| Literature DB >> 15882462 |
David L Schriger1, Patrick S Gibbons, Wais A Nezami, Carol A Langone.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: We previously demonstrated that a computerized psychiatric screening interview (the PRIME-MD) can be used in the Emergency Department (ED) waiting room to identify patients with mental illness. In that trial, however, informing the ED physician of the PRIME-MD results did not increase the frequency of psychiatric diagnosis, consultation or referral. We conducted this study to determine whether telling the patient and physician the PRIME-MD result would result in the majority of PRIME-MD-diagnosed patients being directed toward treatment for their mental illness.Entities:
Year: 2005 PMID: 15882462 PMCID: PMC1142309 DOI: 10.1186/1471-227X-5-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Emerg Med ISSN: 1471-227X
Figure 1This graphic shows how the 95 subjects tallied in the final analysis were culled from the 4,054 patients seen in the ED during study hours. Patients were randomized to three groups: tell neither (PRIME-MD results not shared with the patient or physician – the control group), tell patient (PRIME-MD results shared with the patient), and tell both (PRIME-MD results shared with patient and physician). In the lowest level of boxes, the entry "ER MD Dx or Tx" indicates how many patients diagnosed by PRIME-MD were diagnosed, treated or referred by the emergency physician.
Physician and patient information by study limb
| No. of patients | 23 | 40 | 32 | 95 |
| Age (y) mean (SD) | 48(15) | 46(14) | 48(15) | 47(15) |
| Female, No. (%) | 12(53) | 17(43) | 19(60) | 48(51) |
| No. of Attendings | 12 | 17 | 15 | 20 |
| No. of Residents | 19 | 30 | 30 | 51 |
| 1 patient | 18 | 22 | 25 | 31 |
| 2 patients | 1 | 4 | 3 | 9 |
| 3 patients | 0 | 2 | 0 | 7 |
| ≥ 4 patients | 0 | 0 | 0 | 4 |
PRIME-MD diagnoses by study limb
| No. of patients | 23 | 40 | 32 | 95 |
| Any PRIME-MD diagnostic domain (%) | 9(39) | 20(50) | 22(69) | 51(54) |
| 1 PRIME-MD diagnostic domain | 3(13) | 8(20) | 10(31) | 21(22) |
| 2 PRIME-MD diagnostic domains | 2(9) | 7(18) | 5(16) | 14(14) |
| 3 PRIME-MD diagnostic domains | 4(17) | 1(3) | 5(16) | 10(11) |
| ≥ 4 PRIME-MD diagnostic domains | 0(0) | 4(10) | 2(6) | 6(6) |
| Any mood diagnosis | 7(30) | 12(30) | 17(53) | 36(37) |
| Any anxiety diagnosis | 4(17) | 14(35) | 10(31) | 28(29) |
| Any OCD diagnosis | 5(22) | 6(15) | 7(22) | 18(19) |
| Any alcohol/dependence | 1(4) | 5(13) | 6(19) | 12(13) |
| Any phobia diagnosis | 2(9) | 5(13) | 2(6) | 9(9) |
| Any eating disorder | 0(0) | 0(0) | 2(6) | 2(2) |
Psychiatric diagnosis, consultation and referral in patients with a PRIME-MD diagnosis, by study limb (N (%))
| Patients with a PRIME-MD diagnosis and a: | 9 | 20 | 22 |
| Physician psychiatric diagnosis | 0 (0%) | 2 (10%) | 4 (18%) |
| Physician psychiatric consultation or referral | 1 (11%) | 3 (15%) | 4 (18%) |
| Physician psychiatric diagnosis, consultation, or referral | 1 (11%) | 3 (15%) | 4 (18%) |
| Frequentist 95% CI | 0%, 48% | 3%, 38% | 5%, 40% |
| Bayesian Analysis of these data* | mean | ||
| Prior distribution for limb | 7% | 20% | 20% |
| Likelihood for limb (from observed data) | 11% | 15% | 18% |
| Posterior distribution for limb | 9% | 15% | 18% |
*All probabilities are modelled as beta distributions. The traditional, frequentist 95% confidence intervals for the trial can be compared to the 95% credible intervals of the posterior distributions produced by the Bayesian analysis which combines prior beliefs about the results of each limb with the observed data (see text and [14]).
Figure 2Title: PRIME-MD diagnosis versus whether the ED physician made a psychiatric diagnosis, consultation or referral, by study limb. For each study limb a 2 × 2 table depicts how each patient's PRIME-MD status (psychiatric diagnosis versus none) compares to emergency physician's decision to make a psychiatric diagnosis, obtain psychiatric consultation, or refer the patient for evaluation of the psychiatric condition.