Patient-Disease Characteristics and Coping Strategies Predict Hospitalization in Emergency Psychiatry

Objective: The goal of this study was to analyze how far patient-disease characteristics (sociodemographic variables, previous psychiatric treatment, way of referral, the patient's current diagnosis), and the patient's coping strategies are connected with the consecutive disposition for in...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of psychiatry in medicine 1999-01, Vol.29 (1), p.75-90
Hauptverfasser: Schnyder, Ulrich, Valach, Ladislav, Mörgeli, Hanspeter, Heim, Edgar
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Objective: The goal of this study was to analyze how far patient-disease characteristics (sociodemographic variables, previous psychiatric treatment, way of referral, the patient's current diagnosis), and the patient's coping strategies are connected with the consecutive disposition for inpatient or outpatient treatment. Methods: Data from a one-year intake of the psychiatric emergency service at a University Hospital (N = 1439) were monitored and analyzed with regard to the decision on treatment. Four hundred eighty-one patients were hospitalized and 530 were assigned to outpatient treatment. Two subsamples of twenty-eight patients from each group filled out the Bernese Coping Modes questionnaire before the decision with regard to the treatment disposition was taken. Results: The patient's psychiatric history, the way of referral as well as the current axis I diagnosis made a significant contribution to the treatment decision. Overall, patient-disease characteristics allowed for correct classification of 69.3 percent of cases. However, coping was a comparable predictor of hospitalization. Conclusions: It is argued that the search for patient-disease characteristics in the psychiatric emergency room should be complemented by a more extensive monitoring of the patients' way of coping with their current crisis.
ISSN:0091-2174
1541-3527
DOI:10.2190/YPKF-YWKL-7UKL-36VC