Dual diagnosis in the psychiatric emergency room in Spain

Background and Objectives: Dual diagnosis is associated with increased emergency department service use. During recent years, increased emphasis has been given to monitor the decision to hospitalise the most sever patients. Many rating scales have developed based on patient-related factors. To assess the level of severity of dual diagnosis patients measured by the Severity Psychiatric Illness (SPI) Scale and to evaluate it as a tool for predicting discharge in emergency psychiatric practice. Methods: Data on 1,227 consecutive admissions visited in a psychiatric emergency room of a general teaching hospital during a period of six months were collected. A routine computerised protocol was completed which included socio-demographic, clinical and social factors and the SPI scale. Results: 206 admissions (17%) had dual diagnosis disorder, 106 (9%) had substance abuse disorder (SUD), and 906 (74%) had non-substance abuse disorder (NSUD). Differences among groups were found in clinical characteristics, discharge decision, readmissions, previous psychiatric history, reason for referral, DSM-IV diagnosis and illicit drug use. Dual diagnosed patients had the highest scores of severity. Logistic regression analyses revealed the independent contribution of different SPI'items. The model showed a good fit and indicated excellent calibration in the sample studied, predicting 87.6% of discharge decisions. Conclusions: Dual diagnosed patients at the emergency psychiatric room presented the highest levels of severity both in clinical and social problems. While the SPI was a good tool for assessing severity of illness in our patients, only some dimensions predicted discharge decision.

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Main Authors: Martín-Santos,Rocío, Fonseca,Francina, Domingo-Salvany,Antonia, Ginés,José María, Ímaz,María Luisa, Navinés,Ricard, Pascual,Juan Carlos, Torrens,Marta
Format: Digital revista
Language:English
Published: Universidad de Zaragoza 2006
Online Access:http://scielo.isciii.es/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0213-61632006000300002
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spelling oai:scielo:S0213-616320060003000022009-05-11Dual diagnosis in the psychiatric emergency room in SpainMartín-Santos,RocíoFonseca,FrancinaDomingo-Salvany,AntoniaGinés,José MaríaÍmaz,María LuisaNavinés,RicardPascual,Juan CarlosTorrens,Marta Dual diagnosis emergency room psychiatric emergency services severity of illness psychiatric comorbidity evaluation of services Background and Objectives: Dual diagnosis is associated with increased emergency department service use. During recent years, increased emphasis has been given to monitor the decision to hospitalise the most sever patients. Many rating scales have developed based on patient-related factors. To assess the level of severity of dual diagnosis patients measured by the Severity Psychiatric Illness (SPI) Scale and to evaluate it as a tool for predicting discharge in emergency psychiatric practice. Methods: Data on 1,227 consecutive admissions visited in a psychiatric emergency room of a general teaching hospital during a period of six months were collected. A routine computerised protocol was completed which included socio-demographic, clinical and social factors and the SPI scale. Results: 206 admissions (17%) had dual diagnosis disorder, 106 (9%) had substance abuse disorder (SUD), and 906 (74%) had non-substance abuse disorder (NSUD). Differences among groups were found in clinical characteristics, discharge decision, readmissions, previous psychiatric history, reason for referral, DSM-IV diagnosis and illicit drug use. Dual diagnosed patients had the highest scores of severity. Logistic regression analyses revealed the independent contribution of different SPI'items. The model showed a good fit and indicated excellent calibration in the sample studied, predicting 87.6% of discharge decisions. Conclusions: Dual diagnosed patients at the emergency psychiatric room presented the highest levels of severity both in clinical and social problems. While the SPI was a good tool for assessing severity of illness in our patients, only some dimensions predicted discharge decision.Universidad de ZaragozaThe European Journal of Psychiatry v.20 n.3 20062006-09-01journal articletext/htmlhttp://scielo.isciii.es/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0213-61632006000300002en
institution SCIELO
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country España
countrycode ES
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databasecode rev-scielo-es
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region Europa del Sur
libraryname SciELO
language English
format Digital
author Martín-Santos,Rocío
Fonseca,Francina
Domingo-Salvany,Antonia
Ginés,José María
Ímaz,María Luisa
Navinés,Ricard
Pascual,Juan Carlos
Torrens,Marta
spellingShingle Martín-Santos,Rocío
Fonseca,Francina
Domingo-Salvany,Antonia
Ginés,José María
Ímaz,María Luisa
Navinés,Ricard
Pascual,Juan Carlos
Torrens,Marta
Dual diagnosis in the psychiatric emergency room in Spain
author_facet Martín-Santos,Rocío
Fonseca,Francina
Domingo-Salvany,Antonia
Ginés,José María
Ímaz,María Luisa
Navinés,Ricard
Pascual,Juan Carlos
Torrens,Marta
author_sort Martín-Santos,Rocío
title Dual diagnosis in the psychiatric emergency room in Spain
title_short Dual diagnosis in the psychiatric emergency room in Spain
title_full Dual diagnosis in the psychiatric emergency room in Spain
title_fullStr Dual diagnosis in the psychiatric emergency room in Spain
title_full_unstemmed Dual diagnosis in the psychiatric emergency room in Spain
title_sort dual diagnosis in the psychiatric emergency room in spain
description Background and Objectives: Dual diagnosis is associated with increased emergency department service use. During recent years, increased emphasis has been given to monitor the decision to hospitalise the most sever patients. Many rating scales have developed based on patient-related factors. To assess the level of severity of dual diagnosis patients measured by the Severity Psychiatric Illness (SPI) Scale and to evaluate it as a tool for predicting discharge in emergency psychiatric practice. Methods: Data on 1,227 consecutive admissions visited in a psychiatric emergency room of a general teaching hospital during a period of six months were collected. A routine computerised protocol was completed which included socio-demographic, clinical and social factors and the SPI scale. Results: 206 admissions (17%) had dual diagnosis disorder, 106 (9%) had substance abuse disorder (SUD), and 906 (74%) had non-substance abuse disorder (NSUD). Differences among groups were found in clinical characteristics, discharge decision, readmissions, previous psychiatric history, reason for referral, DSM-IV diagnosis and illicit drug use. Dual diagnosed patients had the highest scores of severity. Logistic regression analyses revealed the independent contribution of different SPI'items. The model showed a good fit and indicated excellent calibration in the sample studied, predicting 87.6% of discharge decisions. Conclusions: Dual diagnosed patients at the emergency psychiatric room presented the highest levels of severity both in clinical and social problems. While the SPI was a good tool for assessing severity of illness in our patients, only some dimensions predicted discharge decision.
publisher Universidad de Zaragoza
publishDate 2006
url http://scielo.isciii.es/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0213-61632006000300002
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