Length of inpatient stay and recidivism among patients with schizophrenia
OBJECTIVE: The study examined whether length of hospital stay is related to recidivism among psychiatric patients. A quasi-experimental approach was used to address limitations of controlled and epidemiological research. METHODS: Three matched groups, each consisting of 55 inpatients with schizophre...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Psychiatric services (Washington, D.C.) D.C.), 1996-09, Vol.47 (9), p.985-990 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | OBJECTIVE: The study examined whether length of hospital stay is related
to recidivism among psychiatric patients. A quasi-experimental approach was
used to address limitations of controlled and epidemiological research.
METHODS: Three matched groups, each consisting of 55 inpatients with
schizophrenia, were selected from public psychiatric units with different
mean lengths of stay. Regression models were used to compare the groups on
three variables: time to first readmission (survival analysis), number of
readmissions (ordinal logit regression), and total time in the community in
the postdischarge year (multiple linear regression). RESULTS: An analysis
based on the units with different lengths of stay, which was similar to
that typically used in controlled studies, found no differences in the
three outcome measures. However, a second analysis that examined data for
all patients irrespective of their unit assignment found that inpatients
treated for 30 days or less relapsed sooner than those with stays longer
than 30 days. The disparity in results was largely due to overlapping
quasi-experimental conditions: many patients on the short- stay units had a
long lengths of stay, and vice versa. The first analysis supports an
administrative policy of short stays. The second reinforces previous
findings that a group of patients, primarily young males with onset of
illness at an early age and multiple previous hospitalizations, is at
greater risk of relapse with short-term treatment. CONCLUSIONS: The
apparent contradiction between a unit- or patient-based analysis suggests
that unit-based results should be interpreted with caution when used to
make clinical or utilization review decisions. |
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ISSN: | 1075-2730 1557-9700 |
DOI: | 10.1176/ps.47.9.985 |