| Literature DB >> 32038320 |
Anna Hegedüs1,2, Bernd Kozel2,3, Dirk Richter4,5, Johann Behrens6,7.
Abstract
Background: The transition from psychiatric hospital to community is often hindered by challenges that influence community adjustment and continuity of care. Transitional interventions with bridging components are provided prior to discharge and continue beyond inpatient care. They provide continuity of care and may be effective in preventing readmission. We aimed to assess the effectiveness of transitional interventions with predischarge and postdischarge components in reducing readmissions and improving health-related or social outcomes of patients discharged from psychiatric hospitals.Entities:
Keywords: discharge; mental health; meta-analysis; psychiatry; systematic review; transitional care
Year: 2020 PMID: 32038320 PMCID: PMC6985781 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2019.00969
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychiatry ISSN: 1664-0640 Impact factor: 4.157
Figure 1Flow diagram of study selection process.
Description of included studies.
| Reference | Design | Country | Intervention | Intervention Components | Length of intervention (weeks) | Intervention intensity score | Comparison | Initial sample size: IG/CG | Diagnoses of participants | Follow-up | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Psychosis/schizophrenia | Depression/anxiety | ||||||||||
| Bonsack et al. ( | RCT | CH | Transitional Case management | CM, CBT | 4 | ++ | TAU | 51/51 | 8% | 75% | 12 months |
| Dixon et al. ( | RCT | US | Brief critical time intervention | PE, CM, CBT | 12 | +++ | TAU | 64/71 | 37% | NR | 6 months |
| Forchuk et al. ( | cRCT | CA | Transitional discharge model | CBT, PS | 12 | +++ | TAU | 201/189 | 48% | 42% | 12 months |
| Hanrahan et al. ( | RCT | US | Transitional Care Model | PE, CM | 12 | ++ | TAU | 20/20 | 73%* | 75%* | 3 months |
| Hengartner et al. ( | RCT | CH | Postdischarge Network Coordination Program | CM | 12 | ++ | TAU | 76/75 | 27% | 34% | 18 months |
| Lay et al. ( | RCT | CH | Psychoeducation and crisis focused monitoring | PE, CM, CBT | 96 | +++ | TAU | 119/119 | 39% | 26% | 24 months |
| Price et al. ( | RCT | US | Transition to Community program | CM | 2 | + | TAU | 7/6 | 100% | 7 weeks | |
| Puschner et al. ( | RCT | D | Needs-oriented discharge planning and monitoring for high utilizers | CM | 12 | + | TAU | 241/250 | 59% | 41% | 18 months |
| Reynolds et al. ( | RCT | UK | Transitional discharge model | CBT, PS | 20 | ++ | TAU | 11/14 | NR | NR | 5 months |
| Simpson et al. ( | RCT | UK | Peer support for discharged patients | PS | 4 | + | TAU | 20/22 | 52% | 39% | 3 months |
| Cuffel et al. ( | QE | US | Group 1: Enhanced care management | CM | 12 | ++ | TAU | 74**/94***/31 | 20% | NR | 6 months |
| Hegedüs et al. ( | QE | CH | Short transitional intervention in psychiatry | CM, CBT | 1 | + | TAU | 20/20 | 10% | 59% | 1 week |
| Khaleghparast et al. ( | QE | IRN | Discharge planning | CM, CBT | 12 | ++ | TAU | 23/23 | 100% | 3 months | |
| Batscha et al. ( | Cohort study | US | Inpatient Transition Intervention by APN transition coach | CM | 3 | + | - | 15 | 100% | 2 weeks | |
| Kidd et al. ( | Cohort study | CA | Modified Welcome Basket intervention | CM, PS | 4 | ++ | - | 23 | 87% | 13% | 1 month; 6 months readmission |
| Noda et al. ( | Cohort study | JPN | Tokyo Musashino Hospital Psychiatric Rehabilitation Service | PE, CM, CBT | 52 | ++ | - | 224 | 100% | 2, 5, 7 years after discharge | |
RCT, randomized controlled trial; cRCT, cluster randomized controlled trial; QE, quasi-experimental design; CH, Switzerland; US, United States; CA, Canada; D, Germany; UK, United Kingdom; IRN, Iran; JPN, Japan; Intervention components: PE, psychoeducation, CM, case management, CBT, cognitive behavioral therapy, PS, peer support; TAU, treatment as usual; + low intensity, ++ moderate intensity, +++ high intensity; IG, intervention group; CG, control group; NR, not reported in publication; *multiple diagnoses possible; **enhanced care management, ***intensive care management.
Quality assessment of randomized controlled studies using the Revised Cochrane Risk-of-Bias tool for randomized trials (26).
| Author | Domain 1: randomization process | Domain 2: deviations from intended interventions (assignment) | Domain 3: missing outcome data | Domain 4: measurement of outcome | Domain 5: selection of reported results | Overall judgment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bonsack et al. ( | low | low | low | some concerns | low | some concerns |
| Dixon et al. ( | low | low | low | low | some concerns | some concerns |
| Forchuk et al. ( | low | some concerns | high | low | some concerns | high risk of bias |
| Hanrahan et al. ( | low | low | low | some concerns | some concerns | some concerns |
| Hengartner et al. ( | low | low | low | low | low | low risk of bias |
| Lay et al. ( | low | some concerns | low | low | low | some concerns |
| Price et al. ( | some concerns | high | low | low | some concerns | high risk of bias |
| Puschner et al. ( | low | low | some concerns | low | low | some concerns |
| Reynolds et al. ( | some concerns | some concerns | some concerns | some concerns | some concerns | high risk of bias |
| Simpson et al. ( | low | some concerns | some concerns | some concerns | some concerns | high risk of bias |
Quality assessment of nonrandomized studies using the Mixed Methods Appraisal Tool (24).
| Quasi-experimental studies | 3.1. Are the participants representative of the target population? | 3.2. Are measurements appropriate regarding both the outcome and intervention (or exposure)? | 3.3. Are there complete outcome data? | 3.4. Are the confounders accounted for in the design and analysis? | 3.5. During the study period, is the intervention administered (or exposure occurred) as intended? |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cuffel et al. ( | yes | yes | cannot tell | no | yes |
| Hegedüs et al. ( | yes | yes | no | yes | yes |
| Khaleghparast et al. ( | yes | yes | yes | no | cannot tell |
|
| |||||
| Batscha et al. ( | yes | yes | yes | yes | yes |
| Kidd et al. ( | yes | yes | no | no | yes |
| Noda et al. ( | yes | yes | yes | no | yes |
Overview of study results.
| RCT | readmission | service use, inpatient | service use, outpatient | Symptoms | Quality of life | continuity of care | costs | functioning | Satisfaction | hopelessness | loneliness | depression | needs | subjective distress | social support & engagement in community | illness severity | coping | knowledge | difficulty faced after discharge | difficulty of discharge process |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bonsack et al. ( | = | = | ||||||||||||||||||
| Dixon et al. ( | = | = | (+) | = | = | + | = | |||||||||||||
| Forchuk et al. ( | = | = | = | |||||||||||||||||
| Hanrahan et al. ( | = | = | ( = ) | ( = ) | ||||||||||||||||
| Hengartner et al. ( | = | = | = | + | - | = | = | |||||||||||||
| Lay et al. ( | (+)* | (+)* | ||||||||||||||||||
| Price et al. ( | = | = | ||||||||||||||||||
| Puschner et al. ( | = | = | = | = | = | = | = | = | ||||||||||||
| Reynolds et al. ( | = | = | = | = | ||||||||||||||||
| Simpson et al. ( | = | = | = | = | = | |||||||||||||||
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| ||||||||||||||||||||
| Cuffel et al. ( | = | = | ( = ) | = | ||||||||||||||||
| Hegedüs et al. ( | = | = | = | = | = | |||||||||||||||
| Khaleghparast et al. ( | + | + | + | |||||||||||||||||
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| Batscha et al. ( | = | |||||||||||||||||||
| Kidd et al. ( | = | = | (+) | + | + | |||||||||||||||
| Noda et al. ( | + |
RCT, randomized controlled trial; + significant difference in favor of intervention; = no difference between groups; - significant difference in favor of control; () different measures of domain and results do not coincide; *significant reduction of compulsory readmissions, no change in voluntary admissions.
Figure 2Random effects meta-analysis for readmission.
Figure 3Funnel plot for readmission.
Subgroup analysis.
| Odds ratio | 95% confidence interval | |
|---|---|---|
|
| ||
| 12 weeks or less (k = 7) | 0.778 | 0.508 – 1.191 |
| 13 weeks or more (k = 2) | 0.790 | 0.449 – 1.389 |
|
| ||
| Low risk (k = 1) | 1.462 | 0.713 – 2.995 |
| Some concerns (k = 5) | 0.735 | 0.444 – 1.216 |
| High risk (k = 3) | 0.612 | 0.315 – 1.189 |
|
| ||
| Low (k = 2) | 0.528 | 0.347 – 0.803 |
| Moderate (k = 5) | 0.898 | 0.460 – 1.753 |
| High (k = 2) | 0.802 | 0.509 – 1.261 |