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Observations on alcohol-related mental illness in the North West of England: better use of service data can help tackle health inequalities and improve commissioning

Tocque, K.; Currie, J.; Hughes, E.; Brooker, C.

Authors

K. Tocque

J. Currie

E. Hughes

C. Brooker



Abstract

Purpose
The North of England characteristically has higher levels of alcohol‐related harm and higher levels of mental illness compared with the South. The purpose of this paper is to present observations on the use of services by people who have both alcohol and mental health problems to explore the equality and economic impact of services.

Design/methodology/approach
Inpatient hospital datasets as well as other NHS service datasets were examined to gather intelligence on alcohol and co‐occurring mental and behavioural disorders.

Findings
The study finds that there are high levels of dual diagnosis (DD) of alcohol and mental health in the North West with significantly higher rates in the more socially deprived areas and gap in access to services.
Research limitations/implications

These health inequalities in relation to DD can only be demonstrated robustly for hospital inpatient admissions because other datasets currently provide intelligence only at larger geographies – such as Primary Care Trust – or by service provider.

Practical implications
Population surveys are useful to generate estimates of the prevalence of mental health issues in alcohol users which then reveal that there are greater inequalities in access to services in more deprived populations. Such valuable intelligence should be generated at the local level so that the most appropriate and the most cost effective services can be commissioned for the local population.

Originality/value
This is the first time that the economic cost of DD in the various services has been estimated.

Citation

Tocque, K., Currie, J., Hughes, E., & Brooker, C. (2011). Observations on alcohol-related mental illness in the North West of England: better use of service data can help tackle health inequalities and improve commissioning. Advances in dual diagnosis, 4(3), 125-134. https://doi.org/10.1108/17570971111183017

Journal Article Type Article
Online Publication Date Aug 15, 2011
Publication Date 2011
Deposit Date Sep 24, 2021
Journal Advances in Dual Diagnosis
Print ISSN 1757-0972
Electronic ISSN 2042-8324
Publisher Emerald
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 4
Issue 3
Pages 125-134
DOI https://doi.org/10.1108/17570971111183017
Public URL http://researchrepository.napier.ac.uk/Output/2797659


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