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Factors associated with a change in disposition for mental health patients boarding in an urban Paediatric emergency department

Authors :
Lisa R. Yanek
Thuy L Ngo
Erin O'Donnell
Vasu Munjapara
Leticia Manning Ryan
Elizabeth K. Reynolds
Larisa E. Breden
Source :
Early Intervention in Psychiatry. 16:509-517
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Wiley, 2021.

Abstract

AIM Paediatric emergency departments (ED) nationwide experience a shared burden of boarding mental health patients. Whilst boarding, some patients have a change in disposition from hospitalization to discharge home. This phenomenon raises concern because EDs often have scarce resources for mental health patients. We sought to understand which patient and clinical factors are associated with a change in disposition outcome. METHODS A nested age-sex-race frequency-matched case-control study was conducted including paediatric patients who presented to an urban PED for mental healthcare over a 36-month period. Control patients included patients admitted to an inpatient psychiatric facility, whilst case patients were those discharged home. Descriptive statistics and multivariable logistic regression analyses were performed to compare groups. RESULTS Case patients were more likely to receive intramuscular Haloperidol (OR 2.2 [CI 1.1-4.4]) for agitation and a psychiatric consult (OR 2.3 [1.4-3.9]) whilst boarding. Case patients were also more likely to present with behavioural concerns (OR 1.8 [CI 1.1-3.1]) and have additional complexities such as medical comorbidities (OR 1.8 [CI 1.1-2.9]) or suicidal ideation/attempt (OR 2.6 [CI 1.1-6.1]). Amongst the most common themes for disposition change was improved patient status (58.8%). CONCLUSION These findings suggest that boarding mental health patients have different disposition outcomes and thus may benefit from patient-specific treatment interventions. Given that patients' statuses may change during the boarding period prompting discharge to home, more focus should be directed to developing brief evidence-based practises that may be implemented in the ED and effectively bridge the gap to outpatient mental health services.

Details

ISSN :
17517893 and 17517885
Volume :
16
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Early Intervention in Psychiatry
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0c46383971eabf0ae43de3e31440a819
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/eip.13188