Literature DB >> 34407629

Association Between Telepsychiatry Capability and Treatment of Patients With Mental Illness in the Emergency Department.

Sadiq Y Patel1, Haiden A Huskamp1, Michael L Barnett1, José R Zubizarreta1, Kori S Zachrison1, Alisa B Busch1, Andrew D Wilcock1, Ateev Mehrotra1.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Because of limited access to psychiatrists, patients with acute mental illness in some emergency departments (EDs) may wait days for a consultation in the ED or as a medical-surgical admission. The study assessed whether telepsychiatry improves access to care and decreases ED wait times and hospital admissions.
METHODS: ED visits with a primary diagnosis of mental illness were identified from 2010-2018 Medicare claims. A total of 134 EDs across 22 states that implemented telepsychiatry between 2013 and 2016 were matched 1:1 with control EDs without telepsychiatry on several characteristics, including availability of in-person psychiatrist consultations. Outcomes included patients' likelihood of admission to a medical-surgical or psychiatric bed, mental illness spending, prolonged ED length of stay (LOS) (two or more midnights in the ED), 90-day mortality, and outpatient follow-up care. Using a difference-in-difference design, changes in outcomes between the 3 years before telepsychiatry adoption and the 2 years after were examined.
RESULTS: There were 172,708 ED mental illness visits across the 134 matched ED pairs in the study period. Telepsychiatry adoption was associated with increased admissions to a psychiatric bed (differential increase, 4.3 percentage points; p<0.001), decreased admissions to a medical-surgical bed (differential decrease, 2.0 percentage points; p<0.001), increased likelihood of a prolonged ED LOS (differential increase, 3.0 percentage points; p<0.001), and increased mental illness spending (differential increase, $292; p<0.01).
CONCLUSIONS: Telepsychiatry adoption was associated with a lower likelihood of admission to a medical-surgical bed but an increased likelihood of admission to a psychiatric bed and a prolonged ED LOS.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Emergency psychiatry; Telecommunications; Telemedicine; Telepsychiatry

Mesh:

Year:  2021        PMID: 34407629      PMCID: PMC8857309          DOI: 10.1176/appi.ps.202100145

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Psychiatr Serv        ISSN: 1075-2730            Impact factor:   3.084


  18 in total

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