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Risk factors for medical deterioration of psychiatric inpatients: opportunities for early recognition and prevention
Authors:Manu Peter  Asif Muhammad  Khan Sameer  Ashraf Husnein  Mani Anup  Guvenek-Cokol Perihan  Lee Hanna  Kane John M  Correll Christoph U
Institution:Zucker Hillside Hospital, North Shore-Long Island Jewish Health System, Glen Oaks, New York; Hofstra North Shore-Long Island Jewish School of Medicine at Hofstra University, Hempstead, New York; Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, New York. Electronic address: pmanu@nshs.edu.
Abstract:BackgroundMedical deterioration during admission to free-standing psychiatric hospitals is distressing for patients, interrupts bio-behavioral interventions, and places a substantial burden on health care resources. Emergency transfers to a general hospital are a reasonable marker of significant medical deterioration, but have not been assessed systematically.ObjectiveTo use clinical data available at the time of psychiatric admission to identify risk factors for transfers to a general hospital.MethodRetrospective review of the hospital course of 1000 adults consecutively admitted for an average of 19.1 ± 21.3 days to a single free-standing psychiatric hospital in 2010.ResultsOne hundred forty-four patients (14.4%) were transferred to a general hospital. Transferred and not-transferred groups differed significantly with regard to age, presence of dementia, number of comorbid medical disorder, history of arterial hypertension, blood urea nitrogen (BUN), creatinine, albumin, glucose, calcium, hemoglobin, and hematocrit (P < .001). In a multiple logistic regression analysis, blood urea nitrogen (odds ratio OR], 63.2), hemoglobin (OR, 35.3), albumin (OR, 7.3) and age (OR, 5.73) were independently associated with transfers. Acute medical deteriorations occurred in 46.2% of patients with azotemia (BUN >24 mg/dL), 32.7% of those with anemia (Hb <12 g/L), 37.5 % of those with hypoalbuminemia (albumin <3.7 g/dL), and 37.4% of patients 65 and older.ConclusionMedical deterioration of psychiatric inpatients correlates with higher BUN, lower albumin and hemoglobin, and older age. Baseline azotemia, anemia or hypoalbuminemia should trigger prompt medical evaluation and enhanced monitoring to prevent, identify, and treat somatic disorders.
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