I am…”Doctor working within local In-Reach Inclusion Health Service
“…people will often. Maybe not have been really assessed for a brain injury because if they have presented previously following an accident and self-discharged any assessment’s quite difficult…”Inclusion Health Program Manager
3.2.3. Resource Scarcity
“I think it’s true of all aspects of the NHS, but resources, you know, not having enough people to be able to see patients and have, you know, particularly people with quite significant cognitive impairment, you would want to be able to do repetition to try and support some need to improve and cope and build strategies, but if you don’t, you’re not able to do that repetition because you don’t have adequate staffing to do that either as an inpatient or an outpatient. I think that leads to like skewed outcomes for patients.”Specialist Brain Injury Occupational Therapist
“Oh yes, we are always up to capacity. The difficulty is because we’re a small team and we’ve had. In three years, we have had about 13, 14 hundred referrals, so the difficulty we have is that we can offer that long-term support to everybody.”Inclusion Health Program Manager
3.2.4. Collaborative and Adaptive Approaches
“…yes, so there’s a number of different things, one of the challenges is they’ve got a lot of other pressures going on in their lives as well, so if you’re looking at health side of things we are now integrated with social work, health, and housing, which supposedly makes access a bit better.”Primary Care Doctor
“Oh no, we absolutely link up. We linked up with hundreds of services. So, all the health services GP practices, community support organizations, addiction services. Just too many to mention. We link up, that is the key, I mean, we do not have the capacity to provide large packages of support on an ongoing basis. So, linking people up with a variety of community support that is tailored to their needs is much more sustainable for them in the future.”Inclusion Health Program Manager
“So, what healthcare can we deliver in an alternative setting in that situation?… So, we have to get rid of that gold-standard treatment… those guidelines are written in without the patient really in mind. And if that’s not tolerable, then what’s the next best thing?”Doctor working within local In-Reach Inclusion Health Service
“There’s a lot of people who come incredibly sporadically who are most needy. Given we have an opportunistic service they might see housing, social work, and health and the nurse and a welfare advisor all in one morning.”Nurse GP Access Practice
4. Discussion
4.1. Contextualising Quantitative Results
4.2. Contextualising Qualitative Results
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
S00 Superficial injury of head S01 Open wound of head S02 Fracture of skull and facial bones S03 Dislocation and sprain of joints and ligaments of head S04 Injury of cranial nerve S05 Injury of eye and orbit S06 Intracranial injury S07 Crushing injury of head S08 Avulsion and traumatic amputation of part of head S09 Other and unspecified injuries of head |
F10 Alcohol-related disorders F11 Opioid-related disorders F12 Cannabis-related disorders F13 Sedative-, hypnotic-, or anxiolytic-related disorders F14 Cocaine-related disorders F15 Other stimulant-related disorders F16 Hallucinogen-related disorders F17 Nicotine dependence F18 Inhalant-related disorders F19 Other psychoactive-substance-related disorders F20 Schizophrenia F21 Schizotypal disorder F22 Delusional disorders F23 Brief psychotic disorder F24 Shared psychotic disorder F25 Schizoaffective disorders F28 Other psychotic disorder not due to a substance or known physiological condition F29 Unspecified psychosis not due to a substance or known physiological condition F30 Manic episode F31 Bipolar disorder F32 Depressive episode F33 Major depressive disorder, recurrent F34 Persistent mood (affective) disorders F39 Unspecified mood (affective) disorder F40 Phobic anxiety disorders F41 Other anxiety disorders F42 Obsessive-compulsive disorder F43 Reaction to severe stress; adjustment disorders F44 Dissociative and conversion disorders F45 Somatoform disorders F48 Other nonpsychotic mental disorders F60 Specific personality disorders |
A15–A19 Tuberculosis A50–A64 Infections with a predominantly sexual mode of transmission B16 Acute hepatitis B B17 Other acute viral hepatitis B18 Chronic viral hepatitis B19 Unspecified viral hepatitis B20 Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) disease |
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Ratio of Female/Male | 1:3.1 * |
Average Age | 47 |
Ethnicity ** | African, African Scottish, or African British—11 Any mixed or multiple ethnic group—9 Any other white ethnic group—17 Arab—1 Australasia (Australia, New Zealand)—2 Bangladeshi, Bangladeshi Scottish, or Bangladeshi British—1 Black, Black Scottish, or Black British—5 Chinese—1 Chinese, Chinese Scottish, or Chinese British—4 E Europe exc. Poland (e.g., Balkans, Russia)—36 Indian, Indian Scottish, or Indian British—1 N Europe (e.g., Denmark, Norway, Sweden)—2 Other Asian—4 Other Black—5 Pakistani, Pakistani Scottish, or Pakistani British—2 S Europe (e.g., Cyprus, Greece, Italy, Spain, Turkey)—16 W Europe (e.g., France, Germany, Netherlands)—6 White British—238 White English—30 White Irish—8 White Northern Irish—2 White Scottish—532 White Welsh—2 |
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Eshun, E.; Burke, O.; Do, F.; Maciver, A.; Mathur, A.; Mayne, C.; Mohamed Jemseed, A.A.; Novak, L.; Siddique, A.; Smith, E.; et al. Exploring the Role of Rehabilitation Medicine within an Inclusion Health Context: Examining a Population at Risk from Homelessness and Brain Injury in Edinburgh. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2024, 21, 769. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph21060769
Eshun E, Burke O, Do F, Maciver A, Mathur A, Mayne C, Mohamed Jemseed AA, Novak L, Siddique A, Smith E, et al. Exploring the Role of Rehabilitation Medicine within an Inclusion Health Context: Examining a Population at Risk from Homelessness and Brain Injury in Edinburgh. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2024; 21(6):769. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph21060769
Chicago/Turabian StyleEshun, Edwin, Orla Burke, Florence Do, Angus Maciver, Anushka Mathur, Cassie Mayne, Aashik Ahamed Mohamed Jemseed, Levente Novak, Anna Siddique, Eve Smith, and et al. 2024. "Exploring the Role of Rehabilitation Medicine within an Inclusion Health Context: Examining a Population at Risk from Homelessness and Brain Injury in Edinburgh" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 21, no. 6: 769. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph21060769
APA StyleEshun, E., Burke, O., Do, F., Maciver, A., Mathur, A., Mayne, C., Mohamed Jemseed, A. A., Novak, L., Siddique, A., Smith, E., Tapia-Stocker, D., & FitzGerald, A. (2024). Exploring the Role of Rehabilitation Medicine within an Inclusion Health Context: Examining a Population at Risk from Homelessness and Brain Injury in Edinburgh. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 21(6), 769. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph21060769