Clinical determinants of involuntary psychiatric hospitalization: A clinical profile approach

Author:

Georgaca Eugenie1ORCID,Machaira Sofia1,Stamovlasis Dimitrios2,Peppou Lily Evangelia3,Papachristou Christina1,Arvaniti Aikaterini4,Samakouri Maria4,Stylianidis Stelios3,Bozikas Vasileios Panteleimon5,Diakogiannis Ioannis6,Fokas Konstantinos6,Garyfallos Georgios5,Gkolia Ioanna7,Karpouza Vassiliki8,Nimatoudis Ioannis9,Patsinakidis Georgios10,Sevris Dimitrios10,Vlachaki Aikaterini11

Affiliation:

1. School of Psychology Aristotle University of Thessaloniki Thessaloniki Greece

2. School of Philosophy and Education Aristotle University of Thessaloniki Thessaloniki Greece

3. Department of Psychology Panteion University of Social Sciences Athens Greece

4. Department of Psychiatry Democritus University of Thrace Alexandroupoli Greece

5. Second Department of Psychiatry, School of Medicine, Psychiatric Hospital of Thessaloniki Aristotle University of Thessaloniki Thessaloniki Greece

6. First Department of Psychiatry, School of Medicine, General Hospital “Papageorgiou” Aristotle University of Thessaloniki Thessaloniki Greece

7. Psychiatric Hospital of Thessaloniki C Acute Ward Thessaloniki Greece

8. Psychiatric Hospital of Thessaloniki, D Acute Ward Thessaloniki Greece

9. Third Department of Psychiatry, School of Medicine, AHEPA University General Hospital‐Department of Mental Health Aristotle University of Thessaloniki Thessaloniki Greece

10. Psychiatric Hospital of Thessaloniki B Acute Ward Thessaloniki Greece

11. Psychiatric Department G. Papanikolaou General Hospital Thessaloniki Greece

Abstract

AbstractObjectivesThe study examines the clinical determinants of involuntary psychiatric hospitalization. Specifically, it investigates whether distinct clinical profiles of hospitalized patients can be discerned, what other characteristics they are linked with, and which profiles predict involuntary admission.MethodsIn this cross‐sectional multicentre population study, data were collected for 1067 consecutive admissions in all public psychiatric clinics of Thessaloniki, Greece, during 12 months. Through Latent Class Analysis distinct patient clinical profiles were established based on Health of the Nation Outcome Scales ratings. The profiles were then correlated with sociodemographic, other clinical, and treatment‐related factors as covariates and admission status as a distal outcome.ResultsThree profiles emerged. The “Disorganized Psychotic Symptoms” profile, combining positive psychotic symptomatology and disorganization, included mainly men, with previous involuntary hospitalizations and poor contact with mental health services and adherence to medication, indicating a deteriorating condition and chronic course. Τhe “Active Psychotic Symptoms” profile included younger persons with positive psychotic symptomatology in the context of normal functioning. The “Depressive Symptoms” profile, characterized by depressed mood coupled with nonaccidental self‐injury, included mainly older women in regular contact with mental health professionals and treatment. The first two profiles were associated with involuntary admission and the third with voluntary admission.ConclusionsIdentifying patient profiles allows the examination of the combined effect of clinical, sociodemographic, and treatment‐related characteristics as risk factors for involuntary hospitalization, moving beyond the variable‐centered approach mainly adopted to date. The identification of two profiles associated with involuntary admission necessitates the development of interventions tailored to chronic patients and younger persons suffering from psychosis respectively.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous),Clinical Psychology

Reference85 articles.

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