ORCID

Abstract

Adult community intellectual disability services in the United Kingdom (UK) are required to deliver specialist, evidence-based care for a variety of conditions while minimising restrictive practices and reliance on inpatient provision. Care pathway models have emerged as a potential mechanism to reconcile these aims yet remain under-used in care philosophies in intellectual disabilities. We propose a generalisable pathways model for community intellectual disability services and examine its implications for policy, clinical practice, and research. The model integrates care navigation, proportionate specialist input, and defined clinical condition care including behaviours that challenge, mental and physical health, forensics, neurodevelopmental conditions, epilepsy, and dementia within a community-based service architecture. It considers recent focus on digitalsation, prevention, workforce and practice innovation. The model aligns with contemporary policy priorities. We argue that pathway-based care delivery provides a pragmatic and ethically grounded framework for organising services. It supports consistency, integration, and preventative care while reducing reliance on reactive risk-based responses. By synthesising service design principles, core pathway functions, and system interfaces, this paper offers a coherent model for contemporary community intellectual disability services. Further empirical evaluation is required to assess the impact of care pathways on outcomes, patient experience, and cost-effectiveness.

Publication Date

2026-02-02

Publication Title

International Review of Psychiatry

ISSN

0954-0261

Acceptance Date

2026-01-27

Deposit Date

2026-02-04

Keywords

Care pathways, mental health services, neurodevelopmental disorders, outcomes, service pathways

Share

COinS