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Title: [Crisis unit at the general hospital: Determinants of further hospitalization]. Author: Norotte C, Omnès C, Crozier C, Verlyck C, Romanos M. Journal: Encephale; 2017 Oct; 43(5):444-450. PubMed ID: 27745725. Abstract: INTRODUCTION: The availability of short-stay beds for brief admission (less than 72hours) of crisis patients presenting to the emergency room is a model that has gained a growing interest because it allows time for developing alternatives to psychiatric hospitalization and favors a maintained functioning in the community. Still, the determinants influencing the disposition decision at discharge after crisis intervention remain largely unexplored. OBJECTIVE: The primary objective of this study was to determine the factors predicting aftercare dispositions at crisis unit discharge: transfer for further hospitalization or return to the community. Secondary objectives included the description of clinical and socio-demographic characteristics of patients admitted to the crisis unit upon presentation to the emergency room. METHOD: All patients (n=255) admitted to the short-stay unit of the emergency department of Rambouillet General Hospital during a one-year period were included in the study. Patient characteristics were collected in a retrospective manner from medical records: patterns of referral, acute stressors, presenting symptoms, initial patient demand, Diagnostic and Statistical Manual, 5th edition (DSM-5) disorders, psychiatric history, and socio-demographic characteristics were inferred. Logistic regression analysis was used to determine the factors associated with hospitalization decision upon crisis intervention at discharge. RESULTS: Following crisis intervention at the short-stay unit, 100 patients (39.2%) required further hospitalization and were transferred. Statistically significant factors associated with a higher probability of hospitalization (P<0.05) included the patient's initial wish to be hospitalized (OR=4.28), the presence of a comorbid disorder (OR=3.43), a referral by family or friends (OR=2.89), a history of psychiatric hospitalization (OR=2.71) and suicidal ideation on arrival in the emergency room (OR=2.26). Conversely, significant factors associated with a lower probability of hospitalization were the presence of a personality disorder (OR=0.31), a precipitating conflict situation (OR=0.41), age between 20 and 39 years (OR=0.42), being employed (OR=0.49). CONCLUSION: Our study confirms that clinical factors such as the presence of a personality disorder or the context of a precipitating conflict situation are predictive of a community return. Interestingly, it points out the importance of the patient's initial wish in the hospitalization decision.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]