European Psychiatry (Apr 2021)

Prolonged length of stay in acute psychiatric wards: A descriptive study

  • L. Lopes,
  • M. Gonçalves-Pinho,
  • S. Pereira,
  • J.P. Ribeiro,
  • A. Freitas

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1192/j.eurpsy.2021.343
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 64
pp. S121 – S122

Abstract

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Introduction The psychiatric care paradigm has shifted towards community-centered models. Yet, prolonged hospitalizations are still a reality, with debated impact at healthcare systems and patients. Objectives This work aims to describe prolonged hospitalizations in acute psychiatric wards through patients’ sociodemographic and clinical data. Methods We analyzed a national hospitalization database that contained all hospitalization episodes registered in Portuguese public hospitals from 2008 to 2015. All episodes with a primary diagnosis of mental disorder defined as ICD-9-CM codes 290.x-319.x were included. Prolonged hospitalizations were defined as having a LoS ≥ P97.5; LOS ≥180 days or LOS ≥1 year. Age, sex, lengh of stay, in-hospital mortality were analysed. Results The LoS ≥ P97.5(≥62 days) group comprised 3911 hospitalizations (2.3% of all psychiatric hospitalizations) and 1755 patients. The median LOS was 81 days and the mean age was 51 years. Sex was equally distributed, though a higher frequency of male patients was found on the ≥180 days (n=364) and ≥ 1 year (n=121) groups. Psychotic disorders were the main diagnosis at discharge (n= 1769, 45.2%), followed by mood disorders (n=1057, 27.0%) and dementia (n=451, 11.5%). In-hospital mortality increased in the higher LoS groups (1.1%; 4.4%; 9.1%, respectively). Conclusions Overall, middle aged patients with psychotic disorders represent most of the prolonged hospitalizations occurring in acute psychiatric wards. Community-based programs require further development to meet the existing needs. Disclosure No significant relationships.

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