Reducing unnecessary psychiatric consultations for informed consent by liaison with administration

The frequency of a psychiatric consultation being requested to assess a patient's capacity to give informed consent varies among institutions, with most recent surveys reporting a frequency of between 3% and 8% of all consultations. At Montefiore Medical Center, a hospital policy was interprete...

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Veröffentlicht in:General hospital psychiatry 1992, Vol.14 (1), p.15-19
Hauptverfasser: McKegney, F.Patrick, Schwartz, Bruce J., O'Dowd, Mary Alice
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container_title General hospital psychiatry
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creator McKegney, F.Patrick
Schwartz, Bruce J.
O'Dowd, Mary Alice
description The frequency of a psychiatric consultation being requested to assess a patient's capacity to give informed consent varies among institutions, with most recent surveys reporting a frequency of between 3% and 8% of all consultations. At Montefiore Medical Center, a hospital policy was interpreted as mandating such consultations for all patients with possible or even definite lack of decisional capacity. From 1987 to 1988, 55% of all psychiatric consultations in the institution were for consent. Only 9% of the consent patients seen had an Axis I diagnosis other than organic mental syndrome (OMS). Because many of these consultations were believed to be unnecessary, with the patient clearly able or unable to give consent, the consultation service worked first with administration to modify the guidelines, and then educated the medical and nursing staff as to when consultation was indicated. With this program, the number of consent consultations fell from 958 in 1988 to 177 in 1990, representing a major saving of staff time and thirdparty billings. In this era of cost containment and outside review of professional practices, psychiatrists must take responsibility for identifying areas where patient services and billings for them are not justified by clinical indications.
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At Montefiore Medical Center, a hospital policy was interpreted as mandating such consultations for all patients with possible or even definite lack of decisional capacity. From 1987 to 1988, 55% of all psychiatric consultations in the institution were for consent. Only 9% of the consent patients seen had an Axis I diagnosis other than organic mental syndrome (OMS). Because many of these consultations were believed to be unnecessary, with the patient clearly able or unable to give consent, the consultation service worked first with administration to modify the guidelines, and then educated the medical and nursing staff as to when consultation was indicated. With this program, the number of consent consultations fell from 958 in 1988 to 177 in 1990, representing a major saving of staff time and thirdparty billings. 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Psychiatry</subject><subject>Psychopathology. Psychiatry</subject><subject>Referral and Consultation - standards</subject><subject>Referral and Consultation - statistics &amp; numerical data</subject><subject>Social psychiatry. 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subjects Aged
Bioethics
Biological and medical sciences
Health Services Misuse - statistics & numerical data
Health Services Research
Hospital Administration
Hospitals, Teaching
Humans
Informed Consent
Mandatory Programs
Medical sciences
Mental Competency
Mental health
Mentally Ill Persons
Middle Aged
New York City
Organizational Policy
Psychiatry - standards
Psychology. Psychoanalysis. Psychiatry
Psychopathology. Psychiatry
Referral and Consultation - standards
Referral and Consultation - statistics & numerical data
Social psychiatry. Ethnopsychiatry
title Reducing unnecessary psychiatric consultations for informed consent by liaison with administration
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