急诊科成人智力和发育障碍患者的神经精神障碍

IF 3.2
Harold A Pollack, Brandon Tabman, Derek S Brown, Hefei Wen, Kristin L Berg, Lauren Peterson, Betsy Q Cliff, Beau M Ances, Kenton J Johnston
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的:本研究旨在比较有智力和发育障碍(IDDs)和无智力和发育障碍(IDDs)的成人急诊科(ED)就诊记录中精神科和神经科诊断率。方法:本横断面研究使用了2019年美国全国急诊科医院急诊出院病例样本。使用验证码比较年龄≥18岁的IDDs患者的精神病学和神经学诊断。被诊断出的精神和神经系统疾病包括抑郁、焦虑、精神分裂症或精神病、自杀倾向、癫痫发作、痴呆和睡眠障碍。结果:分析发现,有和没有idd的成年人分别有558,408次和112,593,527次(全国加权)ED就诊。与一般人群相比,患有idd的成年人患精神障碍的可能性是主要就诊诊断的两倍,主要就诊诊断的自杀(高1.6倍)、神经障碍(高5.6倍)和癫痫(高8.1倍)的可能性更高。与普通人群相比,患有智力残疾的成年人被诊断为痴呆症的可能性几乎是普通人的两倍,而患有唐氏综合症的患者被诊断为痴呆症的可能性是普通人的六倍。年龄在50-54岁的唐氏综合症患者,超过五分之一的急诊科就诊记录包括痴呆诊断;≥70岁患者痴呆诊断率是普通人群的2.7倍。结论:IDDs的成人ED患者比没有IDDs的患者更容易并发精神和神经障碍。研究结果强调需要提供贯穿整个生命周期的神经精神病学服务,以解决idd患者的独特护理需求。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Neuropsychiatric Disorders Among Adult Emergency Department Patients With Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities.

Objective: This study aimed to compare rates of psychiatric and neurologic diagnoses on emergency department (ED) visit records of adults with versus without intellectual and developmental disabilities (IDDs).

Methods: This cross-sectional study used the 2019 Nationwide Emergency Department Sample of U.S. hospital ED visit discharges. Validated codes were used to compare psychiatric and neurologic diagnoses of patients ages ≥18 with versus without diagnosed IDDs. Diagnosed psychiatric and neurologic conditions included depression, anxiety, schizophrenia or psychosis, suicidality, seizure, dementia, and sleep disorder.

Results: The analysis identified 558,408 and 112,593,527 (nationally weighted) ED visits by adults with and without IDDs, respectively. Compared with the general population, adults with IDDs were twice as likely to have a mental disorder as the principal visit diagnosis, with higher probabilities of principal visit suicidality (1.6 times higher), neurologic disorder (5.6 times higher), and seizure (8.1 times higher) diagnoses. Compared with the general population, adults with intellectual disability were nearly twice as likely to have a dementia diagnosis, and patients with Down's syndrome were six times likelier to have a dementia diagnosis. More than one in five ED visit records of patients ages 50-54 with Down's syndrome included a dementia diagnosis; the dementia diagnosis rate for such patients ages ≥70 was 2.7 times higher than that of the general population.

Conclusions: Adult ED patients with IDDs were more likely than those without IDDs to have co-occurring mental and neurologic disorders. Findings underscore the need to provide neuropsychiatric services across the lifespan to address the distinctive care needs of individuals with IDDs.

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