Joseph Kugler M.D. , Garrett Key M.D. , Mark Oldham M.D.
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引用次数: 3
Abstract
Background
Proactive consultation-liaison psychiatry improves identification of psychiatric needs and reduces time to psychiatric consultation and length of stay (LOS) among medical inpatients in academic clinical settings.
Objective
To evaluate the effect of a proactive model on LOS, consult rate, and consultation latency in a nonacademic community hospital.
Methods
We implemented a modified proactive consultation-liaison service (PCS) in a 32-bed acute care medical-surgical unit in a community hospital. We compared outcomes during a 90-day PCS intervention period to preintervention and postintervention cohorts receiving consultation-as-usual in the same unit. During the intervention, a psychiatrist reviewed the electronic medical record of patients admitted to the study unit to guide recommendations and collaborated with existing unit staff. Primary outcomes were LOS, consultation rate, and consultation latency. Secondary outcomes included restraint utilization, 1:1 companion utilization, and a survey completed by unit nursing staff.
Results
Half of patients on the study unit had psychiatric comorbidity. Median LOS in the PCS cohort was 3.0 days versus 5.0 days in the preintervention and postintervention cohorts. The consultation rate was higher in the PCS cohort (1.4% before intervention; 33% intervention; 6.5% after intervention), and median consultation latency was also reduced during the intervention (57.6 h before intervention; 19.2 h intervention; 48 h after intervention).
Conclusions
Implementation of a modified PCS model is feasible in a community hospital setting and can reduce LOS, enhance psychiatric service utilization, and reduce consultation latency. This study demonstrates that proactive consultation-liaison may offer the same benefits to nonacademic community hospitals as it does to large academic centers.
期刊介绍:
The mission of Psychosomatics is to be the leading psychiatry journal focused on the care of patients with comorbid medical and psychiatric illnesses. The scope of Psychosomatics includes original research, review articles and clinical reports that address psychiatric aspects of medical illnesses and their management. Areas of particular interest include: the effect of co-morbid psychiatric conditions on the management of medical illness; the psychiatric management of patients with comorbid medical illness; educational content for physicians and others specializing in consultation-liaison (C-L) psychiatry; and, the provision of psychiatric services to medical populations, including integrated care.