Carol Vidal1, Elizabeth K Reynolds2, Nancy Praglowski3, Marco Grados2. 1. School of Medicine, Johns Hopkins University, 1800 Orleans St, Baltimore, MD, 21287-3335, USA. cvidal2@jhmi.edu. 2. School of Medicine, Johns Hopkins University, 1800 Orleans St, Baltimore, MD, 21287-3335, USA. 3. Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore, MD, USA.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To understand the risk factors for seclusion in a sample of children and adolescents admitted to an inpatient psychiatry unit looking at demographic, clinical severity, life experience, and diagnostic characteristics. METHODS: An unmatched case-control retrospective analysis of psychiatric records in a pediatric inpatient unit from December 2011 to December 2015 (N = 1986) RESULTS: Individual characteristics, including demographics, clinical severity, and clinical presentation as per the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-IV) jointly predicted seclusion in adolescents, with younger age, male sex, black race, having a prior admission, and having a disruptive behavior or bipolar and related disorder diagnoses being predictive of seclusion. While demographic and clinical severity factors were predictive of seclusion in multivariate models, clinical diagnoses only added modestly to the variance explained. CONCLUSIONS: High-risk demographic and clinical characteristics for seclusion events in children and adolescents can provide valuable information to guide interventions to prevent seclusion events during their hospitalization.
OBJECTIVE: To understand the risk factors for seclusion in a sample of children and adolescents admitted to an inpatient psychiatry unit looking at demographic, clinical severity, life experience, and diagnostic characteristics. METHODS: An unmatched case-control retrospective analysis of psychiatric records in a pediatric inpatient unit from December 2011 to December 2015 (N = 1986) RESULTS: Individual characteristics, including demographics, clinical severity, and clinical presentation as per the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-IV) jointly predicted seclusion in adolescents, with younger age, male sex, black race, having a prior admission, and having a disruptive behavior or bipolar and related disorder diagnoses being predictive of seclusion. While demographic and clinical severity factors were predictive of seclusion in multivariate models, clinical diagnoses only added modestly to the variance explained. CONCLUSIONS: High-risk demographic and clinical characteristics for seclusion events in children and adolescents can provide valuable information to guide interventions to prevent seclusion events during their hospitalization.
Authors: Alysha D Thompson; Emily R Berkman; Shannon W Simmons; Kathryn M Porter; Leah Kroon; Rand Goldman; Ravi S Ramasamy Journal: J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry Date: 2022-05-02 Impact factor: 13.113