Recent Substance Intake Among Patients Admitted to Acute Psychiatric Wards: Physician's Assessment and On-Site Urine Testing Compared With Comprehensive Laboratory Analyses

This cross-sectional study of acute psychiatric admissions compared physicians' assessments of recent substance intake and on-site urine testing with comprehensive laboratory drug analyses. The sample comprised 325 consecutive admissions from 2 acute psychiatric wards. Physicians on call were a...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of clinical psychopharmacology 2010-08, Vol.30 (4), p.455-459
Hauptverfasser: MORDAL, Jon, HOLM, Bjørn, MØRLAND, Jørg, BRAMNESS, Jørgen Gustav
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container_issue 4
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container_title Journal of clinical psychopharmacology
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creator MORDAL, Jon
HOLM, Bjørn
MØRLAND, Jørg
BRAMNESS, Jørgen Gustav
description This cross-sectional study of acute psychiatric admissions compared physicians' assessments of recent substance intake and on-site urine testing with comprehensive laboratory drug analyses. The sample comprised 325 consecutive admissions from 2 acute psychiatric wards. Physicians on call were asked to judge if the patient had recently taken benzodiazepines, opiates, alcohol, amphetamines, cannabis, or cocaine. Blood and urine samples were obtained and analyzed with chromatographic laboratory methods for a wide range of substances. A routine on-site urine screening test was performed in 92 of the cases. Physicians' assessments and on-site urine testing were compared with the reference standard of laboratory analyses. The sensitivity of the physician's assessment was highest for amphetamines (76%), followed by benzodiazepines (61%), opiates (57%), cannabis (55%), and cocaine (50%), whereas specificity was greater than 90% for all substances. The sensitivity of the on-site test ranged from 76% for amphetamine to 97% for cannabis, and specificity ranged from 82% for cannabis to 100% for cocaine. The study indicates clinical underdetection of recent substance intake among acute psychiatric admissions. On-site urine testing identified substance use that was not recognized by the physician's initial assessment, although specificity for cannabis and benzodiazepines was low. Chromatographic methods, which offered important supplementary information about substance use, should be considered for the routine screening of acutely admitted psychiatric patients.
doi_str_mv 10.1097/JCP.0b013e3181e61923
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subjects Adult
Biological and medical sciences
Chromatography - methods
Clinical Laboratory Techniques
Cross-Sectional Studies
Female
Humans
Male
Medical sciences
Middle Aged
Neuropharmacology
Patient Admission
Pharmacology. Drug treatments
Physicians
Psychiatric Department, Hospital
Sensitivity and Specificity
Street Drugs - urine
Substance Abuse Detection - methods
Substance-Related Disorders - diagnosis
Substance-Related Disorders - urine
title Recent Substance Intake Among Patients Admitted to Acute Psychiatric Wards: Physician's Assessment and On-Site Urine Testing Compared With Comprehensive Laboratory Analyses
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