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ASSERTIVE COMMUNITY TREATMENT
Georgia Regional Hospital at Savannah is proud to now be offering ACT
services to the residents of Chatham county. We began on December 16th,
2008 and having been operating strong ever since.
What is ACT?
ACT is a service-delivery model that provides comprehensive, locally
based treatment to people with serious and persistent mental illnesses.
Unlike other community-based programs, ACT is not a linkage or brokerage
case-management program that connects individuals to mental health, housing,
or rehabilitation agencies or services. Rather, it provides highly individualized
services directly to consumers. ACT recipients receive the multidisciplinary,
round-the-clock staffing of a psychiatric unit, but within the comfort
of their own home and community. To have the competencies and skills to
meet a client's multiple treatment, rehabilitation, and support needs,
ACT team members are trained in the areas of psychiatry, social work,
nursing, substance abuse, and vocational rehabilitation. The ACT team
provides these necessary services 24 hours a day, seven days a week, 365
days a year.
How did ACT begin?
Now in its 26th year, the ACT model evolved out of work led by Arnold
Marx, M.D., Leonard Stein, M.D., and Mary Ann Test, Ph.D., on an inpatient
research unit of Mendota State Hospital, Madison, Wisconsin, in the late
1960s. Noting that the gains made by clients in the hospital were often
lost when they moved back into the community, they hypothesized that the
hospital's round-the-clock care helped alleviate clients' symptoms and
that this ongoing support and treatment was just as important - if not
more so - following discharge. In 1972, the researchers moved hospital-ward
treatment staff into the community to test their assumption and, thus,
launched ACT.
What are the primary goals of ACT?
ACT strives to lessen or eliminate the debilitating symptoms of mental
illness each individual client experiences and to minimize or prevent
recurrent acute episodes of the illness, to meet basic needs and enhance
quality of life, to improve functioning in adult social and employment
roles, to enhance an individual's ability to live independently in his
or her own community, and to lessen the family's burden of providing care.
What are the key features of ACT?
Treatment: * psychopharmacologic treatment, including new atypical antispyschotic
and antidepressant medications * individual supportive therapy * mobile
crisis intervention * hospitalization * substance abuse treatment, including
group therapy (for clients with a dual diagnosis of substance abuse and
mental illness) Rehabilitation: * behaviorally oriented skill teaching
(supportive and cognitive-behavioral therapy), including structuring time
and handling activities of daily living * supported employment, both paid
and volunteer work * support for resuming education Support services:
* support, education, and skill-teaching to family members * collaboration
with families and assistance to clients with children * direct support
to help clients obtain legal and advocacy services, financial support,
supported housing, money-management services, and transportation
Who benefits from the ACT model?
The ACT model is indicated for individuals in their late teens to their
elderly years who have a severe and persistent mental illness causing
symptoms and impairments that produce distress and major disability in
adult functioning (e.g., employment, self-care, and social and interpersonal
relationships). ACT participants usually are people with schizophrenia,
other psychotic disorders (e.g., schizoaffective disorder), and bipolar
disorder (manic-depressive illness); those who experience significant
disability from other mental illnesses and are not helped by traditional
outpatient models; those who have difficulty getting to appointments on
their own as in the traditional model of case management; those who have
had bad experiences in the traditional system; or those who have limited
understanding of their need for help.
What is the difference between ACT and traditional care?
Most individuals with severe mental illnesses who are in treatment are
involved in a linkage or brokerage case-management program that connects
them to services provided by multiple mental health, housing, or rehabilitation
agencies or programs in the community. Under this traditional system of
care, a person with a mental illness is treated by a group of individual
case managers who operate in the context of a case-management program
and have primary responsibility only for their own caseloads. In contrast,
the ACT multidisciplinary staff work as a team. The ACT team works collaboratively
to deliver the majority of treatment, rehabilitation, and support services
required by each client to live in the community. A psychiatrist is a
member of, not a consultant to, the team. The consumer is a client of
the team, not of an individual staff member. Individuals with the most
severe mental illnesses are typically not served well by the traditional
outpatient model that directs patients to various services that they then
must navigate on their own. ACT goes to the consumer whenever and wherever
needed. The consumer is not required to adapt to or follow prescriptive
rules of a treatment program.
Is there a difference between ACT and PACT?
There is no difference between the PACT (Program of Assertive Community
Treatment) model and the ACT (Assertive Community Treatment) model. Not
only does NAMI use ACT and PACT interchangeably, but ACT or PACT is also
known by other names across the country. For example, in Wisconsin, ACT
programs are called Community Support Programs, or CSP. In Florida, ACT
programs are called FACT (Florida Assertive Community Treatment); in Rhode
Island and Delaware ACT programs are called Mobile Treatment Teams (MTT),
while Virginia uses PACT for its assertive community treatment teams.
While the official name that a state, county, or locality uses for ACT
varies widely, there is only one set of standards that NAMI sets forth
for all programs of assertive community treatment.
How do ACT clients compare with those receiving hospital treatment?
ACT clients spend significantly less time in hospitals and more time
in independent living situations, have less time unemployed, earn more
income from competitive employment, experience more positive social relationships,
express greater satisfaction with life, and are less symptomatic. In one
study, only 18 percent of ACT clients were hospitalized the first year
compared to 89 percent of the non-ACT treatment group. For those ACT clients
that were rehospitalized, stays were significantly shorter than stays
of the non-ACT group. ACT clients also spend more time in the community,
resulting in less burden on family. Additionally, the ACT model has shown
a small economic advantage over institutional care. However, this finding
does not factor in the significant societal costs of lack of access to
adequate treatment (i.e., hospitalizations, suicide, unemployment, incarceration,
homelessness, etc.).
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