Boarding of Mentally Ill Patients in Emergency Departments: American Psychiatric Association Resource Document.

Focus (American Psychiatric Publishing) Pub Date : 2023-01-01 Epub Date: 2023-01-16 DOI:10.1176/appi.focus.23022001
Kimberly Nordstrom, Jon S Berlin, Sara Siris Nash, Sejal B Shah, Naomi A Schmelzer, Linda L M Worley
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Abstract

The treatment of severe mental illness has undergone a paradigm shift over the last fifty years, away from a primary emphasis on hospital-based care and toward community-based care. Some of the forces driving this deinstitutionalization have been scientific and patient-centered, such as better differentiation between acute and subacute risk, innovations in outpatient and crisis care (assertive community treatment programs, dialectical behavioral therapy, treatment-oriented psychiatric emergency services), gradually improving psychopharmacology, and an increased appreciation of the negative effect of coercive hospitalization, except when risk is very high. On the other hand, some of the forces have been less focused on patient needs: budget-driven cuts in public hospital beds divorced from population-based need; managed care's profit-driven impact on private psychiatric hospitals and outpatient services; and purported patient-centered approaches promoting non-hospital care that may under-recognize that some extremely ill patients need years of painstaking effort to make a community transition. The result has been a reconfiguration of the country's mental health system that, at times, leaves large numbers of people without adequate mental health and substance abuse services. Often their only option is to seek care in medical emergency department's (ED's) that are not designed for their needs. Increasingly, many of those individuals end up waiting in ED's for appropriate care and disposition for hours or days. This overflow phenomenon has become so prevalent in ED's that it has been given a name: "boarding". This practice is almost certainly detrimental to patients and staff, and it has spawned efforts on multiple fronts to understand and resolve it. When considering solutions, both ED-focused and system-wide considerations must be explored. This resource document provides an overview and recommendations regarding this complex topic. Reprinted with permission from American Psychiatric Association. Copyright © 2019.

急诊科寄宿精神病患者:美国精神病学协会资料文件。
在过去的五十年里,重性精神病的治疗模式发生了转变,从主要强调医院治疗转向社区治 疗。推动这种 "去机构化 "的一些力量是科学的,是以病人为中心的,比如更好地区分急性和亚急性风险、门诊和危机护理的创新(自信社区治疗项目、辩证行为疗法、以治疗为导向的精神科急诊服务)、精神药理学的逐步完善,以及人们越来越认识到强制住院的负面影响,除非风险非常高。另一方面,有些力量并不那么关注病人的需求:预算驱动的公立医院床位削减脱离了以人口为基础的需求;管理式医疗以利润为导向对私立精神病医院和门诊服务的影响;以及号称以病人为中心的方法,提倡非医院护理,但可能没有充分认识到一些重症病人需要数年的艰苦努力才能向社区过渡。其结果是,国家心理健康体系的重新配置,有时会使大量的人得不到足够的心理健康和药物滥用服务。他们唯一的选择往往是到医疗急诊室(ED)寻求治疗,而这些急诊室并不是为满足他们的需求而设计的。越来越多的人最终要在急诊室等待数小时或数天才能得到适当的治疗和处置。这种溢出现象在急诊室非常普遍,因此被称为 "寄宿"。这种做法几乎肯定会对患者和工作人员造成损害,因此,人们从多个方面努力了解并解决这一问题。在考虑解决方案时,必须同时考虑以急诊室为中心和整个系统的因素。本资料文件提供了有关这一复杂问题的概述和建议。经美国精神病学协会授权转载。版权所有 © 2019。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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