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25th European Congress of Psychiatry / European Psychiatry 41S (2017) S583–S644
S605
EV0618
Adapting the assertive community
treatment (ACT) for the needs of
different communities: A comparative
case study of KUINA ACT Japan and Mt.
Sinai ACT Canada
W. Chow
1 ,∗
, M. Shiida
2, L. Andermann
11
Mt Sinai Hospital, Psychiatry, Toronto, Canada
2
KUINA Center, Psychiatry ACTT, Hitachinaka, Japan
∗
Corresponding author.
In this e-poster, wewill present the assertive community treatment
(ACT) model in both Japan and Toronto, Canada. We will compare
the adaptations of ACT models in both teams in order to serve their
target populations efficiently and effectively.
We will also compare the demographic data, clinical data and the
outcomes of both ACT teams by analysing the hospitalisation days,
number of emergency admission and the number of admissions
into hospitals.
We will also highlight differences in the mental health systems in
Japan and Canada.
Disclosure of interest
The authors have not supplied their decla-
ration of competing interest.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.eurpsy.2017.01.948EV0619
Nursing care to the person with
mental disorder: Experience report
S.C. Vasconcelos
1 ,∗
, A.E.M. Santos
2, K.N. Maranhão
2,
A.V. Lordão
2, Z.F.D. Carvalho
3, S.A. Almeida
1, J.C. Neves
3,
M.J.J. Alves
31
Federal University of Paraíba UFPB, Public Health Nursing, João
Pessoa, Brazil
2
Federal University of Paraíba UFPB, Nursing, João Pessoa, Brazil
3
Psychosocial Care Center, Health’s Secretary, João Pessoa, Brazil
∗
Corresponding author.
Introduction
The formation of nursing professionals requires a
dynamic teaching that provides the acquisition of skills and abilities
to execute care, management, teaching and research activities. In
this perspective, the operative groups are a teaching and nursing
care strategy, performed by a knowledge exchange and collective
interventions.
Aims
Discuss the experience in nursing care to the person with
mental disorder.
Methods
It is about a fourth year undergraduate nursing stu-
dents’ experience report. The activities were developed at a center
of psychosocial attention in João Pessoa, Paraíba, Brazil. Once a
week, four operative group sessions were held under the theme
“men’s health”. In the first session were agreed norms of behavior
and activities plans on which the participants chose the subjects.
Results
The operative group provided a friendly environment to
exchange knowledge, in which the contents where addressed from
the participant’s acquirements and experiences. There was a good
group interaction. The students conducted the activities under the
teacher and monitor’s supervision.
Conclusion
This report provided experiences that contributed to
the students’ teaching-learning process as well as for understand-
ing the nurse’s insertion in the care scenario and the use of soft
technologies to an efficient care to the person with mental disor-
der. The students also noticed the operative group’s impact in the
user’s lives though sentences such as “It was fun”, “I won gifts”,
“liked it”, “I learned”.
Disclosure of interest
The authors have not supplied their decla-
ration of competing interest.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.eurpsy.2017.01.949EV0620
Interdisciplinarity on the care of
a mentally disordered person
S.C. Vasconcelos
1 ,∗
, A.S.B. Correia
2, B.G. Gouveia
2, I.J. Silva
2,
M.S.G.C. Mendes
2, M.A.S.P. Moreira
3, E.S. Domingos
4,
A.S.L.G. Leal
21
Federal University of Paraíba UFPB, Public Health Nursing, João
Pessoa, Brazil
2
Federal University of Paraíba UFPB, Study Center of Collective
Health, João Pessoa, Brazil
3
Federal University of Paraíba UFPB, Speech Therapy, João Pessoa,
Brazil
4
Federal University of Paraíba UFPB, Nursing, João Pessoa, Brazil
∗
Corresponding author.
Introduction
Brazilian’s humanization policy offers the extended
clinic as acting tool in health services, which advocates the use of
soft technologies to provide care to its clientele.
Aim
Discuss the interdisciplinary mental health residents
approach to the care of the person with mental disorder.
Methods
Experience report, accomplished by experiences of
mental health’s multidisciplinary residency members, which is in
a lato sensu postgraduate linked to the study center of collective
health, of the Federal University of Paraíba, Brazil. Structured on
two axes: face meetings; and singling out actions in the daily work.
Results
From the understanding of the extended clinic as a light
technology interdisciplinary approach, in which different profes-
sional specialties share knowledge and co-responsible themselves
for the mentally disordered patients’ care, Residents have used it
as a articulation tool and insertion in the different care scenarios.
When developing activities, the residents use guidelines indicated
by the extended clinic in order to leverage the work done by the
person with mental disorders. Among which stands out: the host,
building links, qualified listening, the sensitization for the care
co-responsibility, construction of the unique therapeutic project,
intersectional actions and sharing care with other services that
make up the health system.
Conclusion
Experiences like these made it possible to perceive
the applicability of the National Policy of Humanization through
its main tool, which is the extended clinic that contributes to the
work process of a health team, promoting interdisciplinarity and
raising the prospective to the look of transdisciplinary.
Disclosure of interest
The authors have not supplied their decla-
ration of competing interest.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.eurpsy.2017.01.950EV0621
Long-acting injectable antipsychotics
and global functioning in north
western italian public health service
M. Probo , V. Dalo’
∗
, F. Facchini , M. Rudoni , V. Preziosi , D. Nano
ASL NOVARA, Department of Psychiatry, Novara, Italy
∗
Corresponding author.
Introduction
Long-acting injectable antipsychotics (LAI-APs)
should be the first choice therapy in the treatment of schizophre-
nia, however their use in outpatient’s psychiatric services remains
limited.
Objective
Observational study in schizophrenic patients of the
northwestern public health service.
Aim
To assess demographic and psychopathological features
in patients treated with LAI haloperidol (H-LAI) and second-
generation LAI antipsychotics (SG-LAI).
Methods
We recruited 105 schizophrenic patients upon LAI-
APs treatment, and we assessed socio-demographic data, medical
comorbidity, substances use, time from admission, treatment
length, and per os augmentation therapies. All participants were