Emergency Care Journal (Sep 2021)

Effects after the lockdown on emergency room admissions for psychiatric evaluation: An observational study from the province of Forlì-Cesena, Italy

  • Massimiliano Beghi,
  • Riccardo Brandolini,
  • Laura Biondi,
  • Claudia Corsini,
  • Carlo Fraticelli,
  • Rosa Sant'Angelo,
  • Giovanni De Paoli

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4081/ecj.2021.9827
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 3

Abstract

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The aim was to study the number of accesses to the Emergency Room (ER) requiring psychiatric evaluation in the four months following the lockdown period for the COVID-19 outbreak (May 4th, 2020-August 31th, 2020). The study is a retrospective longitudinal observational study of the ER admissions of the Hospitals of Cesena and Forlì (Emilia Romagna region) leading to psychiatric assessment. Sociodemographic variables, history for medical comorbidities or psychiatric disorders, reason for ER admission, psychiatric diagnosis at discharge and measures taken by the psychiatrist were collected. An increase of 9.4% of psychiatric assessments was observed. The difference was more pronounced in the first two months after lockdown, with a 21.7% increase of number of ER accesses, while after two months numbers were the same as those of the year before. Admission with anxiety symptoms and history of psychiatric disorder decreased significantly. Moreover, there is an age trend with an increasing age of admission.

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