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COMMUNITY PSYCHIATRY IN ITALY di
GIORDANO INVERNIZZI
Exactly twenty years have passed since Italian psychiatry made
its stand, chancing the success of its new treatment for insanity.
At that time, all psychiatrists, regardless of extraction, training
or background (hospital, academic, biological or psychodynamic),
agreed that the system had to be changed, that one could not go on
with an organization that dated back to Esquirol and Chiarugi and
whose legal regulations were based on the law on mental illnesses
unrevised since 1904. There had thus been a kind of “popular
uprising”, by psychiatrists, politicians and patients' relatives,
who sided together, totally refusing to continue this type of
treatment for the mentally ill. Such was the pressure of these
demands for change that the authorities began to fear an
impending national referendum for the immediate abolition of the
mental hospitals. This prospect (which would have put the national
health system in serious difficulties), spurred the Italian
government into unanimously approving the new legislation on
psychiatric care. Psychiatric treatment in Italy underwent a
deep-seated and radical change in 1978 with the passing of law 180.
This law sanctioned the end of the Psychiatric Hospital as an
institution that removed the mentally ill person from society and
segregated him, under prison-like conditions, as he was considered
“a danger to himself and to others and offensive to society”. So we
have progressed from a situation where society erected a protective
barrier against the mentally ill to that in which the subject
concerned is considered a sick person in every way, a person who is
suffering and who has a right to be treated, and not only guarded
and segregated. Psychiatry thus stopped being a peripheral area of
medicine and began to be integrated into the general health
service. Psychiatric hospitals had traditionally been located
well outside the towns; they were isolated, divorced from reality.
Instead, with the passing of the new law, psychiatry was again a
part of medicine; a psychiatric disorder had the same dignity as an
illness; it no longer stigmatized the sufferer and set him
apart. The abolition of the Psychiatric Hospitals meant that
psychiatry had to be integrated within the social context of the
community: out-patient clinics were organized in the various
districts and Departments created in the General Hospital. Patients
were thus brought into closer contact with normal life and with
their families, and there was a rejection of the concept of mental
illness as something different, something dangerous, to be hidden
and denied. Admissions to psychiatric wards were no longer motivated
by the fact that the patient was “dangerous”, but by an urgent need
for a form of treatment that could not feasibly be provided outside
the context of a hospital stay. Admission was therefore no longer
tantamount to an arrest, but solely a measure taken for health
reasons. Legal provisions established that the new health service
facilities were to be organized on a regional basis and set in the
context of the General Hospital. The new structures were assigned
specific functions, including the provision of suitable outpatient
and in-patient care and social welfare and health services. The
organizational model is based mainly upon the joint and co-ordinated
action of psychiatric services operating within one and the same
area, in accordance with the principle of therapeutic continuity,
whereby users are identified according to their area of
residence. This revolution has obviously not been easy to carry
out and, still today, there are ideological and practical problems
impeding its realization As you well know, Italy is made like a
boot. It is an elongated peninsula stretching from the Alps almost
as far as Africa. There are still considerable differences in
culture, economic conditions and industrialization between north and
south. It is undoubtedly one of the most heterogeneous countries in
Europe. The outcome was inevitable: the psychiatric revolution,
conceived and engendered in the north, has not been interpreted and
implemented in the same way in all regions. Although the theoretical
model is universally accepted in principle, it is still hard to
achieve homogeneous results in terms of practical application; each
region has changed its old organization and services to suit the
local situation. So, today, what we effectively have is a General
Plan of objectives entitled “ The Protection of mental health
1997-1999”, drawn up by the Ministry of Health that establishes
broad guidelines for the changes, plus a series of regional
projects, which present quite substantial variations. I shall now
go on to illustrate the model realized in Milan. Milan is in
Lombardy, a Northern region, and the new organization achieved in
this city most nearly approaches the complete organization according
to the inspiring principles of law 180. The model I am about to
present to you is further complicated by the fact that it is
directed by the university. This is a rare situation in Italy, where
district Psychiatric Services are nearly all under hospital
management. The basic structure is the Department of Mental
Health (DMN), which is ultimately responsible for prevention, care
and rehabilitation in connection with mental illness in the adult
population. The Department also provides for emergency treatment at
home or in hospital; it possesses ‘acute admissions' wards and
hospital first aid units. In order to carry out their programmes,
the Departments draw on the services of out-patient centres or
health clinics that provide treatment in a hospital setting or in
residential or semi-residential communities. The basic programmes
cover the following areas: -therapy - rehabilitation -
social and health care and - social support. The Department
has various health centres that are able to guarantee therapeutic
continuity and to intervene during the various stages of mental
illness. The Psycho-social centre (PSC) provides a range of
services relating to out-patient treatment and home care. It also
ensures that patients and their families have access to a special
information service to assist them with their problems. The PSC
works in conjunction with the other basic social and health welfare
services for the district. It guarantees emergency psychiatric
intervention; it runs training and occupational reintegration
programmes for young people and adults; it acts as a filter for
admission to private nursing homes and other private institutions
and supervises all aspects of the relative stay. It also performs
consultancy activities for hospitals that do not possess a
psychiatric diagnosis and care service of their own. It organizes
socialization programmes, including holidays and excursions, and
arranges financial assistance through subsidies. The general
First Aid Department includes an Emergency Psychiatric Unit. This
functions round the clock, dealing with crisis situations and
deciding on the best form of treatment. Again within the General
Hospital context, there is a Psychiatric Diagnosis and Care Service
(PSDC), which provides for the needs of patients requiring medical
treatment involving a stay in hospital, both in the case of
voluntary admissions and in that of compulsory treatment. It also
guarantees emergency treatment in conjunction with the hospital's
emergency department. The PDSC is part of the framework of the
general hospital in a particular district. It is an integral part of
the DMH, and is structurally linked with the other health centres.
The PSDC is officially allocated one hospital bed for every 10,000
inhabitants.
The intermediate semi-residential structures are designed to
provide medical and psychiatric treatment and opportunities for
daytime re-socialization for subjects requiring this. The structures
include the Day Hospital and the Day Centre. The Day Hospital is
a semi-residential structure in which short- and medium-term
therapeutic and rehabilitative programmes are carried out. It is
intended for patients with sub-acute psychiatric disorders who are
in need of drug therapy, psychotherapy and/or rehabilitative
therapy. The aim is to avoid as far as possible the need for a
full-time hospital stay during periods of patient relapse or
inability to cope, and to limit the duration of such stays should
they be indispensable. The structural configuration of the Day
Hospital thus envisages a possible necessity for drug treatment and
guarantees the availability of suitable premises for patients
requiring infusion and sedative therapy. The Day Centre provides
a “free” environment where therapeutic and rehabilitative programmes
and re-socialization activities aimed at the recovery and
development of the patient's social skills are carried out in a
semi-residential, community setting. The Day Centre may take the
form of: - an intermediate structure designed for medium-term
rehabilitation of persons with social and occupational
problems; - an intermediate structure for “difficult” patients,
helping patients to maintain their autonomy within the community and
to improve their clinical condition. Hence the Day Centre lays
emphasis on specific and personalized rehabilitative intervention
tailored to the specific requirements of the patient, avoiding the
necessity of a prolonged stay in the centre. Rehabilitative
programmes are designed for psychotic patients, for those suffering
from serious personality disorders and for subjects who are
distressed or in a pre-crisis situation linked with objectively
difficult external conditions. However, a psychotic or seriously
disturbed patient is only assigned to a rehabilitative programme
when there are identifiable areas of functioning that indicate the
possibility of improvement.
The Intermediate Residential structures have been designed to
meet medium- and long-term health care needs engendered by the
so-called “new psychiatric chronicity”. They mainly cater for
subjects whose illness is of recent onset, but who are soon found to
have problems with social functioning and autonomy. Such patients
often require intensive care in a sheltered residential setting in
order to help them recover the skills they have lost. The
residential structures are organized in different ways according to
the degree of shelter required and, above all, according to duration
of stay and prescribed treatment or therapy. The Residential
Centre for Psychiatric Therapy and Rehabilitation (RCPTR) is
organized as a therapeutic community. Its function is to carry out
fixed-term therapeutic-rehabilitative programmes which entail a
temporary stay in a residential setting. The RCPTR is a health
centre, not a hospital centre. Communities are structures
designed to meet the health and social welfare needs of psychiatric
patients requiring therapeutic and rehabilitative assistance to
underpin and develop their residual capacity for autonomy. Treatment
is provided in a sheltered residential setting, with no
pre-determined time limits. All sheltered communities run by
each DMS are classed together as “Sheltered Community Centres”.
These Centres are organized to provide various levels of protection:
from round-the-clock assistance for patients suffering from marked
personality destructuring, to relatively limited care for those who
possess a certain degree of autonomy. The various levels of shelter
may coexist within a single structure or be provided by separate
structures. These days, the Italian model of psychiatric care is
organized so as to provide several differentiated kinds of
treatment, chosen according to the prognosis for and characteristics
of the psychiatric disorders concerned. Essentially, the aim is to
reduce the need for hospitalization to a minimum and to limit its
duration where unavoidable. This is achieved by operating within the
patient's social context and family, by trying to prevent
chronicization and by maintaining the patient in his own relational
network. The aforesaid orientation has led to the closure of the
traditional psychiatric hospitals and to the organization of
prevention, treatment and rehabilitation on a local basis.
Psychiatry has thus become one of the General Hospital Departments,
with the same status as all other medical specializations, and
without any negative connotations as a less worthy science.
The following concept is fundamental: psychiatric intervention
must not be limited to a single option (whether pharmacological,
psychotherapeutic or rehabilitation); nor can it rely on multiple
but disconnected options. Several phases of the various disorders
can be identified, each of which requires specific and appropriate
intervention: prevention, the emergency phase, acute episodes, the
stabilization phase and prevention of relapse. Several therapeutic
techniques are available for each different phase. It should,
however, be stressed that our aim is to integrate somatic,
psychological, behavioral, family and social
interventions. Studies performed in different countries, among
people from different cultural groups, all support the theory that
no mental illness need necessarily become chronic, a principle that
extends to even the most serious disorders, such as schizophrenia.
The continually-increasing rate of chronicization is only partly due
to the endogenous structure of the personality; in most cases it is
linked to factors which are extrinsic to the disease, in particular,
those concerning the family and the individual's social environment.
Interventions during the acute and emergency phase must therefore be
set in the context of a global therapeutic program but, most
importantly, we need to identify those interventions which obviate
the danger of chronicization right from the earliest stages of the
illness.
Above I have described Italy's experiences over the last twenty
years in its attempts to change psychiatric care and make it more
civilized. Unfortunately, results are not as yet uniform throughout
the country. There are regions which provide a shining example of
what can be done, and other, more backward areas, but today, we are
proud of what we have achieved so far and we are committed to
pursuing this path, thus enhancing the quality of our patients'
lives.



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