| Literature DB >> 31777340 |
Susan Walker1, Euan Mackay2, Phoebe Barnett2, Luke Sheridan Rains3, Monica Leverton4, Christian Dalton-Locke3, Kylee Trevillion5, Brynmor Lloyd-Evans3, Sonia Johnson3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Use of involuntary psychiatric hospitalisation varies widely within and between countries. The factors that place individuals and populations at increased risk of involuntary hospitalisation are unclear, and evidence is needed to understand these disparities and inform development of interventions to reduce involuntary hospitalisation. We did a systematic review, meta-analysis, and narrative synthesis to investigate risk factors at the patient, service, and area level associated with involuntary psychiatric hospitalisation of adults.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31777340 PMCID: PMC7029280 DOI: 10.1016/S2215-0366(19)30406-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Lancet Psychiatry ISSN: 2215-0366 Impact factor: 27.083
FigureSelection of studies
Characteristics of included studies
| Aguglia et al (2016) | Cohort | Italy | 730 | Consecutive admissions to the psychiatric inpatient unit of the San Luigi Gonzaga Hospital, Orbassano, Italy, from September, 2013, to August, 2015 | 112 (15·3%) | Age, gender, education level, relationship status, diagnosis | Moderate |
| Balducci et al (2017) | Cohort | Italy | 848 | Consecutive admissions to the psychiatric inpatient unit of the general teaching hospital of Santa Maria della Misericordia, Perugia, Italy, from June, 2011, to June, 2014 | 309 (36·4%) | Age, gender, relationship status, diagnosis, taking medication at the time of admission, more than one hospitalisation, risk to self | High |
| Bauer et al (2007) | Cohort | Israel | 34 799 | National psychiatric case registry of the Israeli Ministry of Health used to identify all adult inpatient psychiatric admissions to hospital between 1991 and 2000 | 11 156 (32·1%) | Gender, diagnosis, relationship status, years of education, risk to self | High |
| Beck et al (1984) | Cohort | USA | 300 | Random sample of voluntary and involuntary admissions to three adult inpatient units in the US State of Missouri over three periods (January, 1978, to June, 1978; January, 1979, to June, 1979; and January, 1980, to June, 1980) | 150 (selected control group) | None | Low |
| Bindman et al (2002) | Ecological | England | About 1·71 million | Purposive sample of eight mental health provider trusts in England from 1998 to 1999 | 1507 (voluntary admissions not recorded) | Number of inpatient beds, availability of less restrictive care, area deprivation | Moderate |
| Blank et al (1989) | Cohort | USA | 274 | All patients aged 55 years and older admitted to an old age psychiatric unit in a non-profit teaching hospital in the US State of New York from November, 1984, to December, 1985 | 75 (27·3%) | Gender, relationship status, living situation, diagnosis, risk to others, risk to self, presentation | High |
| Bonsack and Borgeat (2005) | Cross-sectional | Switzerland | 87 | Self-completed questionnaire given to all inpatients of the psychiatric hospital of the University of Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland, on May 10, 2002 (response rate 96%) | 30 (34·5%) | Gender, diagnosis | Low |
| Bruns (1991) | Cohort | Germany | 628 | Patients who were involuntarily admitted into the psychiatric unit of Hospital Bremen-Ost in Germany, and 300 randomly chosen controls who were voluntarily admitted between 1984 and 1985 | 328 (selected control group) | Gender, relationship status | Low |
| Burnett et al (1999) | Cohort | England | 100 | First admissions with psychosis within southeast London in England from April, 1991, to March, 1993 | 28 (28%) | Pathways to care | Moderate |
| Canova Mosele et al (2018) | Cohort | Brazil | 137 | Admissions to the psychiatry service of the University Hospital of Santa Maria in Brazil from August, 2012, to January, 2013 | 71 (51·8%) | Gender, living situation, occupation, relationship status, presentation, pathways to care, risk to self, risk to others, education level | High |
| Casella and Loch (2014) | Cohort | Brazil | 169 | Consecutive discharges from the Philippe Pinel Psychiatric Hospital in Brazil from May, 2009, to August, 2009; those with diagnoses other than psychosis or bipolar affective disorder were excluded | 81 (48%) | Gender, relationship status, diagnosis, previous admission, presentation, correct use of medication before admission, risk to others, risk to self, social support | Moderate |
| Chang et al (2013) | Cohort | Brazil | 2289 | All adults hospitalised at the Institute of Psychiatry of the Clinical Hospital, University of San Paulo, Brazil, between 2001 and 2008 | 305 (13·3%) | Gender, employment, relationship status, education level, diagnosis, adherence to treatment before admission | Low |
| Chiang et al (2017) | Cohort | Taiwan | 26 611 | All first admissions with psychosis in Taiwan between 2004 and 2007, identified using the national health insurance database | 2540 (9·5%) | Gender, employment, previous admission | High |
| Cole et al (1995) | Cohort | England | 93 | People with first-onset psychosis in the catchment area for St Ann's Hospital in London, England, between July 1, 1991, and June 30, 1992 | 29 (31%) | Age, living situation, employment, pathways to care, social support | Moderate |
| Cougnard et al (2004) | Cohort | France | 86 | Consecutive admissions with psychosis in ten departments of psychiatry in the Bordeaux region of France between March, 2001, and March, 2002 | 53 (61·6%) | Age, gender, living situation, employment, relationship status, diagnosis, presentation, pathways to care, risk to self, criminal history, social support, educational level | High |
| Craw and Compton (2006) | Cohort | USA | 227 | Consecutively discharged patients from a large public sector hospital in the US State of Georgia from December, 2003, to July, 2004 | 171 (75·3%) | Age, gender, living situation, employment, relationship status, previous psychiatric hospitalisation, presentation | High |
| Crisanti and Love (2001) | Cohort | Canada | 1718 | Admissions to the Department of Psychiatry at the Calgary General Hospital in Alberta, Canada between April 1, 1987, and March 31, 1995 | 711 (41·4%) | Gender, diagnosis, criminal history | High |
| Curley et al (2016) | Cohort | Ireland | 1099 | All admissions to St Aloysius Ward, an acute adult psychiatric inpatient facility in north Dublin, Ireland, between Jan 1, 2008, and Dec 31, 2014 | 155 (14·1%) | Area deprivation (other variables repeated in Kelly et al [2018]) | High |
| de Girolamo et al (2009) | Cross-sectional national survey | Italy | 1548 | All patients admitted to public or private inpatient facilities in Italy (excluding Sicily) during a 12-day period in 2004 | 196 (12·6%) | Gender, housing status, employment status, relationship status, diagnosis, availability of less restrictive care, presentation, referral pathway, risk to self, risk to others, criminal history, educational level | Moderate |
| Delayahu et al (2014) | Cohort | Israel | 24 | Men aged 18–60 years with a DSM-IV axis I diagnosis and substance abuse disorder who were hospitalised in an acute psychiatric dual diagnosis ward in Israel between February, 2004, and March, 2004, and between May, 2004, and June, 2004* | 9 (37·5%) | Age, relationship status, presentation on admission, risk to self, educational level | Moderate |
| Di Lorenzo et al (2018) | Cohort | Italy | 396 | All patients admitted to an acute psychiatric ward in northern Italy between Jan 1, 2015, and Dec 31, 2015 | 160 (40%) | Gender, living arrangements, diagnosis, employment situation, risk to self, risk to others | Moderate |
| Donisi et al (2016) | Cohort | Italy | 74 931 | All discharges from the 40 acute inpatient facilities in the Vento region of Italy between 2000 and 2007 | 3975 (5·3%) | Referral pathway | High |
| Emons et al (2014) | Cohort | Germany | 230 678 | All admissions to the largest provider of psychiatric services in Germany (Landschaftsverbands Westfalen-Lippe) from 2004 to 2009 | 17 206 (7·5%) | Area deprivation, availability of less restrictive care | Moderate |
| Eytan et al (2013) | Cohort | Switzerland | 2227 | All admissions to an acute psychiatric facility in Switzerland over an 8-month period in 2006 | 1422 (63·9%) | None | Moderate |
| Fok et al (2014) | Cohort | England | 14 233 | Adult patients with severe mental illness with and without co-morbid personality disorder between Jan 1, 2007, and Dec 31, 2011 | 3748 (26%) | None | High |
| Folnegovic-Smalc et al (2000) | Cohort | Croatia | 888 | All admitted patients to two acute facilities in Croatia from Jan 1, 1997, to June 30, 1997 | 173 (19%) | Gender, diagnosis | Moderate |
| Gaddini et al (2008) | Cross-sectional | Italy | 7984 | All adult inpatients in 369 psychiatric facilities across Italy (excluding Sicily) on May 8, 2003 | 305 (3·8%) | None | Moderate |
| Garcia Cabeza et al (1998) | Cross- sectional | Spain | 367 | All patients admitted to the acute unit at the psychiatric service of the hospital Gregorio Marañon in Madrid, Spain, in the first 4 months of 1994 | 67 (18%) | Gender, relationship status, employment status, living arrangements, diagnosis, pathways to care | Moderate |
| Gou et al (2014) | Cohort | China | 160 | Consecutive admissions to an acute psychiatric facility in China between July 26, 2012, and Sept 10, 2012 | 85 (53·1%) | Age, gender, employment, relationship status, diagnosis, presentation on admission, education | High |
| Gultekin et al (2013) | Cohort | Turkey | 504 | Patients admitted to an acute psychiatric facility in Turkey between May 1, 2010, and Oct 31, 2010, who had been discharged at the time of data collection | 66 (13·1%) | Gender, employment, relationship status, diagnosis, education | High |
| Hansson et al (1999) | Cohort | Denmark, Finland, Norway, and Sweden | 2834 | All new patients contacting the psychiatric services in seven catchments areas over a 1-year period | 219 (7·7%) | None | Moderate |
| Hatling et al (2002) | Cohort | Norway | 13 985 | Patients admitted to psychiatric facilities in general hospitals in Norway in 1996 | 6476 (46·3%) | Gender, employment, relationship status, diagnosis, availability of inpatient beds | Moderate |
| Hoffman et al (2017) | Cohort | Germany | 213 595 | All admissions to the largest provider of psychiatric services in Germany (Landschaftsverbands Westfalen-Lippe) from 2004 to 2009 | 17 206 (8·1%) | Gender, relationship status, diagnosis, referral pathway, previous admission | Moderate |
| Hotzy et al (2019) | Cohort | Switzerland | 31 508 | Includes all admissions to the University Hospital of Psychiatry in Zurich, Switzerland, between 2008 and 2016; the number of admissions per patient ranged from one to ten (median two [IQR one to three]) | 8843 (28·1%) | Gender, diagnosis, education level | Moderate |
| Houston et al (2001) | Cohort | USA | 487 | First admissions (unclear where to) between October, 1986, and December, 1990 | 282 (58%) | None | Low |
| Hugo (1998) | Cohort | Australia | 402 | Inpatient admissions to an acute ward in Australia over an 8-month period | 136 (34%) | Diagnosis, presentation, risk to self, risk to others | Low |
| Hustoft et al (2012) | Cohort | Norway | 3326 | Consecutive admissions to 20 acute psychiatric units in Norway from 2005 to 2006 | 1453 (44%) | Gender, housing stability, employment, relationship status, presentation on admission, referral pathway, education level, risk to self, risk to others | Moderate |
| Ielmini et al (2018) | Cohort | Italy | 200 | 200 adult psychiatric inpatients hospitalised at the General Hospital Psychiatric Ward in Varese, Italy, from January, 2014, to March, 2017 | 100 (selected control group) | Age, gender, housing stability, employment, relationship status, presentation on admission, risk to others, having social support | Moderate |
| Indu et al (2018) | Case-control | India | 300 | Consecutive compulsory admissions and the two following voluntary admissions to the Indian Government's mental health centre in Thiruvananthapuram, Kerala, from June, 2010, to February, 2011 | 100 (33%) | Gender, housing stability, employment status, relationship status, diagnosis, previous involuntary admission, presentation, compliance, having social support, education level | Moderate |
| Isohanni et al (1991) | Case-control | Finland | 1586 | Admissions to a closed psychiatric ward with modified therapeutic community principles in Oulu, Finland, between 1978 and 1987 | 215 (13·6%) | Age, diagnosis, previous admission | Moderate |
| Iversen et al (2002) | Cohort | Norway | 223 | All patients admitted to four acute wards in Norway from October, 1998, to November, 1999 | 150 (67%) | Gender, diagnosis, presentation | Moderate |
| Kelly et al (2004) | Cohort | Ireland | 78 | Patients with first-episode psychosis admitted to two psychiatric hospitals in Dublin, Ireland, over a 4-year period | 17 (22%) | Age, gender, presentation | Moderate |
| Kelly et al (2018) | Cohort | Ireland | 2940 | All adult admissions to three acute psychiatric hospitals in Dublin, Ireland, from 2008 to 2015 (Dublin Involuntary Admission Study) | 423 (14·4%) | Gender, employment, relationship status, diagnosis | Moderate |
| Keown et al (2016) | Cohort | England | Population of 138 primary care trusts | All adult psychiatric admissions in England in 2010 and 2011; data from the Mental Health Minimum Data Set | Unclear | Area deprivation | High |
| Lastra Martinez et al (1993) | Cross-sectional | Spain | 298 | Clinical records of patients admitted to the acute unit of the psychiatric service of a general hospital (San Carlos University Hospital) in Madrid, Spain, between March, 1990, and February, 1991 | 148 (voluntary group is a selected control group) | Gender, relationship status, risk to self, risk to others | Moderate |
| Lay et al (2011) | Cohort | Switzerland | 9698 | All patients admitted to psychiatric inpatient facilities in Zurich, Switzerland, in 2007 | 2406 (24·8%) | Age, gender, housing stability, employment, diagnosis, inpatient beds, education level, presentation on admission | Moderate |
| Lebenbaum et al (2018) | Cohort | Canada | 115 515 | All patients admitted to mental health beds in the Canadian Province of Ontario from 2009 to 2013 | 85 607 (74·1%) | Gender, housing stability, diagnosis, previous involuntary admission, referral pathways, risk to self, risk to others, presentation on admission | High |
| Leung et al (1993) | Case-control | USA | 44 | Admissions of Indochinese patients to a psychiatric facility in the US State of Oregon in 1985 and 1986; all involuntary admissions were included, and the same number of voluntary patients was selected randomly | 22 (selected control group) | Gender, housing stability, employment, relationship status, diagnosis, previous involuntary admission, previous admission, education level | Moderate |
| Lin et al (2019) | Case-control | Taiwan | 10 190 | All inpatients in Taiwan with a principal diagnosis of schizophrenia between 2007 and 2013; all involuntary patients were included and matched to four voluntary patients based on age, gender, and year of admission | 2038 (selected control group) | Risk to self, previous admission | Moderate |
| Lorant et al (2007) | Cohort | Belgium | 346 | Random sample of 1200 patients referred to one of six psychiatric inpatient units in Brussels, Belgium, in 2004 | 154 (44·5%) | Age, availability of less restrictive care, compliance with treatment before admission, risk to self, risk to others | High |
| Luo et al (2019) | Cross-sectional | China | 155 | All patients with a diagnosis of bipolar affective disorder admitted to 16 psychiatric institutions in China in an index month (March 15, 2013, to April 15, 2013) | 81 (52%) | Gender, employment status, relationship status, education level, previous outpatient treatment, previous hospitalisation, risk to self, risk to others, presentation | Moderate |
| Malla et al (1987) | Cohort | Canada | 5729 | Consecutive admissions to four psychiatric facilities in the Canadian Province of Ontario between October, 1975, and October, 1978 | 724 (12·6%) | Gender, employment, relationship status, referral pathways, diagnosis, risk to self, risk to others | Moderate |
| Mandarelli et al (2014) | Case-control | Italy | 60 | Consecutive involuntary admissions to a psychiatric inpatient unit in Rome, Italy, between October, 2009, and April 2010; each inpatient was matched for age and sex to a voluntarily admitted patient from the same hospital over the same period | 30 (selected control group) | Relationship status, diagnosis, presentation, risk to self | Moderate |
| Montemagni et al (2011) | Cohort | Italy | 119 | Patients with schizophrenia consecutively admitted to an emergency psychiatric ward in Turin, Italy, between December, 2007, and December, 2009 | 34 (28·5%) | Age, gender, employment, relationship status, previous involuntary admission, presentation | Moderate |
| Montemagni et al (2012) | Cohort | Italy | 848 | Consecutive admissions to an emergency psychiatric ward in Turin, Italy, between January, 2007, and December, 2008 | 146 (17%) | Age, diagnosis, education level, risk to self, presentation | Moderate |
| Myklebust et al (2012) | Cohort | Norway | 1963 | Admissions to a psychiatric hospital in northern Norway from 2003 to 2006 | 183 (9·3%) | Age, gender, diagnosis, presentation on admission, referral pathway | Moderate |
| Okin (1986) | Cross-sectional | USA | 198 | All admissions to seven state psychiatric hospitals in the US State of Massachusetts over a 2-week period in 1981 | 94 (47·5%) | Gender, housing stability, diagnosis, previous admission, relationship status, education, risk to self, risk to others | Low |
| Olajide et al (2016) | Cohort | England | 2087 | Patients referred for a Mental Health Act assessment in London, Birmingham, or Oxfordshire in England between the months of July and October in 2008–11 | 1396 (66·9%) | Age, diagnosis, risk to self, risk to others | Moderate |
| Opjordsmoen et al (2010) | Cohort | Norway | 217 | Inpatients with first-episode psychosis in four psychiatric facilities in Norway from January, 1997, to December, 2000 | 126 (58·1%) | Gender, relationship status, presentation, education level | Moderate |
| Opsal et al (2011) | Cross-sectional | Norway | 1187 | All patients with a history of substance abuse admitted to 39 acute psychiatric wards in Norway over a 3-month period in 2005–06 | 361 (30·4%) | Gender, housing stability, employment status, diagnosis, presentation, risk to self, referral pathways | Moderate |
| Polachek et al (2017) | Cohort | Israel | 5411 | All patients with a diagnosis of a psychotic disorder discharged from a mental health centre between January, 2010, and April, 2013 | 2109 (39%) | Gender | Low |
| Riecher et al (1991) | Cohort | Germany | 10 749 | All patients admitted to psychiatric hospital in Baden-Wurttemberg, Germany, between Jan 1, 1984, and June 30, 1986 | 517 (4·8%) | Gender, housing stability, employment, relationship status diagnosis, previous admission | Moderate |
| Ritsner et al (2015) | Cohort | Israel | 439 | All patients admitted to the Sh'ar Menashe mental health centre in Israel between March 1, 2012, and Feb 28, 2013 | 106 (24·1%) | Age, gender, diagnosis, presentation, risk to self | Low |
| Rodrigues et al (2019) | Cohort | Canada | 5191 | All patients from a cohort of young people (aged 16–35 years) with a diagnosis of non-affective psychosis who were hospitalised over a 2-year follow-up period from the initial diagnosis | 4208 (84%) | Gender, living arrangements, social support, risk to self, risk to others, presentation, previous hospitalisation, adherence to treatment before hospitalisation, pathways to care | High |
| Rooney et al (1996) | Case-control | Ireland | 101 | Consecutive involuntary admissions to an inpatient psychiatric unit in Dublin, Ireland, over 6 months were compared with a sample of voluntary patients in the same hospital | 58 (selected control group) | Gender, diagnosis, referral pathways, risk to self, risk to others | Low |
| Schmitz-Buhl et al (2019) | Cohort | Germany | 5764 | All patients involuntarily hospitalised in the state of North Rhine-Westphalia in Cologne, Germany, in 2011; 3991 patients treated voluntarily in the same hospitals over the same period served as a control group | 1773 (voluntary group is a selected control group) | Education level, risk to self | Moderate |
| Schuepbach et al (2006) | Cohort | Switzerland | 86 | Inpatients with an acutely manic or mixed episode of bipolar disorder in the Swiss cohort of the EMBLEM study | 55 (64%) | Gender, relationship status, presentation on admission, compliance with medication before admission | Moderate |
| Schuepbach et al (2008) | Cross-sectional | 14 European countries | 1374 | A sample of inpatients with an acutely manic or mixed episode of bipolar disorder enrolled in the EMBLEM study | 561 (40·8%) | Gender, housing stability, relationship status, presentation, compliance with medication before admission, risk to self, education level | Moderate |
| Serfaty and McCluskey (1998) | Case series | England | 12 | A sample of 11 inpatients with a diagnosis of an eating disorder | 7 (58·3%) | Diagnosis, presentation | Low |
| Silva et al (2018) | Cohort | Switzerland | 5027 | All consecutive admissions to four psychiatric hospitals in the Canton of Vaud, Switzerland, between Jan 1, 2015, and Dec 31, 2015 | 1918 (38·2%) | Gender, relationship status, diagnosis, risk to self, risk to others, previous psychiatric hospitalisation, previous involuntary hospitalisation | High |
| Spengler (1986) | Cohort | Germany | 206 | Consecutive new contacts with the psychiatric emergency department who were admitted to public psychiatric hospitals in Hamburg, Germany, from January, 1980, to September, 1981 | 122 (59·2%) | Gender, housing stability, employment, relationship status, diagnosis, presentation, compliance with treatment before admission, risk to self | High |
| Stylianidis et al (2017) | Cohort | Greece | 715 | All patients admitted to the psychiatric hospital of Attica, Greece, from June, 2011, to October, 2011 | 427 (59·7%) | Age, gender, employment status, relationship status, diagnosis, previous admission, social support, education | High |
| Tørrissen (2007) | Cohort | Norway | 104 | All patients discharged from an acute ward in the Norwegian county of Hedmark from January, 2005, to June, 2005 | 49 (47%) | Age, diagnosis | Low |
| van der Post et al (2009) | Cohort | Netherlands | 7600 | Consecutive patients presenting to emergency psychiatric services in Amsterdam and admitted to an inpatient unit between Sept 15, 2004, and Sept 15, 2006 | 352 (46·3%) | Previous involuntary admission, referral pathway, presentation, risk to self, risk to others | Moderate |
| Wang et al (2015) | Cohort | Taiwan | 2777 | Admissions to psychiatric hospital from the emergency psychiatric service from January, 2009, to December, 2010 | 110 (4·0%) | Age, gender, diagnosis, presentation on admission, referral pathways, risk to self | Moderate |
| Watson et al (2000) | Cohort | USA | 397 | Consecutive patients with an eating disorder referred for admission in the University of Iowa hospital between July, 1991, and June, 1998 | 66 (16·6%) | Gender, relationship status | Low |
| Weich et al (2017) | Cross-sectional | England | 1 238 188 total sample; 104 647 inpatient admissions | All patients who received care at 64 NHS provider trusts in 2010–11; data from the Mental Health Minimum Data Set | 42 915 (3·5% of total sample, 41·0% of the inpatient sample) | Gender, area deprivation, inpatient beds, availability of less restrictive care | High |
EMBLEM=European Mania in Bipolar Longitudinal Evaluation of Medication. NHS=National Health Service.
Risk factors for involuntary care
| Male | 53 | 1·23 (1·14–1·32) | 94·22% |
| Psychosis | 37 | 2·18 (1·95–2·44) | 94·78% |
| Bipolar disorder | 14 | 1·48 (1·24–1·76) | 61·24% |
| Depression | 10 | 0·22 (0·15–0·33) | 85·87% |
| Mood disorder | 20 | 0·59 (0·50–0·69) | 95·73% |
| Anxiety | 11 | 0·80 (0·68–0·95) | 76·22% |
| Personality disorder | 26 | 0·78 (0·65–0·93) | 92·66% |
| Anorexia | 2 | 1·19 (0·21–6·72) | 95·99% |
| Substance misuse | 23 | 0·81 (0·66–1·00) | 95·19% |
| Organic disorder | 14 | 1·57 (1·08–2·27) | 97·82% |
| Neurosis | 8 | 0·37 (0·19–0·73) | 98·11% |
| Unemployed | 20 | 1·43 (1·07–1·90) | 91·28% |
| Student | 3 | 0·88 (0·28–2·79) | 74·61% |
| Homeworker | 2 | 1·36 (0·27–6·83) | 75·83% |
| Welfare benefits | 8 | 1·71 (1·28–2·27) | 71·73% |
| Retired | 7 | 1·41 (0·92–2·17) | 76·62% |
| Dependent | 2 | 1·08 (0·67–1·74) | 93·44% |
| Homeless | 7 | 1·22 (0·88–1·69) | 91·27% |
| Living alone | 13 | 1·24 (0·94–1·65) | 75·37% |
| Friend or relative | 6 | 1·14 (0·73–1·78) | 69·00% |
| Living in an institution | 5 | 0·88 (0·47–1·63) | 71·41% |
| Non-owner | 3 | 1·49 (1·04–2·15) | 87·02% |
| Single | 28 | 1·47 (1·18–1·83) | 97·22% |
| Separated or divorced | 11 | 0·96 (0·67–1·39) | 75·46% |
| Widowed | 7 | 0·81 (0·32–2·05) | 89·36% |
| Previously married | 6 | 1·26 (1·12–1·42) | 59·21% |
| Yes | 6 | 2·17 (1·62–2·91) | 84·23% |
| Yes | 12 | 0·86 (0·58–1·28) | 94·22% |
Risk factors for involuntary care, restricted to high-quality studies
| Male | 16 | 1·32 (1·16–1·51) | 96·90% |
| Psychosis | 10 | 2·19 (1·80–2·66) | 94·85% |
| Bipolar disorder | 3 | 1·06 (0·70–1·60) | 67·37% |
| Depression | 2 | 0·10 (0·06–0·17) | 0% |
| Mood disorder | 6 | 0·46 (0·36–0·60) | 97·12% |
| Anxiety | 2 | 0·56 (0·09–3·42) | 53·16% |
| Personality disorder | 5 | 0·60 (0·37–0·98) | 93·12% |
| Anorexia | 0 | NA | NA |
| Substance misuse | 4 | 0·66 (0·52–0·84) | 9·20% |
| Organic disorder | 4 | 1·92 (0·72–5·08) | 97·76% |
| Neurosis | 2 | 0·55 (0·45–0·67) | 0% |
| Unemployed | 7 | 1·46 (1·04–2·05) | 32·80% |
| Student | 1 | NA | NA |
| Homeworker | 2 | 1·36 (0·27–6·83) | 75·83% |
| Welfare benefits | 1 | NA | NA |
| Retired | 3 | 1·19 (0·50–2·81) | 49·65% |
| Dependent | 1 | NA | NA |
| Homeless | 3 | 0·58 (0·22–1·57) | 85·07% |
| Living alone | 5 | 0·68 (0·39–1·20) | 67·82% |
| Friend or relative | 1 | NA | NA |
| Living in an institution | 2 | 0·72 (0·06–9·42) | 88·63% |
| Non-owner | 1 | NA | NA |
| Single | 9 | 1·18 (0·85–1·64) | 91·72% |
| Separated or divorced | 4 | 0·53 (0·23–1·25) | 89·62% |
| Widowed | 3 | 1·27 (0·37–4·46) | 90·20% |
| Previously married | 3 | 1·12 (1·06–1·20) | 0% |
| Yes | 2 | 1·58 (1·32–1·90) | 82·68% |
| Yes | 5 | 0·75 (0·55–1·02) | 94·71% |
NA=not available.