1. The Impact of the North Carolina Statewide Telepsychiatry Program (NC-STeP) on Patients' Dispositions From Emergency Departments.
- Author
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Kothadia RJ, Jones K, Saeed SA, and Torres MJ
- Subjects
- Emergency Service, Hospital, Humans, Length of Stay, North Carolina, Mental Disorders therapy, Mental Health Services
- Abstract
Objective: The number of patients seeking treatment in emergency departments (EDs) for mental health reasons is rising, and these patients are often kept in the ED until they can be treated or discharged, leading to overcrowding. Telepsychiatry may alleviate overcrowding by increasing the rate of discharges home., Methods: ED discharge records for 86,931 patients with psychiatric symptoms were examined to compare patient disposition and length of stay (LOS) between times when the North Carolina Statewide Telepsychiatry Program (NC-STeP) program was available or unavailable., Results: For patients with a LOS of >2 days (N=3,144) and when NC-STeP was available, 62% (N=1,941) were discharged home, and 29% (N=922) were transferred to a psychiatric facility. When NC-STeP was unavailable (N=2,662), 43% (N=1,139) of these patients were discharged home, and 46% (N=1,230) were transferred to a psychiatric facility. For patients with a LOS of 1-2 days and when NC-STeP was available (N=41,713), 77.0% (N=32,131) were discharged home, and 15.4% (N=6,441) were transferred to a psychiatric facility, compared with 74.2% (N=29,237) discharged home and 13.9% (N=5,495) transferred to a psychiatric facility when NC-STeP was unavailable (N=39,412). The increases in discharges home and decreases in referrals to psychiatric facilities when NC-STeP was available were statistically significant for patients in both groups (p<0.001)., Conclusions: Results suggest that telepsychiatry programs such as NC-STeP increase the number of discharges home and decrease transfers to psychiatric facilities, likely promoting patient satisfaction and improving ED efficiency.
- Published
- 2020
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