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When to discharge and when to voluntary or compulsory hospitalize? Factors associated with treatment decision after self-harm

Authors :
Laurent Michaud
Sébastien Berva
Louise Ostertag
Alessandra Costanza
Bénédicte Van der Vaeren
Yves Dorogi
Stéphane Saillant
Philippe Golay
Stéphane Morandi
Source :
Psychiatry research, vol. 317, pp. 114810
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Clinicians assessing suicidal patients in emergency departments (EDs) must decide whether to admit the person to a psychiatric ward with voluntary or compulsory hospitalization or to discharge him/her as an outpatient. This cross-sectional study aimed to identify independent predictors of this decision among a large sample of self-harm (SH) patients. It used data from all patients admitted to four Swiss EDs between 2016 and 2019. Socio-demographic, clinical, and suicidal process-related characteristics data were evaluated against the decision for voluntary or compulsory hospitalization using t-tests, Chi-Square tests and logistic multiple regression. 2142 episodes from 1832 unique patients were evaluated. Independent predictors of decision to hospitalize included: male gender, advanced age, hospital location, depression and personality disorders, substance use, a difficult socio-economic condition, a clear intent to die, and a serious suicide attempt. Significant variables that emerged as independent predictors of compulsory hospitalization were hospital location, not having anxiety and personality disorders, being retired, having a clear intent to die, and making a serious suicide attempt. Hospital EDs had different rates of compulsory psychiatric admission. However, the decision to admit a patient for hospitalization, either voluntary or compulsory, was mainly based on clinical factors.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Psychiatry research, vol. 317, pp. 114810
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....65e6b318211da4104bf3b653d0660ae9