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Editorial
. 2012 May 28;6(1):4.
doi: 10.1186/1752-4458-6-4.

Achievements in mental health outcome measurement in Australia: Reflections on progress made by the Australian Mental Health Outcomes and Classification Network (AMHOCN)

Affiliations
Editorial

Achievements in mental health outcome measurement in Australia: Reflections on progress made by the Australian Mental Health Outcomes and Classification Network (AMHOCN)

Philip Burgess et al. Int J Ment Health Syst. .

Abstract

Background: Australia's National Mental Health Strategy has emphasised the quality, effectiveness and efficiency of services, and has promoted the collection of outcomes and casemix data as a means of monitoring these. All public sector mental health services across Australia now routinely report outcomes and casemix data. Since late-2003, the Australian Mental Health Outcomes and Classification Network (AMHOCN) has received, processed, analysed and reported on outcome data at a national level, and played a training and service development role. This paper documents the history of AMHOCN's activities and achievements, with a view to providing lessons for others embarking on similar exercises.

Method: We conducted a desktop review of relevant documents to summarise the history of AMHOCN.

Results: AMHOCN has operated within a framework that has provided an overarching structure to guide its activities but has been flexible enough to allow it to respond to changing priorities. With no precedents to draw upon, it has undertaken activities in an iterative fashion with an element of 'trial and error'. It has taken a multi-pronged approach to ensuring that data are of high quality: developing innovative technical solutions; fostering 'information literacy'; maximising the clinical utility of data at a local level; and producing reports that are meaningful to a range of audiences.

Conclusion: AMHOCN's efforts have contributed to routine outcome measurement gaining a firm foothold in Australia's public sector mental health services.

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Number of ‘gold’ collection occasions nationally, by year.
Figure 2
Figure 2
Sample screen shot of the wDST.

References

    1. Australian Health Ministers. National Mental Health Plan. Australian Government Publishing Service, Canberra; 1992.
    1. Australian Health Ministers. National Mental Health Policy. Australian Government Publishing Service, Canberra; 1992.
    1. Australian Health Ministers. Second National Mental Health Plan. Mental Health Branch, Commonwealth Department of Health and Family Services, Canberra; 1998.
    1. Australian Health Ministers. National Mental Health Plan (2003–2008) Australian Government, Canberra; 1998.
    1. Australian Health Ministers. Fourth National Mental Health Plan: An Agenda for Collaborative Government Action in Mental Health 2009–2014. Commonwealth of Australia, Canberra; 2009.

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