OBJECTIVE: Suicidal ideation frequently prompts visits to psychiatric emergency departments, and more information is needed about factors that mediate clinicians' decisions to hospitalize or discharge patients with suicidal ideation. METHODS: The authors reviewed records for 257 patients presenting with suicidal ideation to a psychiatric emergency service. Demographic and clinical correlates of hospitalization were examined by backward stepwise binary logistic regression. RESULTS: Hospitalization occurred for 70% of suicidal persons and was significantly associated with psychosis, a history of attempted suicide, and a suicidal plan. With potential confounding factors controlled, these variables correctly classified 80% of hospitalization decisions. CONCLUSIONS: Psychosis, past suicide attempts, and the presence of a suicide plan robustly predicted the decision to hospitalize suicidal persons seen in psychiatric emergency services. Diagnosis, pharmacotherapy, having a psychiatrist, and insurance subtype were unrelated to hospitalization decisions, suggesting that psychiatric emergency department staff perceive few alternatives to hospitalization when psychosis and suicide plans accompany suicidal ideation.
OBJECTIVE: Suicidal ideation frequently prompts visits to psychiatric emergency departments, and more information is needed about factors that mediate clinicians' decisions to hospitalize or discharge patients with suicidal ideation. METHODS: The authors reviewed records for 257 patients presenting with suicidal ideation to a psychiatric emergency service. Demographic and clinical correlates of hospitalization were examined by backward stepwise binary logistic regression. RESULTS: Hospitalization occurred for 70% of suicidal persons and was significantly associated with psychosis, a history of attempted suicide, and a suicidal plan. With potential confounding factors controlled, these variables correctly classified 80% of hospitalization decisions. CONCLUSIONS:Psychosis, past suicide attempts, and the presence of a suicide plan robustly predicted the decision to hospitalize suicidal persons seen in psychiatric emergency services. Diagnosis, pharmacotherapy, having a psychiatrist, and insurance subtype were unrelated to hospitalization decisions, suggesting that psychiatric emergency department staff perceive few alternatives to hospitalization when psychosis and suicide plans accompany suicidal ideation.
Authors: Amanda S Newton; Michele P Hamm; Jennifer Bethell; Anne E Rhodes; Craig J Bryan; Lisa Tjosvold; Samina Ali; Erin Logue; Ian G Manion Journal: Ann Emerg Med Date: 2010-04-09 Impact factor: 5.721
Authors: Eugene Grudnikoff; Erin Callahan Soto; Anne Frederickson; Michael L Birnbaum; Ema Saito; Robert Dicker; John M Kane; Christoph U Correll Journal: Eur Child Adolesc Psychiatry Date: 2014-10-21 Impact factor: 4.785
Authors: Daw San San Thinn; Carissa Nadia Kuswanto; Min Yi Sum; Suet Bin Chai; Hian Koh Doris Sok; Changqing Xu; Alex Hsin Chuan Su; Somnath Sengupta; Rajesh Jacob; Kang Sim Journal: Prim Care Companion CNS Disord Date: 2015-07-16
Authors: Antonio Preti; Leonardo Tondo; Davide Sisti; Marco B Rocchi; Giovanni de Girolamo Journal: Eur Arch Psychiatry Clin Neurosci Date: 2009-08-06 Impact factor: 5.270
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