Length of admission into psychiatric hospitals according to diagnoses - 08/07/17
Résumé |
Introduction |
In recent years, psychiatry in the United Kingdom has faced an important challenge due to the shortage of beds for patients with increased lengths of stay. Available resources have been saturated due to the reduced capability of psychiatric hospitals to provide spaces for patients needing access to psychiatric care.
Objectives |
This research provides a figure of length of stay linked to psychiatric pathology at discharge.
Aim |
To establish the length of admission of psychiatric patients.
Methods |
The sample comprised 137 discharges from a general adult psychiatric ward distributed over the first 8months of 2016. Results were analyzed by descriptive statistics and meta-analysis.
Results |
Overall, longer periods of admission were recorded for psychoses and shorter periods for adjustment disorders. Psychoses had a median length of admission of 28days (range=3–374); borderline personality disorders, 10days (range=1–249); mood disorders, 14days (range=2–74); drug addictions, 6days (range=1–222); and adjustment disorders, 5days (range=1–55). Meta-analysis (Fig. 1) provided a confidence interval estimate for the whole model of 24.314days (95% CI=13.00–35.621) with P<.001. Meta-analysis results also provided t2=101.061, Cochrane's Q (df=4)=14.327, I2=72.081, with P=.006.
Conclusions |
Psychoses are conditions that require longer admissions, whereas adjustment disorders are more transient pathologies. Borderline personality disorder is somewhat of a hybrid condition. Overall, patients remain in hospital for about a month (24days).
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Plan
Vol 41 - N° S
P. S250 - avril 2017 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.
L’accès au texte intégral de cet article nécessite un abonnement.
Déjà abonné à cette revue ?