Known as Assertive Community Treatment (ACT) in the United States, a huge, and largely US,
literature and research base underpins this model. Assertive Outreach is not a treatment but a way of
organising and delivering care via a specialised team to provide intensive, highly coordinated and flexible
support and treatment for clients with longer term needs living in the community.
Specifically those referred to Assertive Outreach are people with whom mainstream mental health services
have found it difficult to engage, and with histories including a severe and enduring mental illness, social
chaos, high use of inpatient beds, and with multiple complex needs. To be effective teams must deliver a
mix of evidence based psychosocial intervention and intensive practical support from multi-skilled and
multi-disciplinary practitioners. The focus of the work must be on engagement and rapport, building up,
often over the long-term, strong relationships. Effective teams aim to replicate the findings of numerous
international randomised controlled trial studies comparing ACT with standard care. These outcomes for
ACT are summarised as:
Large Impact On:
Engagement
Housing
Bed use (not replicated in UK)
Moderate Impact On:
Symptoms
Quality of life
Weak impact On:
Employment
Substance use
Jail and legal problems
Social adjustment
Assertive Outreach team
features
Delivery by a discrete multi-disciplinary team able to provide a full range of interventions.
Most services provided directly by team not brokered out.
Low staff to client ratios (maximum 1:12).
Most interventions provided in community settings.
Emphasis on engagement and maintaining contact with clients.
Caseloads shared across clinicians, staff know and work with the entire caseload although a CPA care
coordinator
is allocated and responsible.
Highly coordinated intensive service with brief daily handover meetings and weekly clinical review
meetings.
Availability out-of -hours and a seven day a week service with capacity to manage crises and increase
contact to
daily according to need.
Time-unlimited service whilst there is evidence of benefit, or continuity of care according to need.