Sex differences in functional outcome after hospitalisation: A systematic review and meta-analysis

•A minority of studies (7%) analysed data in relation to possible sex differences.•Minimal differences in global functioning outcomes between men and women were found.•There was a trend for global functioning to improve more for females than males.•Services should focus on applying gender-informed c...

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Veröffentlicht in:Psychiatry research 2023-05, Vol.323, p.115095-115095, Article 115095
Hauptverfasser: Tully, S., Bucci, S., Alkotob, Y., Penn, G., Berry, K.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•A minority of studies (7%) analysed data in relation to possible sex differences.•Minimal differences in global functioning outcomes between men and women were found.•There was a trend for global functioning to improve more for females than males.•Services should focus on applying gender-informed care for men as well as women.•Future research needs to investigate the effect of sex differences on outcomes. The aims of this review were to determine: i) how many studies have examined global functioning outcomes from a psychiatric inpatient stay disaggregated by sex; and ii) if women have worse global functioning outcomes than men following an admission. A systematic review following PRISMA guidance and meta-analysis were conducted. Thirty-six studies met eligibility criteria for inclusion in the review. Of these, eleven papers provided sufficient data to conduct a meta-analysis of global functioning outcomes comparing men and women. Overall, differences between men and women were small. The meta-analysis revealed either no difference or a small significant difference in global functioning outcomes in favour of women, contrary to expectations. As many as 93% of otherwise eligible studies had to be excluded for not disaggregating data by sex. Women may have slightly superior functioning outcomes than men suggesting that inpatient services should be more heavily focused on applying principles of gender-informed care for men as well as women. The finding that so many potential studies had to be excluded for not reporting sex differences is consistent with other mental health literature and highlights a need for better reporting practices in relation to sex differences.
ISSN:0165-1781
1872-7123
DOI:10.1016/j.psychres.2023.115095