1 / 18

From Where to Here…?

From Where to Here…?. Michael Sharpe, Professor of Psychological Medicine, University of Edinburgh. Mental illness. One in six of the population suffers from anxiety or depression At least 1 in 4 GP consultations for mental ill health

prisca
Télécharger la présentation

From Where to Here…?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. From Where to Here…? Michael Sharpe, Professor of Psychological Medicine, University of Edinburgh

  2. Mental illness • One in six of the population suffers from anxiety or depression • At least 1 in 4 GP consultations for mental ill health • Annual direct care costs £12.5 billion • Annual cost to UK society more than £77 billion • We need better ways of helping mentally ill people • We need research to help us do this

  3. What research do we need? • Research that is relevant • No only to cause but also to treatment • Relevant to different mental illnesses • Cover all aspects of treatment • Research that gives us high quality evidence • Good ideas • Well done studies • Large and representative samples • Research that is feasible • Results can be delivered

  4. What research do we have? • Research that is relevant? • Less than 5% of the trials on the Cochrane database are indexed under mental disorder • Research that gives us high quality evidence? • Studies are generally far too small • The outcomes are too short term • They are too often based on hospital samples • Almost all are of drug treatment • Research that is feasible? • The majority of studies are not completed as planned

  5. How can we get better research? • Clearly, researchers simply need to work harder and faster to deliver more and better research ! • But researchers also need to be able to deliver good research • What obstacles do they see ? • Surveys by Dr Craig on CSO 2004 and by us in 2005.

  6. Obstacles to better research?What might a Network provide? • Feeling it can’t be done • Galvanize energy and vision and make it feel possible • Lack of expertise staff and infrastructure • Provide design statistical and other practical expertise • Overwhelmed by paperwork • Offer guidance and help to address regulatory requirements • Isolated with limited capacity • Forge links between clinicians and researchers, centres and networks • Can’t get big grants • Offer advice expertise and support to make strong applications • Can’t recruit sufficient patients to studies • Provide manpower to assist

  7. Medical school CRFs Trials Unit

  8. A Proposal for a Scottish Mental Health Research Network • The challenges • Diffuse concept of ‘mental health’ • Small clinical research community • Limited research culture in clinical services • The opportunities • Our population and organized services • Our potential for collaboration • Existing infrastructure • The ‘X’ factor • Determination to make it work

  9. The original bid for SMHRN • To Link • 4 clinical medical schools • NHS and academic researchers • Other networks • To Provide • Methodological and practical support • Guidance on regulation • Assistance with recruiting • To Supplement • CRFs • R & D departments • Research grants

  10. The SMHRN 3 year targets (2006) • Establishment of a baseline of multicentre clinical research activity in and funding for Scottish MH research. • At least six new UK multicentre studies within 3 years. • At least three new multi-centre studies led from Scotland within 3 years. • The number of patients participating in multi-centre studies increased by at least 20% of baseline every year. • Active grant funding for multicentre MH trials in Scotland increased by at least 20% of baseline every year.

  11. The SMHRN achievements (2009) • Establishment of a baseline of multicentre clinical research activity in and funding for Scottish MH research. • At least six new UK multicentre studies within 3 years. • At least three new multi-centre studies led from Scotland within 3 years. • The number of patients participating in multi-centre studies increased by at least 20% of baseline every year. • Active grant funding for multicentre MH trials in Scotland increased by at least 20% of baseline every year.

  12. What we have learned • It remains a challenge • To achieve focus in ‘mental health’ • To keep political, CSO, University, NHS and Industry support • To recruit and keep good staff (let studies recruit their own) • It is a long term job • 10 years plus • It need a substantial commitment of senior time • We need to support success but also to grow new Scottish studies • Back winners • Promote PDGs and pilots

  13. Thanks to the original team Edinburgh: Professor Michael Sharpe (Academic), Dr Alan Carson (NHS) Glasgow: Dr Andrew Gumley (Academic), Professor Bob Hunter (NHS). Aberdeen: Professor Ian Reid (Academic), Dr Ross Hamilton (NHS). Dundee: Dr Alex Baldacchino(NHS), Dr Rob Durham (Academic) Primary Care: Professor Jill Morrison (Academic Glasgow), Public Health: Dr Cameron Stark (NHS Highlands Health Board) Clinical Research Facilities: Mr Gordon Hill (Wellcome Trust CRF) Statistics and methodology: Professor Gordon Murray Manager: Dr Lucy McCloughan

  14. Also to those who joined later Board members: Professor Keith Matthews (Dundee); Dr. Jonathan Cavanagh (Glasgow); Professor Stephen Lawrie (Edinburgh – biological psychiatry); Network Staff: Nadine Dougall; Mark Hazelwood; Gillian McHugh; Ann Doust

  15. And also to CSO: Peter Craig,Roma Armstrong; Beatrice Cant; Hilary Lapsley CRFs: Anne Gordon; Fiona McArdle NIHR MHRN: Til Wykes and colleagues University of Edinburgh: Professor Stuart Ralston and Professor Eve Johnstone and colleagues in my research group (PMR) Scottish Government: Denise Coia

More Related